Recorded more than six years after The New Folk Sound, this was the first
album to feature Terry Callier's unusual hybrid sound. The combination
of a rich baritone voice and his unique blues/folk/jazz songwriting are
met by just a touch of Andy Williams' zim, making Occasional Rain the
best of his albums from the early '70s. Often prone to expansive, wandering
melodies, Callier has written a tightness into most of the songs here
that would generally be abandoned on the records to follow. Two of his
most recognizable songs, "Ordinary Joe" and "Lean on Me,"
make their appearance and are joined by fragments of "Go 'Head On,"
which are interspersed throughout and provide a conceptual framework for
the album as a whole. Highly accessible, this album conjures an intimate
and relaxed mood, perfect for that lazy weekend morning.
(by Joshua David Shanker, All
Music Guide)
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Occasional Rain, originally released in 1972, is the first
of three albums, Chicago singer/songwriter Terry Callier cut for Cadet in
the 1970s with producer Charles Stepney. Eight years earlier Callier, then
a soulful blues and folk singer, cut an album of covers (as was par for
the course in 1964 at the end of the folk revival, Bob Dylan was just getting
his momentum) for Prestige, but it was shelved until 1968 and went nowhere.
Callier spent the intervening time touring coffeehouses and small clubs
around the country until he signed with Cadet. While the voice is most certainly
the same, the nearly alchemical transformation of his sound via his own
songwriting and the way those songs were treated by Stepney
is still mind-boggling. Occasional Rain is recorded as a suite; not quite
a concept album, there are segues all titled "Go Head On" fading
in and out that introduce various stages in the recording. Stepney put together
a band led by Callier's excellent acoustic guitar playing, his own harpsichord
and organ, pianist Leonard Pirani, bassist Sydney Simms, and drummer Bob
Crowder it's the leanest production job in their collaboration. The
beautiful touch, though, is Stepney adding a backing chorus with sopranos
Minnie Riperton and Kitty Haywood, and contralto Shirley Wahls! The nearly
baroque soul sound is heard almost immediately on the classic "Ordinary
Joe." The organ and harpsichord momentarily offer the false impression
of horns in a pulsing 4/4 before Callier lays out the poetic truth of his
protagonist: "For my openin' line/I might try to indicate my state
of mind/Or turn you on-or tell you that I'm laughin'/Just to keep from cryin'...Now
I've seen a sparrow get high/And waste his time in the sky/He thinks it's
easy to fly/he's just a little bit freer than me..." The jumbled images
are met with the swell of a taut, killer band; they give him more room out
there on the ledge to let his freely associated snapshots articulate into
a whole that expresses a transition from heartbreak to resistance to determination,
to a holistic spirituality and ultimately to hope as he transfers it from
his own view to the woman he is addressing. Whew. These cats could have
recorded for Buddah backing the Lemon Pipers, but Stepney keeps it from
any saccharine sweetness, and makes it all flow into the direct expression
of deep emotion.
"Golden Circle" follows, with that choir in the backdrop flowing
in and out of a very scaled back mix where acoustic piano and Callier's
acoustic guitar lead the flow of this deep expression of love as vulnerability.
The grain in Callier's voice is very masculine, but its tenderness is
total, his words poetic; sophisticated yet very direct. The added cello
on "Trance on Sedgwick Street," by Earl Madison, makes for the
startling juxtaposition of hard, street-tough truth and a critical examination
of spirituality. Callier's guitar and that multi-tracked cello are devastatingly
effective. The folk and blues roots in Callier's writing and singing just
pour from this tune, but Stepney understands that these are soul tunes,
so he creates bridges from one tradition to the next, making it a seamless
whole.
The other classic tune from this session is the title cut. This beautiful
and startling psychedelic soul tune is unlike anything else in Callier's
catalog. Stepney adds multi-channel sound effects, tiny little organ tones
that float through each channel beginning at the end of certain lines
seemingly randomly. As an acoustic guitar plays atop a church organ which
swells in the middle eight to fill out a shelf underneath Callier's voice,
it feels like an entire universe floating between one channel and the
next (especially on headphones!). It can even be startling, as those sounds,
even though they are expected, are kind of a shock you'll need
to listen through it a couple of times to get the full meaning of the
Callier's gorgeous songwriting. In reference to the "Go Ahead On":
they are the only direct reference to the blues roots in the songwriter's
past and are very effective at both establishing that musical continuum
and highlighting this wonderful new direction. This record is tight in
a way the other Callier titles are sprawling. Here he holds the songs
in check, and Stepney supports that while expanding the sonic palette
that frames them. Certainly "Blues for Marcus," touches on those
blues roots, to be sure, but the cellos and the decorative acoustic guitar
turn it into a soul tune. That's what happens in the hands of two masters
who know how to work together. Callier probably had no idea he was so
inspired until he and Stepney began to tease the genius out of the songs
on tape and illustrate them in such an organic yet wildly expansive way.
The final cut "Lean on Me" (not to be confused with the Bill
Withers tune of the same name) sends the set out on the highest of high
notes: Callier's voice is so firm and determined, but his gentleness is
not to be underestimated. The empathic dedication in his singing
and its encouragement by that chorus of women makes the track and
the album transcendent.
(by Thom Jurek, All
Music Guide)
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