Track Listing 1. Bring It on Home to Me 2. Never Give You Up 3. Girl I Love You 4. Hobo 5. I Need You Woman 6. I've Never Found a Girl 7. I'll Take Her 8. Slip Away 9. I'm Just the Kind of Fool 10. Water 11. Sweet Things You Do 12. Knock on Wood 13. Raise Your Hand 14. Love Is a Doggone Good Thing 15. On a Saturday Night 16. Things Get Better 17. Big Bird 18. Got to Make a Comeback 19. I've Just Been Feeling Bad 20. This House 21. I've Got to Have Your Love 22. Consider Me 23. Never Let You Go 24. Ain't That Good 25. Laurie
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Isaac Hayes, Issac Hayes | | Distributor: | Fantasy (distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: Eddie Floyd, Booker T. Jones, Steve Cropper, Donald "Duck" Dunn, Al Jackson Jr., Wayne Jackson, Andrew Love, Ben Cauley, Joe Arnold, Ed Logan. RARE STAMPS brings together selections from veteran soul singer Eddie Floyd's I'VE NEVER FOUND A GIRL and CHRONICLE: GREATEST HITS albums. Floyd had made a name for himself as an ace songwriter on prior work but this collection reveals his skills as a vocalist. His actual vocal style is more laid back and a little smoother than that of his Stax peers. The album was written for his deceased labelmate, Otis Redding. Floyd and the band turn the lament into an ominous cry. There is menace to the music, heartbreak turned inward and transformed into something far darker. The Stax house band, Booker T. and the MG's, provides a flawless canvas for Floyd. The loping bass pulse that introduces "Bring it on to Me" provides a background that's ideal for Floyd's voice. The band pumps up for the rollicking "Hobo," an insistent tune that pushes Floyd further than he's usually accustomed to going. "Big Bird" takes things even further. The mighty Mavis Staples (the earth-moving voice behind the Staple Singers' "I'll Take You There") even shows up near the end of the collection for two tunes.
Editorial Reviews 3 stars out of 5 - ...Every big hit or important disc of [Floyd's] career is found here..even the most casual fan can't help but realise why they call this music 'soul'. Q (06/01/2002)
| See an error? Submit a change request |