In classic soul songs, life often just isn't fair. True love doesn't work out, fate takes a wrong turn, hard work goes unrewarded.
Charles Bradley knew plenty about what made soul music great, and it was sad but somehow fitting that, after decades of struggle and disappointment,
Bradley finally started receiving the acclaim he deserved after he cut his first album in 2011 at the age of 62, only to succumb to cancer in 2017. To honor
Bradley's passing, Dunham/Daptone Records has released
Black Velvet, a collection of rarities and unreleased material that
Bradley cut during his tenure with the label, and while this album lacks the thematic coherence of the three LPs he cut in his lifetime, this certainly demonstrates the skill, passion, and emotional intelligence that
Bradley brought to his music. Working with producer and bandleader
Tommy "TNT" Brenneck,
Bradley consistently delivered performances that made clear he wasn't merely inspired by legendary vocalists like
Otis Redding,
James Brown, and
Wilson Pickett, he fashioned a style that took elements of their trademark sounds and fused it into a musical imagination with a lyrical gift that was very much his own. Matched by the rich dynamics of
Brenneck's backing tracks,
Bradley sings his stories of life and love with a straight-from-the-gut sound that's genuine and never histrionic, no matter how forceful he sounds. Since
Bradley had an unexpected success with his cover of
Black Sabbath's "Changes," it should surprise no one that there are some offbeat takes on rock tunes included on this set, and he transforms
Nirvana's "Stay Away" so totally that you might not recognize it at first, and while his take on
Neil Young's "Heart of Gold" follows the original a bit more closely, the weary grit of his interpretation captures the sorrow and introspection of
Young's lyrics brilliantly. And the moody psychedelic washes of "(I Hope You Find) The Good Life" prove to be an inspired match for
Bradley's mournful lyrics, even when he interpolates "The Way We Were" and "Go Away Little Girl."
Black Velvet is a collection of odds and ends and not a proper album, and sometimes it sounds that way as it moves from track to track. But it is full of the heart, soul, and spirit that
Charles Bradley summoned every time he stood before a microphone, and this is a moving reminder of how much he gave us, and how much we have lost.