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Ike & Tina Turner | Sing The Blues

Acrobat (2008)
By GUSTAVO TURNER  |  October 29, 2008
4.0 4.0 Stars
Ike-'n-TinaINSIDE.jpg
Aretha grew up in church, with a doting father guiding her prodigious talent, and ended up longing to be a classical pianist. Tina grew up on the road, with an abusive jerk svengali-ing the shit out of her, and ended up selling Pepsi with David Bowie and counting her millions in Switzerland. But around 1969–1971, when the recordings on this surprising reissue were released by the legendary Blue Thumb label, their paths did not look so divergent. Here’s Tina tackling Stax/Volt standards (along with Eddie Boyd and Chuck Willis tunes and the ancient blues repertory), and it’s amazing what her sweaty-sheets swagger can do to the familiar Memphis sound of the Queen and Otis. In Tina’s hands, “I’ve Been Loving You So Too Long” is an overheated tour de force arranged like Side 1 of Abbey Road. The band’s take on Jimmy Reed’s “Honest I Do” is some of the best black country music ever recorded — the kind of sound Mick Jagger would have given up a testicle to achieve on Exile on Main Street. It is now a commonplace (particularly after his death last year) to give Ike his musical due and try to rescue his artistry from the Larry Fishburne/Tim Meadows buffoonery engraved on most people’s perceptions; but the uncomfortable truth is that Tina did her best work during their troubled partnership. It’s unclear what love — or hate — has got to do with superior music, but chances are you’ll be spinning this long after you’ve forgotten your copy of “Private Dancer.”
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Comments
Re: Ike & Tina Turner | Sing The Blues
Cool review. Actually, for some of us it was commonplace to give Ike his due well before his death, without excusing any of his terrible behavior. After all, this is the man responsible for what's largely regarded as the first rock 'n' roll single and for bringing a host of other artists - including Howlin' Wolf, Otis Rush, James Cotton - to their first recording sessions for Sun and Cobra Records. Sam Phillips told me that Ike Turner was by far the most talented musician he ever worked with. Ike was a great bandleader with an abilty to identify and mold talent. Tina's voice is one of the greatest sounds in American music. To watch Tina front the Ike & Tina Turner Revue and sing the kind of material on this album, check out this posting from the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1969, where Tina sounds and looks marvelous and Ike leads the band through their demanding paces looking resplendent with a Stratocaster and a gold suit with a French cuffed shirt: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiD7PNZalU4 Baby, THIS is rock 'n' soul.
By TedDrozdowski on 11/02/2008 at 7:02:10

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