Yes, you sinners, Dead Air Church is back in session!
This week, one of us deep-voiced alto gals in the spotlight, the amazing Terri Gibbs, whose voice is even deeper some decades later. Gibbs is blind and her countryish hit song, "Somebody's Knockin," was largely a fluke. Record companies didn't know how to package her, this being the same year as the launch of MTV. The story-video was still unknown, which is too bad, because this song would make a great one. (Gibbs wouldn't need to be in the video at all, to make an entertaining fable of the narrative.) As it was, there had never been (to my knowledge) a blind woman with a hit song, although blind men such as Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder had hits. But they are men, with the accompanying gravitas of manhood. It is evident from this video that the director really didn't know how to film Terri, and the camera seems to back away out of some weird misplaced politeness.
This song marked a period of time in my life in which I was separated from my first husband, and I strongly identified with it. It seemed I attracted a lot of unwanted attention, which scared me (I was still in my 20s). There have been lots of songs about women as "the devil"--devil in the blue dress--women as personification of evil. I like the fact that this song handily reverses that trope, and the guy is now the devil.
Ohhhh, so true, so true.
I don't particularly like the musical arrangement, which reeks of 70s doodly-doodly riffs (not the good kind, the Stephen Bishop kind) and like the camera, seems uncomfortable with Gibbs and her sexuality and seeks to cutsify it. The song and Gibbs are strong enough to overcome the mediocrity of the production. In addition, her deep, resonant voice was a breath of fresh air in a soprano-laden Olivia Newton-John era.
I love the way she sings, My fever's burnin, so he oughtta feel right at hooo-ooome.
Terri pounds the piano like a southern gal raised in church, and we are all much poorer for the fact that they couldn't, or wouldn't, make her a star. Wouldn't that have been nice?
Terri, you were ahead of your time. And thanks for a great song!
**Also notable for an introduction by Dionne Warwick and Barry White... in which Barry exhibits his famous fashion sense!
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Terri Gibbs - Somebody's Knockin (1981)
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Dead Air Church: Somebody's Knockin
Posted by
Daisy Deadhead
at
10:00 AM
Labels: 70s, 80s, alt-country, Barry White, Dead Air Church, Dionne Warwick, disability, feminism, gender, music, Terri Gibbs
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Oldies for your Wednesday
I've been pretty busy this week, and consequently, ain't got nothing but some oldies. I know you kids just love that stuff! :P
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Trivia time: How many of you knew that Dionne is Whitney Houston's aunt? I think their voices are very similar, but of course, we know who is first and best.
Walk on by - Dionne Warwick
Speaking of voices, this voice always made me swoon. (You can see Johnny Cash playing guitar in the background.)
I very nearly named my daughter after this song, but I somehow knew that she'd get pissed at me over being named for a country song. (Note: I was right.)
Amanda - Waylon Jennings
The Partridge Family TV-show was based on this band, The Cowsills, also a family. This song is a real gem! I don't mind telling you I think it's one of the best and sweetest pop songs of the 60s! (The ersatz singing TV-family never even came close.)
Trivia: Little Susan Cowsill was 9 years old, making her the youngest singer to sing on a top-ten song to date (1967). I was Susan's age, and wanted so badly to be her!
Barry Cowsill died in Hurricane Katrina, at age 51.
The Rain, The Park And Other Things - The Cowsills
I was upset that this song was used in JACKIE BROWN for the scene where Samuel L. Jackson pulls into a junkyard with a dead body in his trunk. Honestly, does Quentin Tarantino have to ruin EVERY damn thing? Certainly, I would have used the song for some sexy, steamy scene.
Quincy Jones, producer, made this sound super-pretty and dazzling; an aural cotton-candy confection. I'm sure it was quite the disappointment when performed in person! (Although you must admit: the outer space jumpsuits really make the song, too!)
Rainbows and waterfalls run through my mind.
Strawberry Letter 23 - The Brothers Johnson
Posted by
Daisy Deadhead
at
11:02 AM
Labels: 60s, 70s, Brothers Johnson, Burt Bacharach, classic country, Cowsills, Dionne Warwick, disco, funk, Johnny Cash, music, Quentin Tarantino, Quincy Jones, Susan Cowsill, TV, Waylon Jennings