You Got My Mind Messed Up

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You Got My Mind Messed Up album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 35:09

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Classic Soul

Average-Nights-Jack

On a par with anything that The Big O ever did, this is genuine top class soul music. Great songs, by great song-writers - Dan Penn, Chips Moman, George Jackson etc. superbly interpreted by one of the best ever soul voices. Wow. And all I ever had in my collection before this was a 7 inch single of Freedom Train. Thanks eMusic.

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Great southern soul!

MAB78

It's great that emusic has the two Goldwax albums by James Carr. They are both excellent examples of prime 60s southern soul!

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The Greatest

MonkeyMod

The actual CD has 24 tracks: The twelve original LP songs plus twelve extra ones. This e-music version has the twelve plus (confusingly) two other songs not part of the CD's extra twelve. Got that?! Phew. Anyway - it's all bunkum. This is simply the greatest soul album ever made ("Otis Blue"? Pah! Lightweight!). You'll be hooked.

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(at least) last two tracks are mislabeled

biersquirrel

"Freedom Train" download is actually "To Love Somebody". "To Love Somebody" download is actually "Freedom Train". Caveat emptor.

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Something's missing...

Vaughn

Look closely at the cover art. It says, "Original 1966 Album plus 12 Bonus Tracks." Unless the original album was a single, I'd say this version is missing some songs.

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Greatest Southern Soul Album Ever Made

tncjoey

Really. Superlative to ever other album in the genre. J.C. + The Goldwax house band (Reggie Young on guitar, bobby emmons with some great organ parts, the memphis horns..... ) This is stirring stuff.

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They Say All Music Guide

If ever there was a soul singer who rivaled Otis Redding’s raw, deep emotional sensuality, it was James Carr, and the proof is in the pudding with You Got My Mind Messed Up. Carr was one of the last country-soul singers to approach any chart given to him as if it was a gift from God. Carr was Redding’s rival in every respect if for no other reason than the release of this, his debut album recorded in 1966. The 12 songs here, many of them covered by other artists, are all soul classics merely by their having been sung and recorded by Carr. Among them is the Drew Baker/Dani McCormick smash “Pouring Water on a Drowning Man,” George Jackson’s “Coming Back to Me Baby,” a handful of tracks by O.B. McLinton, including “Forgetting You” and the title track, and the Chips Moman/Dan Penn hit “Dark End of the Street.” And while it’s true that few have ever done bad versions of the song because of the phenomenal writing, there is only one definitive version, and that one belongs to Carr. In his version he sings from the territory of a heart that is already broken but enslaved both to his regret and his desire. This is a love so pure it can only have been illicit. When he gets to the beginning of the second verse, and intones “I know time is gonna take its toll,” he’s already at the end of his rope; he knows that desire that burns like this can only bring about ruin and disaster, and it is precisely since it cannot be avoided that his repentance is perhaps accepted by the powers that would try him and judge him. He holds the arrangement at bay, and unlike some versions, Carr keeps his composure, making it a true song of regret, remorse, and a love so forbidden yet so faithful that it is worth risking not only disgrace and destruction for, but also hell itself. As the guitar cascades down the fretboard staccato, he can see the dark end of the street and holds it as close to his heart as a sacred and secret memory. By the album’s end with the title track, listeners hear the totality of the force of Memphis soul. With Steve Cropper’s guitar filling the space in the background, Carr offers a chilling portrait of what would happen to him in the future. Again pleading with the beloved in a tone reminiscent of a church-singer hell, he’s in the church of love. He pleads, admonishes, begs, and finally confirms that the end of this love is his insanity, which was a chilling prophecy given what happened to Carr some years later. This is one of theMemphis soul records of the mid-’60s, full of rough-hewn grace, passion, tenderness, and danger. A masterpiece. – Thom Jurek

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