Step by Step - Clarence & Calvin
LOOKING FOR A FOX - 1966
Slippin' Around
Funky Fever
Thread The Needle - Atlantic 1966
SNATCHING IT BACK - 1968
Slip Away
Too Weak to Fight
Patches - 1969
Blind
soul singer and song writer Clarence Carter was born on January 14, 1936,
Montgomery, AL
Recording at the now legendary
Muscle
Shoals Flame studios generating an alternate deep south sounding
rhythm & blues style, distinct from Stax.
His most popular tracks played in
the period (1965-69) are listed above but soul club DJ’s in
Manchester choked
on having to play
Patches. Clarence’s numbers were firm ‘have to play’
favourites at Manchester's Soul Clubs in the 1960’s.
1981 released
Workin' (On a Love Building),
Tampa Red's
Love Me with a Feeling,
Strokin'
Interview with the ‘Man' - Snatching It Back:
Well, I'II tell ya, it makes no difference if you came from
the city. And it don't matter if you came from the country. And some of you out
there within the sound of my voice may have come from the suburbs,"
declares Clarence Carter, in his most stentorian tones, at the climactic moment
of his lost masterpiece. "Making Love (At The Dark End Of The Street").
He is preaching on one of his great themes -the furtive pursuit of love- but he
might as well be sending a message about the universality of his music. For
Clarence Carter is both an artist steeped in the most traditional aspects of
Southern music and one of the most modern of all deep bluesmen.
Unlike most of his peers in the Southern soul hierarchy.
Carter's musical approach harkened directly back to acoustic country blues.
Specifically, he was the final link in a long chain of blind blues singer-guitarists,
a descendant of Blind Lemon Jefferson. Blind Willie McTell, and Blind Willie
Johnson, among others. Like them, he was possessed of a special vision,
darkling and a little frightening. In Carter's case, love, particularly
cheating love, became the great spiritual metaphor. In a sense, he owed more to
the preaching gospel-blues of Blind Willie Johnson than any of the others, for
even when he was singing the melody straight, you always had the feeling that
Carter was reaching for a homily and his vocals feature frequent interjections
and interpolations. spoken, gasped and hummed, whose source could only be the
gospel church.
On the other hand, more than any of his guitar-playing
predecessors (but not unlike that more contemporary blind musical genius. Ray
Charles, Carter was possessed of an expansive sense of humor, embodied in the
lewd guttural chuckle (reportedly derived from Mr. Lee, a Montgomery, Ala. disc
jockey) that punctuates many of his best records. This deeply ironic spirit
also allowed Carter to knowingly but quite unselfconsciously work with
metaphors based on his own blindness, as on "I Can't See Myself' and
"I'd Rather Go Blind." For all his links to the past, this spirit
marks Clarence Carter as a genuinely modern performer, a link in another chain
that stretches from streetcorner dozens players to the rappers of today.
Those links began to be forged in Montgomery, Alabama, where
Carter was born on January 4, 1936. He grew up, learned to play guitar from
listening to records by
John Lee Hooker,
Lightnin' Hopkins and
Jimmy Reed, then attended Alabama State
College in Montgomery. where he earned a music degree. By the time he
graduated, Carter had developed sufficiently diverse skills that on his
recordings, he would not only sing and play guitar but also occasionally do his
own keyboard work and write and arrange, writing charts in Braille. Around
1963, Carter and Calvin Scott began singing together. They made two singles for
tiny Fairlane Records as Clarence and Calvin and then another four for Duke
Records. three of them as the C&C Boys.
In 1965. Clarence and Calvin paid Rick Hall's Fame Studio in
Muscle Shoals, Alabama, $85 to record "Step By Step" and
"Rooster Knees And Rice." Their contract with Duke had expired. but
Atlanta disc jockey Zenas Sears (formerly manager of
Chuck
Willis. among others) tipped Atlantic's
Jerry Wexler to the quality of
the disc. and it was released by the Atco subsidiary. "Step By Step"
didn't chart, but Clarence's one full-throated verse made an impact that
survived the departure of Scott after a car crash. Carter's first few solo
singles appeared on Hall's Fame label. But after "Thread The Needle"
briefly crossed over and "Tell Daddy" provided the inspiration for
Etta James's crossover success with
"Tell Mama," he became a full-fledged Atlantic act with "Looking
For A Fox." in January 1968.
Six months lacer, Carter scored a solid Top Ten hit
with the magnificent cheating blues ballad "Slip Away." and over the
next three years, he was a steady R&B presence on the lower reaches of the
pop charts, climaxing with his other Top Ten hit, "Patches," in 1970,
but continuing on Atlantic through late 1971's "Slipped. Tripped And Fell
In Love" (which did almost as much for
Ann
Peebles as "Tell Daddy" did for Etta James). Carter continued
working withRick Hall until the mid-70s. Since then, he has recorded for a
variety of small labels, most often with Atlanta-based Ichiban. for whom he
still occasionally makes the R&B charts.
The typical Clarence Carter record features his mammoth
vocal and twanging Jazzmaster guitar figures over a solid Muscle Shoals soul
groove, accented by a sonorous Memphis-style
horn chart. Chances are, if the song is a ballad, there may be some kind of
preaching break, or if the tune is uptempo. ample space for his lascivious
chuckle. (That naughty laugh practically becomes a percussion instrument on his
Christmas classic, "Back Door Santa.")
Carter sings, in hit massive deep baritone, almost every
kind of love song. from the ecstatic "Soul Deep" (borrowed from the
Box Tops) to the despondent "I’d Rather Go Blind." but his specialty
is narrating cheating in all its myriad aspects. Most often, he presents
infidelity either as the most rarefied of romantic delights or as a sin whose
wages are guilt both overwhelming and spine-tingling. "Slip Away"
typifies what he has to say on the subject but the pinnacle of his preachments
on this text in undoubtedly "Making Love (At The Dark End Of The
Street)," with its four minutes of preaching and thirty seconds of
singing.
Here, Carter takes the archetypal deep soul song, James
Carr's "The Dark End Of The Street" and reworks it in a way that
reinvests it with the spirit of gospel-blues preaching. Yet he does this over a
groove that's partly carried by strings. just the same. Carter's sermon on
sexual expression ranges from barnyard couplings to the Mile High Club. The
opening sentences are high absurdity and accompanied by that grave chuckle; the
final lines, in which Carter finally discourses (as you knew he would) on the
propensity of humans to "slip around." practically sob with the
resonance of his voice. The sound seems to blossom directly from his chest, an
explosion of feeling so rich that mere flesh cannot contain it. If the goal of
Southern soul is to intermingle the sexual and the spiritual so that they are
at last indistinguishable, then one of the rare times when the fusion is fully
achieved is the moment when Carter ceases to preach and begins to sing:
"Aaaaat the dark end of the street."
In its fusion of the absurd and the profound, there could be
no record more redolent of rock'n'roll than Carter's "Making Love,"
but just the same, it remains one of the great mystery records of both rock and
soul. (How Rick Hall ever got the nerve to release it -as the B side of
"Snatching It Back" is more easily explained. Rolling Stone critic
Jon Landau talked him into it.) But this much is certainly true:The absurdity
of the opening lines is indispensable to the catharsis of the final drama. And
only one of soul's great artists would have come up with anything so outrageous
yet perfectly constructed.
Clarence Carter has sustained the tension between those
elements throughout his career it is there in the corny sentiment of
"Patches" and it is the essence of the exuberant snickers that made
"Sixty Minute Man" his last true classic, released on Fame following
Carter's departure from Atlantic. Skirting that close to caricature, he found
the depths of soul hidden at the dark end of the street. For a soul singer,
there could hardly be a greater tribute.
From the Rhino CD "Snatching It Back"
And below from -
LP liner notes, Soul Deep (Edsel)
The King of Atlantic's second string of '60s soul men,
Clarence Carter could belt out the blues with the best of 'em but was still a
soul singer all the way.
He was born in Montgomery, Alabama, on January 14, 1936, and
took up the guitar while still quite young. When Carter went blind, his music
was a tremendous comfort to him. He later earned a music degree from an Alabama
college.
Trained in the gospel idiom, Carter moved into soul music as
half of Clarence & Calvin, who first recorded for the Duke label in 1964.
They met producer Rick Hall in 1965 when they rented his studio for a session.
Hall leased the results of that session to Atlantic, and the single became a regional
hit.
Clarence & Calvin broke up after the latter was severely
injured in a car wreck, so Hall recorded Carter as a solo artist, at his Fame
studio in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Carter first made the pop top ten in 1968
with "Slip Away," and had his biggest hit two years later with a
remake of the
Chairmen of the Board's "Patches." ("Patches, I'm
dependin' on you, son...") He also guided the soul-singing career of his
then-wife,
Candi Staton.
Clarence Carter's brand of deep-fried southern soul always
mirrored real life. He was paradoxically at his best on both macho boasts like
"Thread The Needle" and on heart-stirring ballads like "Making
Love (At the Dark End of the Street)." He continues to perform and record,
and was on hand for the first annual Rockport Rhythm and Blues Festival in
Newport, Rhode Island, on Saturday, July 29, 1995.