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Tamla T 54119 (B), August 1965
B-side of High Heel Sneakers
(Written by Willie Nelson)
This B-side – another live recording from the same Paris package tour show that yielded the energetic throwback topside High Heel Sneakers – was pulled in favour of Music Talk for international releases and later US pressings, which I’m always bound to find tantalising. Why did Motown second-guess themselves, and what was it about this that made them switch it out for something else?
Unfortunately, now that I come to actually play the thing, there’s nothing particularly exciting about Funny (How Time Slips Away). Not about what’s on the record, anyway; it’s a cover of a Willie Nelson song (which I haven’t heard and, frankly, can’t be bothered to look up right now), but I only discovered this from looking at the label, because it sounds very similar to a previous Stevie ballad, Tears In Vain. It’s set to almost the exact same tune, and the similarities are striking, right down to the unwelcome appearance of Stevie’s producer and handler Clarence Paul turning this into another duet nobody was asking for.
In fact, the more I play this, the more I’m getting a sense of why it was pulled. It’s not awful – I mean, for what it’s worth, I quite liked Tears In Vain – but this live retread is both redundant (because it’s less good) and confusing (because it’s less exciting, especially in a live setting).
Clarence Paul, again, has no business here, and the uncharitable stories about him trying to “grow his part”, crowbarring himself into his protégé’s spotlight in order to revive his own DOA performing career have rarely felt more plausible. He’s slightly less dominant over Stevie than on Tears In Vain (which makes sense in the live setting, given that presumably Stevie was the person who the French crowd paid to watch), but only slightly (it sounds as though he’s actually mic’ed up louder than Stevie), and while his vocal is decent enough, it’s still incongruous, competing rather than complementing, almost as if someone had decided the voice of his teenage charge wasn’t strong enough to carry a song like this in a setting like this without outside help.
Plus, as if Paul’s guest spot wasn’t enough, Stevie also has to contend with a stage band – presumably the corps of travelling Funk Brothers brought to Europe by Motown for a rare spell in the limelight – over-egging the pudding so as not to be left out, Earl Van Dyke in particular having lots of fun bashing whatever keys he feels like.
Maybe I’m being too hard on this. Maybe this is the sound of a bunch of great mates having a brilliant time; from Nelson George’s Where Did Our Love Go we read that Stevie, Clarence and the musicians all got on splendidly behind the scenes, sharing cigs and booze and prostitutes. Perhaps this is nothing more than a spontaneous expression of that laddish camaraderie. For all I know, the whole thing was Stevie’s idea; perhaps this is a much looser and more relaxed exercise than Motown had expected. Back in Detroit, the Paris live tapes were “edited and assembled” (whatever that means) for release by Robert Gordy, Bob Kayli himself, brother of the big boss, implying high-level supervision, and it’s impossible to know their reaction to this, nor what was cut out, nor why Motown then decided to quietly drop it.
But it’s still not all that good, regardless of whether it really is an off-the-cuff indulgence. It’s almost a quintessential example of “you had to be there”; on record, unlike the thrills of Fingertips or High Heel Sneakers, without being able to see the grins and sweat and dancing (or rather, without being able to see whether there was any grinning or sweat or dancing), it’s just impossible to hear what the fuss is about.
At worst, this is several older men indulging themselves at a starlet’s expense; at best, it’s some people we don’t really know all that well having a blast at someone else’s party, while we turn up late and then stand by the punch bowl and try to work out who’s who. I might nod my head, might smile, might dance a bit, but the fun isn’t inclusive, the in-jokes sail over my head, and I’m left feeling like a gatecrasher.
MOTOWN JUNKIES VERDICT
(I’ve had MY say, now it’s your turn. Agree? Disagree? Leave a comment, or click the thumbs at the bottom there. Dissent is encouraged!)
You’re reading Motown Junkies, an attempt to review every Motown A- and B-side ever released. Click on the “previous” and “next” buttons below to go back and forth through the catalogue, or visit the Master Index for a full list of reviews so far.
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Stevie Wonder “High Heel Sneakers” |
Stevie Wonder “Music Talk” |
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Dave L said:
If there’s any rendition of this song I truly enjoy, and return to more than any others. it’s Dorothy Moore’s 1976 version, as immediate follow-up to her breakthrough “Misty Blue,” and capturing all the bitterness in it that Nelson wrote.
The Supremes version is decent, not spectacular, but one of too-few reasons to even own Sing Country Western & Pop.
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bogart4017 said:
They should have left this one to Joe Hinton. He recorded and release THE superior version in 1964 on the Backbeat label out of texas.
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Nick in Pasadena said:
I also kinda like the biggest hit of this song, by Jimmy Elledge in 1961. He was an 18-year-old from Tennessee with an is-it-a-boy-or-is-it-a-girl quality to his voice, sort of like early Wayne Newton. But Joe Hinton does knock it out of the park.
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treborij said:
As Nick and Bogart stated, Joe Hinton had a huge hit with this tune in the fall of 1964 (top 20 on the pop charts). It had that bluesy/jazzy big band sound that characterized Bobby Bland’s tracks of the period. It’s pretty great and it’s the version I prefer.
This one sounds like a bunch of guys just knocking off a recent pop tune on a live date as filler because the main performer didn’t have that many recognizable hits on his own for the audience to recognize. Why Motown felt compelled to put this on a B side is anyone’s guess.
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144man said:
I had the pleasure of seeing Stevie and Clarence duet on this when the tour hit London. It was absolutely sensational and brought the house down.
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762rob said:
Good answer 144 man, and I’ll bet it was!
P.S. any of you who have not heard Joe Hinton’s version, you really should pick up on it….
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The Nixon Administration said:
Fascinating! Did the crowd (a) know who Clarence was, or (b) care?
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Robb Klein said:
Tamla119 with this B side must be dead rare (IF released AT ALL to shops or even distributors). I was looking for records from the time of its release, solidly through1984, and I’ve NEVER seen it (even in Thee Motown and Jobete Record Files. Clearly they pressed store stock copies (at leased the 6 press run test pressings). But, they must have destroyed almost all the store stock copies (or never actually had the run after the tests). I assume that the copy in the scan above was an official Motown reference copy (usually taken from the 6 press run test copies).
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Slade Barker said:
Nixon, years have passed & I certainly hope you bothered to find one of Willie Nelson’s versions of this song, as it’s not only one of the very best country songs ever written, it’s a soul standard which I can’t believe you haven’t encountered in other versions. At the very least, PLEASE listen to Al Green’s version. The Hi house band is, imho, the best studio house band of any label ever (sorry, Motown, you tie for #2 with the MG’s at Stax). PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE listen to Al Green’s version. It’s a scorcher. What an incredible song, and the lyrics tell a story with a TWIST. Listen closely. Stevie’s version is pretty good, too.
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therealdavesing said:
Clarence’s vision for Stevie was a huge miscalculation. He would have been much more Successful had he given Stevie the songs he was writing for Marvelettes, Marvin gaye, or Martha and the Vandellas. Stevie even co wrote You’re the one for me on Marvins moods album. He definitely could have sung that and it would have been better this.
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