Caught Up

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:11

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Andy Beta

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Andy Beta has written about music and comedy for the Wall Street Journal, the disco revival for the Village Voice, animatronic bands for SPIN, Thai pop for the ...more »

11.22.10
Millie Jackson, Caught Up
2006 | Label: Ace Records / IODA

Another concept record from Muscle Shoals, this one’s about a love triangle as sticky as the cover’s web, with the “other woman” voicing the first half, the shamed wife on the second. Listen to that hypnotic throb that Hawkins and Hood lock into for “(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don’t Want To Be Right” and hear the seeds for Portishead’s trip-hop sound. And when Jimmy Johnson’s guitar snakes in on “The Rap,” every bit as sultry as Millie Jackson’s raspy monologue, one can’t help but be caught up in this classic soul album.

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Great voice, good album

billymaci

Definitely worth a listen

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At Last! You Go Emusic!

MusiclLover1157

At last! This is one of my favorit albums out of my pass. Millie Jackson was raw and powerful. I'm so glad to see it here. I have been looking for this one for a long time. Thanks Emusic. Just keep getting better and better.

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A Classic

anorak

This is a gem of a record, great interpretations of classic songs-Millie Jackson has an amzing voice. This is the album that set the template for the rest of her career. Classic 70s soul.

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They Say All Media Guide

Taking the drama of a love triangle to logical extremes, Millie Jackson’s Caught Up turns the pitfalls of tainted love into the basis for a concept album (the seeds for soul music’s explicit treatment of the topic having been planted by James Carr’s “Dark End of the Street”). While the “other woman’s” view is taken up initially on cuts like the R&B hit “If Loving You Is Wrong I Don’t Want to Be Right,” the wife’s plight is covered on the second half of the disc with revealing titles like “It’s All Over but the Shouting.” Jackson also delivers some of her patented racy commentary on the appropriately named “The Rap,” while showing equal vigor in the album’s wealth of fine vocal performances, including an impressive cover of Bobby Womack’s “I’m Through Trying to Prove My Love to You.” Caught Up’s standout track, though, is the version of Bobby Goldsboro’s “Summer” that closes the record. Seemingly out of sync with the overriding concept, the song touches upon a girl’s loss of innocence to an older man. One soon realizes, though, that beyond sexual awakening, Jackson is really emphasizing the point of no return: After the epiphany, one is sent hurdling toward the power struggles and politics of adult relations, including, potentially, the moral crossroads of infidelity. Luckily, as soon as your mind overloads from pop semiotics, the in-the-pocket grooves supplied by the Muscle Shoals Swampers provides the needed salve. Jackson shows both brains and soul on this fine release, creating what might be the only concept album one can dance and drink to. – Stephen Cook

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