Tag Archives: Girlgroup

Jackie DeShannon: Don’t Turn Your Back on Me / This is Jackie DeShannon

jackiedeshannon_dontturnthisisHit songwriter’s first two UK albums as a performer

Though Kentucky-born Jackie DeShannon had two major chart hits, a chart-topping 1965 version of Bacharach and David’s “What the World Needs Now is Love” and the 1969 original “Put a Little Love in Your Heart,” her work as a songwriter has commercially overshadowed her performing. The author of “Dum Dum,” “When You Walk in the Room,” “Come and Stay,” “Breakaway,” and “Bette Davis Eyes” has been represented on the charts for four decades, turning up on countless artist’s albums and greatest hits collections, but her own catalog of performances has had a difficult time gaining CD reissue.

A number of single-disc anthologies, including the Definitive Collection, Ultimate Jackie DeShannon, Come and Get Me and High Coinage have offered good overviews, but only in the past few years have her original albums found their way into the digital domain. This two-fer from BGO combines DeShannon’s first pair of British LPs, opening with the sensational rock sounds of 1964’s Don’t Turn Your Back On Me, and continuing with the more centrist orchestrations of 1965’s This is Jackie DeShannon. The jump from the debut’s pop, rock and folk-rock works to the industry productions of the sophomore release is stark, to say the least, and though the former is the more satisfying spin, the latter holds several charming works.

Don’t Turn Your Back On Me relies on Brill Building styled arrangements (courtesy of Phil Spector’s main man, Jack Nitzsche), with light violins adorning tracks powered by full-kit drumming, deep tympani, driving 12-string guitars and vocals that are both R&B rough and girl-group sweet. DeShannon’s original take of Nitzsche and Sonny Bono’s “Needles and Pins” is sung downbeat, making the vocal more tearfully bitter than the Searchers’ spitefully anxious hit cover. The mood recovers by song’s end, however, with DeShannon singing sassily across the beat and flinging away her pain.

Additional tunes from Jack Nitzsche (the girl-group “Should I Cry”) and Randy Newman (the stagey ballad “She Don’t Understand Him Like I Do,” the Lesley Gore styled “Hold Your Head High,” and the girl-group “Did He Call Today, Mama”), are complemented by DeShannon’s original version of her own “When You Walk in the Room.” The latter, taken again at a slower tempo than the Searchers’ hit cover, has an edgier vocal and wields the lyrical beat like a hammer. DeShannon’s voice turns to a Brenda Lee styled growl on “The Prince,” the 1950s R&B tune “It’s Love Baby (24 Hours a Day)” provides a fine 1960s rave-up, and her cover of “Oh Boy” charts the transition from Buddy Holly’s reign to the Beatles then-current dominance.

The two-fer arrangement of this CD finds the last track of Don’t Turn Your Back On Me, a rousing cover of Allen Toussaint’s “Over You” segueing into the muted brass introduction of “What the World Needs Now is Love,” which opens This is Jackie DeShannon. It’s a segue that was really meant to be heard with a year’s gap in between. With the rock drums and guitars stripped away and the arrangements turned to sweeping orchestrations, DeShannon still shines on covers of Gershwin’s “Summertime” and Bacharach and David’s “A Lifetime of Loneliness,” but mostly without the electricity of her earlier sides. The originals “Am I Making It Hard on You,” “Hellos and Goodbyes” and “I Remember the Boy” sound as if they were recorded during the sessions of the previous album.

“What the World Needs Now is Love” fit DeShannon like a glove, but the attempts to replicate its orchestrated formula weren’t as successful. In contrast, the album cuts on Don’t Turn Your Back On Me are enjoyable, if not hit single quality, as are the rock performances grafted on to This is Jackie DeShannon. This is a fine two-fer, though more for the debut than the follow-up, though even the latter has a number of cuts that will find space in your regular rotation. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Jackie DeShannon’s Home Page
Jackie DeShannon Appreciation Society

Jackie DeShannon: What the World Needs Now Is… Jackie DeShannon- The Definitive Collection

jackiedeshannon_definitiveFamous songwriter, underappreciated performer

American songwriter Jackie DeShannon had two monumental top-10 hits as a performer, her own “Put a Little Love in Your Heart” and an indelible cover of Burt Bacharach and Hal David’s “What the World Needs Now.” But even with major chart success, she’s been more commercially successful writing songs others brought to fame, including The Searchers’ “When You Walk in the Room,” Marianne Faithfull’s “Come and Stay With Me,” and Tracey Ullman’s “Breakaway.” Many of he compositions are perennial cover bait, returning to the charts in new versions by artists ranging from Dolly Parton to Al Green to Tom Petty to Pam Tillis.

As her own albums and hits collections show, however, her immense talent as a songwriter was matched by her work as a singer. Her original versions of “When You Walk in the Room” and “Breakaway” aren’t merely songwriter demos – they’re templates of the angst and joy that would mark every subsequent version. Her early version of “Needles and Pins,” written by Sonny Bono and Jack Nitzsche, has all the hooks that made the Searchers’ subsequent cover a hit, and her original take of “Till You Say You’ll Be Mine” showed a young Olivia Newton John just how the song should sound (the Searchers’ string-lined cover pales in comparison to both the ladies’ versions).

This 28-track collection spans 1958 to 1980, but focuses most heavily on DeShannon’s output for Liberty between 1959 and 1970. Both of her hit singles are here, along with singles the flopped and originals of songs that became hits for others. DeShannon proves herself to be much more than a songwriter trying to cut their own tunes, she’s a talented vocalist equally comfortable with chirpy rockabilly, pop, soul, girl group harmony, and especially chiming folk-rock. DeShannon’s later ballads (those recorded after the success of “What the World Needs Now is Love”) often suffered from mundane orchestrations, but this collection keeps such tracks to a minimum.

This 1994 set was nominally replaced in the EMI catalog by the cover-laden and less satisfying Ultimate Jackie DeShannon. Better is Raven’s Come and Get Me and its recent companion, High Coinage. Of the four, What the World Needs Now still provides the most balanced portrait of DeShannon’s key years and the best starting point into DeShannon’s catalog. All four collections feature tracks not on the other three, so you might pick up more than one, or use any of the four as a map to the recent original album reissues. Finally, the Ace volume Break-A-Way: The Songs of Jackie DeShannon provides a good helping of others’ covers of her writing. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Jackie DeShannon’s Home Page
Jackie DeShannon Appreciation Society

On Tour: The Hot Toddies

Oakland, California’s Hot Toddies hit the road to Southern California in March and the United Kingdom in April. Check out their version of Santa Baby, and visit their MySpace page for a bigger helping of their catchy pop.

California
March 11 San Francisco The Rickshaw Stop
March 19 Fresno Audie’s Olympic Tavern
March 20 Los Angeles Knitting Factory
March 21 San Diego Radio Room
March 27 San Francisco Red Devil Lounge

United Kingdom
April 2 Brighton Latest Bar (formerly Joogleberry)
April 3 London The Lexington
April 4 Portsmouth Edge of the Wedge
April 5 Exeter The Phoenix
April 6 Bristol Mother’s Ruin
April 7 Liverpool Bar Fresa
April 8 Preston Mad Ferret
April 9 Oxford The Cellar
April 10 Peterborough The Met Lounge

California
April 24 San Jose Nickel City Arcade

The Hot Toddies: Santa Baby

Free Song Download!

The Oakland, California four-piece girlpop Hot Toddies are gifting fans with a cover of an Eartha Kitt holiday classic.

MP3 | Santa Baby

For more of the Hot Toddies catalog, check out their first full-length CD, Smell the Mitten, or stream their songs on ReverbNation. Favorite cut: “Motorscooter.”

Hot Toddies’ MySpace Page