Soul Strut 100: # 67 - Curtis Mayfield - Curtis/Live! (1971)

batmon said:pickwick33 said:batmon said:Ill agree on the "crowd participation" part. Another thing for me is the acoustics. It sounds like a medium to small place so shit is intimate.




Yep. From all the photos I've seen of the Bitter End, the back wall was solid exposed brick. And from the sound quality, I'd guess the floors were straight wood. I can only surmise what the audience was like. Probably a mix of young black concertgoers and white hippies. All chanting "stone junkie, stone, stone junkie..."





As I said in an earlier thread, Curtis attempted the crowd-participation bit a year later on a "Stone Junkie" remake that appeared on Newport In New York '72, a various-artists live LP on Cobblestone. It didn't quite come off that time, but that wasn't Curtis' fault, necessarily. There's a world of difference between an intimate folk-rock/comedy joint vs. a large outdoor venue.




Which spot do u think is larger, The Bitter End or the place he appeared in Superfly?


Which seemed like a lounge/bar/restaurant in Harlem - Scatter's




Having never been to the Bitter End, I'm guessing that it was roughly the same size as the lounge where Curtis gigged in that movie.





Just big enough that it's not a sardine can, but just small enough that you could almost reach out and touch the stage.





New York Strutters: does anyone know if the Bitter End is still in the same spot as when Curtis and Donny recorded there? I know they closed and reopened a few times...
 
batmon said:pickwick33 said:batmon said:Ill agree on the "crowd participation" part. Another thing for me is the acoustics. It sounds like a medium to small place so shit is intimate.




Yep. From all the photos I've seen of the Bitter End, the back wall was solid exposed brick. And from the sound quality, I'd guess the floors were straight wood. I can only surmise what the audience was like. Probably a mix of young black concertgoers and white hippies. All chanting "stone junkie, stone, stone junkie..."





As I said in an earlier thread, Curtis attempted the crowd-participation bit a year later on a "Stone Junkie" remake that appeared on Newport In New York '72, a various-artists live LP on Cobblestone. It didn't quite come off that time, but that wasn't Curtis' fault, necessarily. There's a world of difference between an intimate folk-rock/comedy joint vs. a large outdoor venue.




Which spot do u think is larger, The Bitter End or the place he appeared in Superfly?


Which seemed like a lounge/bar/restaurant in Harlem - Scatter's




Having never been to the Bitter End, I'm guessing that it was roughly the same size as the lounge where Curtis gigged in that movie.





Just big enough that it's not a sardine can, but just small enough that you could almost reach out and touch the stage.





New York Strutters: does anyone know if the Bitter End is still in the same spot as when Curtis and Donny recorded there? I know they closed and reopened a few times...
 
Great album. Was the timing on purpose?? This is a fitting tribute, considering his 70th birthday was yesterday.
 
pickwick33 said:.





New York Strutters: does anyone know if the Bitter End is still in the same spot as when Curtis and Donny recorded there? I know they closed and reopened a few times...




As far as I know The Bitter End has been at that location since the early 1960's. It's changed names once or twice but always been that location on Bleecker Street.
 
Jonny_Paycheck said:tripledouble said:one of my absolute favorite records. this is the first time im a little surprised that a record isnt higher up the list. i could have seen this being top ten.




"Shoulda been number one to me"




Yessir.
 
"Gypsy Woman" is just an incredibly soulful track that ranks as an alltime favourite, and easily my favourite from this release.





Fwiw, Batmon, it's not too hard to find this if you need it, and it's cheap, too!





http://www.discogs.com/Curtis-Mayfield-Curtis-Live/release/699012
 
parallax said:"Gypsy Woman" is just an incredibly soulful track that ranks as an alltime favourite, and easily my favourite from this release.





Fwiw, Batmon, it's not too hard to find this if you need it, and it's cheap, too!





http://www.discogs.com/Curtis-Mayfield-Curtis-Live/release/699012




Thanx bro,





i already own the vinyl reissue.
 
We recorded just with a room mic last time we played there and it came out great. It is a pretty small place.
 
One of Curtis' best albums and it should have been way up in the Top #100 list.


Fun fact: Curtis' bassist Lucky Scott is the nephew of Sam Gooden of the Impressions. Sam hooked him up with the Curtis gig and even bought him the Fender bass that he plays on most of the albums, including this one. Lucky was also an aspiring producer who did some session work for Curtom Records. Most of y'all probably know the second Rasputin Stash album "The devil made me do it", released on the Curtom subsidiary Gemigo Records ... that album was Lucky's baby.
 
The stripped-down, stark presentation of these songs is what makes the LP amazing and makes these versions the definitive ones IMO.. There really isn't another 70s soul LP (aside from another live LP, Bill Withers' Carnegie Hall) that is so stripped down and not propped up by strings, keyboards, big backing vocals, etc. So good.
 
The_Hook_Up said:The stripped-down, stark presentation of these songs is what makes the LP amazing and makes these versions the definitive ones IMO.. There really isn't another 70s soul LP (aside from another live LP, Bill Withers' Carnegie Hall) that is so stripped down and not propped up by strings, keyboards, big backing vocals, etc. So good.




I agree ... it demonstrates how superb the songwriting is if still sounds good at the most basic instrumentation.
 
This album is one of my all time favorites in any genre. Everytime I listen to this album, I can close my eyes and it feels like you are right there as they are performing.
 
tripledouble said:one of my absolute favorite records. this is the first time im a little surprised that a record isnt higher up the list. i could have seen this being top ten.




:cosine: The strange thing is, I'm not a great fan of live albums in general. I'm an audiophile and persnickety as far as musical playing goes, but "Curtis Live" is special and an exception. It's deviation from the original and looseness are the LP's main charms (e.g., the banter with the crowd on "Stone Junkie"), and I appreciate the inclusion of the album on the Soul Strut 100. I agree with Tripdubs that it should be higher on the list, but oh well.





Peace,





Big Stacks from Kakalak
 
batmon said:Unherd said:batmon, there's a rhino version from 2000 remastered with bonus tracks




"Exact miniature replica of the LP, limited edition 1,500 copies. Recorded live at NYC's Bitter End in 1971, this is the Curtis album. It just doesn't get any better than this. Includes 'Stone Junkie,' 'People Get Ready' and 'If There's A Hell Below, We're All Gonna Go.' 24 bit digitally remastered. Sunspots. 2002. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title."




And it sounds lovely.





Sweet_Premium said:Fantastic record! The version of Makings of you is just beautiful!




Yes!