Larry Carlton:
His Sound of Philadelphia Noted contemporary jazz guitarist plays
the hits of Gamble & Huff, Tom Bell and Philadelphia International tratto
da "Jazztimes.com" autore: Lee Mergner - febbraio
2011
Fresh on the heels of a Grammy award win for his collaboration
with Tak Matsumoto, Take Your Pick, Larry
Carlton doesn't hesitate to answer why he chose to participate
in a tribute album to the Sound of Philadelphia. "Every
song was a great pop song," says the guitarist. "Every
song was a hit."
Carlton's new album, Larry
Carlton Plays the Sound of Philadelphia (335
Records) features the guitarist applying his distinctive string-bending
to a set of material from the songbooks of Gamble & Huff and Thom
Bell, who wrote a succession of hits for The Spinners,
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, The O'Jays and many other soul
and R&B legends.
Perhaps the most surprising thing about
the album is that the leader was the last man in.
The album was almost completely
recorded and produced by Billy Terrell, who
had cut the tracks thinking that he was going to have a vocalist
sing the tunes for this tribute to the Philly soul sound. "Somehow
over the course of a year and a half or two years after they
had cut the tracks, he [Terrell] changed his mind," explains
Carlton. "It
didn't come to fruition. Either he didn't find the right vocalist
or he just got turned off to that idea. And that's when my
name came up. "What if we had Larry Carlton do these as instrumentals?"
The tracks were done. The arrangements were meticulous. That's
how it came about. He came to me and said, "Hey, man, would
you want to be the voice, except do it instrumentally." And
I said, "Of
course, great songs."
Besides his long career as a solo artist and also a member
of the Crusaders, L.A. Express and Fourplay, Carlton spent
many years as a studio session guitarist, both credited and
uncredited, playing on literally hundreds of records. However,
he says he was never called for a session with any of the Philadelphia
International or Sigma Sound projects,
perhaps because he was on the West Coast for much of that
time. Also, like Berry
Gordy with Motown in Detroit, Gamble and Huff tended
to use musicians from the community for their sessions. Carlton
admits that he didn't know the names of the guitarists who
did the lion's share of the original Philly International
sessions - Bobby Eli and Norman Harris.
Then again, as the secret weapon on so many hit records including
Joni Mitchell's Court
and Spark, Michael Jackson's Off
the Wall and Steely Dan's The
Royal Scam, Carlton knows all about how contributions
by sidemen can get lost in the small print. " When
I started sessions in the early '70s, that's when they started
listing the players on albums," recalls Carlton.
"And
that was a great benefit, obviously, to me and many other
players because we did become known - our sound was on hit
records and they could read our names." Carlton
also had the advantage of striking out on his own as a performer.
Philly session players Eli and Harris never did.
Carlton also confesses that he didn't know a lot about the
difficulties and demise of the Philadelphia International
label, which was beset by internal strife and external pressure,
and ended up in legal entanglements that overwhelmed and
subsumed the company. Although he hasn't been able to rekindle
the fire of those glory days, Gamble is still very active
in the Philadelphia music community and, in keeping with
the social message of many of his songs, has been an important
part of redevelopment efforts in that city.
Regardless of their current projects, Gamble and Huff (and
Thom Bell) will always have the legacy of their incredible
catalog of songs. As the co-writers of much of the material
associated with the Philly Sound, Gamble and Huff had a remarkable
creative and commercial run in the '70s. These days, it's
hard to turn on the television or radio and not hear their
songs, which have become staples in advertising, to the point
where many people associate their "Love
Train" with a certain popular brew, rather
than with the zeitgeist of the '70s.
With Huff generally writing the music and Gamble the lyrics,
the two had complementary talents and remarkable chemistry.
However, they're rarely mentioned in the same breath as other
famous pop songwriting teams like Lennon/McCartney, Jagger/Richards,
Holland/Dozier/Holland and Bacharach/David. Carlton says
he has a real appreciation for what they did together. "Yes,
it was one of those combinations that were so natural that
great things came from them," he says. "They
had this this unique twist of producing R&B but with an orchestra.
They had great melodies, but for the day, they had more sophisticated
harmonies and their use of orchestration to present these
R&B sorts of pop tunes was very appealing. And their songs
that were about social events of the day and they also wrote
love songs."
Remaking hit records of nearly iconic status can be a tricky
business. And this is not Carlton's first time at the rodeo,
having done an instrumental version of the Doobie Brothers'
"Minute
by Minute," as well as of other hit songs. He readily
admits the pitfalls of the approach. "One
of the biggest challenges for me personally was to find an
approach on each song that would come, at least to the best
of my ability, as close as possible to emulating the voice
or at least the articulation of the words of the original
singer," Carlton explains. "If
you take a song like, "Could
It Be I'm Falling
in Love," the
line "Could it be...' on
the guitar can all be played on one string and just be the
same sound. But I spent most of my time in preparation, just
trying to get those lyrics to speak on my guitar. What string
should I play that on? Is that an upstroke? How do I get
as close as I can to the articulation of the original version?"
For someone who has put his own personal stamp on hit records
like "Kid
Charlemagne" by Steely Dan or "Help
Me" by
Joni Mitchell, Carlton has heard plenty of his own licks recreated by cover versions,
and he concludes that you have to go in one direction or another. "I
respect the fact that the guys either pay homage to what I played or completely
depart from it because that statement that I made was my statement and it's part
of the original song and they just say, 'I better not mess with that...I'll
just do it my way."
Carlton faced that same dilemma of homage vs. reinvention when he covered "Layla" on
his Solid
Ground album in 1989, released shortly after his recovery from a gunshot
wound - the victim of a random act of violence outside his studio in LA. For
a guitarist to mess with not only a popular tune, but one associated with two
giants of the electric guitar - Duane Allman and Eric Clapton - it
could have been almost sacrilegious. "It
never entered my mind that that would be hallowed ground and I shouldn't touch
it," he recalls. "I just dug the tune and thought how
much fun it would be to re-arrange it. It wasn't until after I started recording
the song that a few people would come by the studio and say, "Man, are you sure
you want to do this?" But
my innocence and my truthfulness is what came through. I just did the song my
way and many people liked it."
His own way of playing his trademark Gibson ES-335 guitar was once described
by Joni Mitchell as "fly-fishing." The life-long trout fisherman
laughs when that reference is brought up. "Yes,
Joni said that during the sessions for Court and Spark. My volume pedal lines
were very unique to me and she responded, obviously, very positively to my sound
so I can see how after she got to know me and knew that I did like to fish, that's
kind of the label she put on it. And visually, that's
what came to her when she heard my parts."
Indeed Carlton's note bending and volume-shifting does have a reeling quality.
Leave it to the cinematic Mitchell to come up with such a simple yet evocative
description. Although he doesn't have a comparably clever name for it, Carlton
professes an admiration for Mitchell's
own style of guitar-playing, which was just coming into its own during that session,
where she started experimenting with a syncopated upstroke on the electric guitar.
"And
another part of that style is she used tunings that made her sound completely
unique," adds Carlton.
Although Carlton didn't cross paths often with the Philadelphia soul and R&B
artists, there is a unique documentation of at least one encounter. In Jeffrey
Levy-Hinte's documentary film Soul
Power, you can see a youthful Carlton with flowing locks playing guitar
with Joe Sample, Wilton Felder and the Crusaders. Also performing in what was
then Zaire in connection with the Ali-Foreman
fight ("The Rumble in the Jungle") in 1974 were James Brown, Bill
Withers, Sister Sledge, the Fania All-Stars and the Spinners. Carlton admits
that he doesn't
remember a lot from that trip. It was after all over 35 years ago and it was
just one concert. He does however have vivid memories about a last-minute request
to accompany one of his heroes at the concert. "I
know one of the highlights for me was when I was asked to play rhythm guitar
during BB King's set. Wilton [Felder] played bass I think and I played rhythm
guitar. So if you look back there you'll
see me playing rhythm with BB King in 1974."
Although he was raised in Southern California and made his mark there professionally,
for the last 15 years, Carlton and his wife Michele Pillar have called Nashville
their home. Oddly, one of the most prolific session guitarists of the 70s and
80s is not in Music City, home to guitar-pickers galore, for that purpose. "No,
I didn't come here looking for any session work at all," he explains.
"My
reason for moving here is that my children had moved to the Nashville area so
we wanted to be near them." Still, he's not completely out of the loop.
"I've
done a few little solo spots and I just did a solo spot last month for a record
by Diane Schuur that Steve Buckingham is producing. She's doing covers of old
country songs but doing them her way and they asked me to play a solo on one
tune. But it doesn't
happen very often."
For better or worse, Carlton is generally categorized as a Smooth Jazz player.
Besides recording a slew of contemporary jazz albums for MCA and GRP, he was
a long-time member of Fourplay, one of the core acts in that genre, until leaving
that group recently. For his part, Carlton professes some ambivalence about the
Smooth Jazz genre and how it's evolved. "I'm so thankful that starting
back in the mid-'80s, it became a format for non-singers - meaning instrumentalists
who were basically focused on instrumental music. I'm thankful that that happened
and I'm thankful that I was very successful in it. But I also realize that over
the last 25 years the quality, in my opinion, has become very generic in that
market. I can't tell from one sax player from another. It all sounds the same.
So it's got its negatives but I'm
thankful that there is and was a place for instrumentalists to show their music."
I mention to Carlton the distinctive sound of the late Grover Washington, Jr.,
a Philly jazz legend who was a major figure both in the local scene and within
the Smooth Jazz genre. If you hear one bar of Grover, you know who it is. Carlton
agrees. "Exactly,
I feel the same way about Kirk Whalum" he says. "There's
always been that special cream of the crop, but overall I feel the genre has
become pretty generic."
Genre deconstruction aside, Carlton is focusing all of his attention on the current
project, celebrating the Philadelphia sound. "I
think this was a really good idea from Billy Terrell," he says. "He
was so passionate about the catalogue and Philadelphia. You know, he was a Brill
Building writer for many many years so he's got the history to put something
like this together in what I'm
sure everybody will perceive as a very high quality and appropriate project."
Right now Carlton is excited about taking the music from this album out to audiences,
starting in Japan in about two weeks. "I'm bringing an eight-piece
band and three of the guys sing so we're
going to try to present this music as close as we can to the record," says
the guitarist. "And
this will be a departure, because normally I go over there and they want to see
me blow - let loose and go for it. [This time] they're looking forward because
these tunes are so well known around the world. There's been a very positive
response to the release and all the hype out in front of it so I'm excited to
go over and play these eleven songs and then maybe five more of my "go for it"
tunes."
Carlton knew that he had to pull together a band that could pull off the songs
both instrumentally and vocally. "Exactly.
For the two vocals on the album I chose Bill LeBounty to sing
the two vocals on the album. And Bill's going with me to Japan. He's an R&B guy
from way back with deep roots into this music." Carlton says that Marc
Jordan, a singer-songwriter
with Philly roots, is coming along to play the organ parts and sing background.
He also is planning to perform the music in the U.S., but is imagining a different
venue from his usual concerts. "We
think this project would probably be presented in performing arts centers, where
it's a focused evening of Gamble and Huff tunes with Larry Carlton and then I
can also tell some stories, rather than just do a straight performance."
I do have one beef with the guitar-slinging fly-fisherman. Just as you rarely
hear someone from Philly refer to it as the City of Brotherly Love, you are also
unlikely to hear a native call his hometown Philadelphia. It's Philly. Carlton
laughs and says that in fact, he has the music from this project on his iPod
labeled as "Philly
Masters." Cool. And what do Nashville residents call their hometown?
Certainly not Music City, right? "Oh
no, it's pronounced Nashfull." Nuff said.
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