Showing posts with label Naomi Shelton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Naomi Shelton. Show all posts

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Naomi Shelton & The Gospel Queens - What Have You Done, My Brother

Album: What Have You Done, My Brother
Size: 91,6 MB
Time: 39:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Gospel/Soul/Blues mix
Art: Full

1. What Is This (3:13)
2. What More Can I Do? (4:22)
3. I'll Take The Long Road (2:56)
4. What Have You Done (3:45)
5. I Need You To Hold My Hand (3:21)
6. Trouble In My Way (2:54)
7. Jordan River (2:31)
8. He Knows My Heart (2:38)
9. Am I Asking Too Much? (4:02)
10. By Your Side (2:52)
11. Lift My Burdens (3:05)
12. A Change Is Gonna Come (3:48)

Daptone Records, arguably the epicenter of the 2000s funk/soul resurgence, has launched records by retro-styled revivalists (the Budos Band, the Mighty Imperials), reissues of vintage-era obscurities (Bob & Gene), and even reissues of revivalists (the Daktaris, the Poets of Rhythm), but for a long time the label lacked another act that could compare with its flagship star, Sharon Jones, a bona-fide throwback soul artist with roots in the music's heyday who's still very much musically active today. Enter Naomi Shelton, a commanding and full-throated vocalist whose musical identity stems equally from her churchgoing rural Alabama childhood in the '40s and '50s and her tenure on the New York club scene in the '60s and beyond.

Like Jones, hers is an undeniable, inimitable voice, a rich and gritty alto brimming with authority and hard-earned authenticity, but also an unmistakable sense of compassion, grounded by a forthright, soberly pragmatic sensibility. What Have You Done, My Brother?, the first full-length Shelton has cut in her long and varied career, is a gospel record, to be sure -- from the reedy organ notes that open the proceedings to the inspiring lyrical message of uplift and righteous struggle, bolstered by the sturdy and stirring backing harmonies of the Gospel Queens -- but it's a soul record, too, just as obviously, and one that bears many of the hallmarks of Jones' Daptone sides.

Along with a number of traditional and classic gospel numbers, most familiarly Sam Cooke's timeless "A Change Is Gonna Come" (which sounds as affecting as ever, and more personally informed than usual, in Shelton's relatively unadorned take), she's blessed here with a handful of top-notch original tunes by Daptone ringleader Bosco Mann (aka Gabriel Roth) which, true to form, are practically impossible to distinguish from the older songs -- although the socially conscious, mock-deferential "Am I Asking Too Much?," which is rather atypically sardonic, does feel particularly like one of Jones' groovy struts.

Roth also serves as producer and plays bass, alongside fellow Dap-Kings Tommy Brenneck and Homer Steinweiss, while Jones herself is one of several supplemental background vocalists, in addition to the Queens (two of whom take turns on lead vocals.) Suffice it to say, fans of Jones and/or the label won't be too surprised, and certainly shouldn't be disappointed, by what they hear here, even those who wouldn't typically be inclined to listen to a gospel record. And, thanks perhaps to the understated influence of the band's arranger and musical director Cliff Driver, or to Shelton's unaffected sincerity, or simply to the directness, optimism, and relevance of the music's spiritual message, this set is blissfully free of the occasionally over-earnest schtickiness that can sometimes creep into Daptone's more retro-minded output: this is real, and this is righteous. /K. Ross Hoffman, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

What Have You Done, My Brother mc
What Have You Done, My Brother gofile

Friday, October 27, 2017

Naomi Shelton & The Gospel Queens - Cold World

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:37
Size: 88.4 MB
Styles: Gospel blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. Sinner
[2:47] 2. Movin'
[2:51] 3. Heaven Is Mine
[2:51] 4. Bound For The Promised Land
[3:20] 5. It's A Cold, Cold World
[3:47] 6. I Don't Know
[3:28] 7. Get Up, Child
[4:04] 8. One Day
[3:00] 9. I Earned Mine
[4:06] 10. Humble Me
[2:25] 11. Thank You, Lord
[3:01] 12. Everybody Knows (River Song)

Gospel and rhythm & blues have long been close siblings even if they don't always acknowledge each other in public -- many early R&B hits were essentially secularized versions of classic sacred numbers, and dozens of soul stars got their start singing with gospel groups -- so it certainly makes sense that the soul revivalists at Daptone Recordings would open their arms to the talents of Naomi Shelton, who has sung both Saturday night and Sunday morning music over the course of her career that's spanned six decades. Shelton's second album for Daptone, Cold World, mixes elements of traditional gospel with '60s-influenced soul, and while there's less of a churchy feel to this album than 2009's What Have You Done, My Brother?, it certainly fits in with the mindset of acts like Curtis Mayfield and the Staple Singers, who weren't afraid to add some Christian-leaning commentary to their music. "Sinner," "Heaven Is Mine," "Humble Me," and the title track all have the slinky feel of vintage soul (Shelton's longtime musical director Cliff Driver and Daptone chief Gabriel Roth, the latter of whom wrote six of the album's 12 numbers, have helped give this music a groove that's authentic yet unforced), while Shelton's voice -- compassionate and muscular, with just a hint of sass -- has both the power and the emotional heft to bring these tunes to life, not so much preaching as offering her audience advice about life lessons she learned the hard way. Shelton's style makes a virtue of her maturity while showing off an energy and passion one would expect from a much younger woman; Cold World is an example of what Daptone and the retro-soul crowd are doing right, and it's an authoritative and affecting piece of work. ~Mark Deming

Cold World