Shuggie Otis – Ice Cold Daydream

By , May 17, 2011 11:40 am

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Mr John Alexander Veliotes

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Listen/Download – Shuggie Otis – Ice Cold Daydream

 

Greetings all.

I’m sitting here, looking out the windows of the Funky16Corners Blogcasting Nerve Center and Record Vault, looking at yet another grey, wet spring day and finding some small consolation in the fact that at least it’s not also freezing out.

So far the spring has been a huge letdown, with any sunshine or warmth generally coinciding with other responsibilities that preclude outdoor recreation. I know it will probably resolve itself and I’ll be bitching about the heat before long, but it’s just a drag.

Blaarrrghhh….

There…now that I have that out of my system, I should mention that next Monday, 5/23 I’ll be taking my 45 box back up to Spindletop @ Botanica to join my man Perry Lane for some of the most excellent sounds you’ve come to expect from that night. I have some interesting things in mind, so if you’re in the neighborhood drop by and grab yourself a barstool and something cold to drink so that you might soak up the vinyl goodness.

It’s also looking like the acquisition of some crucial equipment is in the offing, that should make the Funky16Corners Mobile Sound System (for all your soulful and funky needs) complete, so if you have a shindig coming up for which the addition of the best in funk, soul, jazz and rare groove would serve as the complement to the proceedings, drop me a line.

That said, the tune I bring you today is something upbeat and very groovy from the mighty Shuggie Otis.

Shuggie is a very interesting cat indeed. Son of Johnny, talented guitarist, songwriter and performer, Shuggie Otis was performing and recording at his father’s side from his very early teens, playing guitar on funky jams like ‘Watts Breakaway’ and ‘Country Girl’ (as well as stuff like Preston Love’s ‘Cool-Aid’) before heading into the studio and recording two of the great lost classics of the 70s, ‘Freedom Flight’ in 1971 and ‘Inspiration Information’ in 1974 (in actuality his third and fourth solo albums, his earlier stuff being mainly blues).

Though these records didn’t make much of dent in the public consciousness at the time,  the Brothers Johnson’s faithful cover of Shuggie’s ‘Strawberry Letter 23’ hit big on both the R&B and Pop charts in 1977, putting a little cash in Shuggie’s wallet.

Shuggie was all but forgotten when, in 2001 David Byrne’s Luaka Bop label reissued ‘Inspiration Information’ (with several tracks from ‘Freedom Flight’, including today’s selection), restoring him in the public consciousness, at least to the point where he became a respected cult figure.

At the time the hype machine was going full blast, with various and sundry alt-world figures hailing Shuggie as the great lost genius, and his music as some kind of ‘whole new thing’ that the world had missed the first time around.

While these albums are very cool, and evidence of a serious talent, the sounds on them are not without precedent. The early 70s was full of genre splicing/crossing artists (especially Sly Stone), mixing the same basic ingredients in different ways.

This isn’t to take anything away from Shuggie’s talent, or the quality of these two albums especially, which are both very cool, but rather an indicator that if they are new to you, they should be ingested with the hype pushed to the side.

‘Ice Cold Daydream’ was the flipside of Shuggie’s original version of ‘Strawberry Letter 23’ in 1971, and it’s a great example of the stew he was cooking, mixing funk, soul and rock sounds.

The tune rolls over a stop/start rhythm with a percolating Hammond organ running underneath, jumping repeatedly to an uptempo section with some groovy fuzz guitar. You can hear bits of Sly, Jimi Hendrix and Curtis Mayfield, but never so much that Shuggie’s vision is obscured.

Currently, of the two albums in question, only ‘Freedom Flight’ is available on iTunes, though you can get ‘Inspiration Information’ (which is out of print) fairly cheaply. Both ‘Freedom Flight’ and ‘Inspiration Information’ have also been reissued on vinyl as well.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll be back on Friday.

Peace

Larry

 

 

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3 Responses to “Shuggie Otis – Ice Cold Daydream”

  1. Ben C. says:

    Hey Larry, thanks for posting the Shuggie Otis. An Australian label released Here Comes Shuggie Otis/Freedom Flight together in 2003. You can get the CD on Amazon pretty cheap. Shuggie’s work with the great Al Kooper also comes highly recommended, as well. You can also hear a young Shuggie on the x-rated, party blues album Snatch & the Poontangs with his dad, Johnny.

  2. Mondo says:

    Love a bit of Shuggie, this tune’s a peach and a pip. Put him and Baby Huey on the same playlist and you can’t go wrong..

  3. Stu says:

    Will never forget how delighted I was to come across his original version of ‘Strawberry Letter 23’. Possibly in this very blog?!?

    Loved the Brothers Johnson version – it is a treasured childhood radio memory.

    Have since got my hands on the Luaka Bop CD you mention and it is very cool indeed, in my opinion!

    It’s a shame so many plastic, slut-pop dolly-boys and dolly-girls have multi-platinum careers, while true genius so often gets overlooked.

    Gotta love Shuggie! 🙂

    Stu, Glasgow, (Almost) Free Republic of Scotland (!)

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