eMusic Review 0
He wasn’t as smooth as either Jackie Wilson (who emulated him) or Sam Cooke, and he was often shackled with syrupy, middle-of-the-road arrangements, but Clyde McPhatter was a radical vocalist, abundantly gifted with every conceivable cultural trick of the interpretive trade. His singing was subversive: He would use the cluttered treacle provided to him as a foil for his melismatic gymnastics. His resources were nearly limitless: If Wilson and Cooke were ultimately looking for acceptance among the supper club set (and, in a sense, this proved the artistic undoing of both), McPhatter knew that the success of his material was to be found in maintaining a purity of approach in the midst of the most unlikely settings.
He also waged a kind of ongoing guerilla war with his producers and songwriters. As Lover Please: The Complete MGM & Mercury Singles illustrates, it was a battle he nearly always won. The preposterousness of the material he was given turned out to be a strange kind of asset. Because his genius came from elevating kitsch to rock ‘n’ roll art, it was necessary that he work from a starting point of extreme disadvantage. If any reasonably endowed vocalist could find something… read more »