At 3:31 the title cut of Joan Armatrading's 1977 album Show Some Emotion is easily under the four-minute requirement of a perfect pop tune. It also has a sweet melody and just enough emotional force. I'm surprised Armatrading's gem has not been covered often, because it seems like a great vehicle for a variety of possibilities. If you're among the few that are familiar with Armatrading's original, you should also check out Vicki Genfan's 2008 acoustic version.
In short I recommend "Show Some Emotion" to everybody's mix. Armatrading's voice, full of stance and nuance (Robert Christgau), should please most people, and the simple, bluesy production has aged well.
Time lapse judgment
When Police released Ghost in the Machine in 1981 I was excited to review it for the college newspaper. My memory is I was cool to it, or cooler to it than Police's preceding album, Zenyatta Mondatta. Later Synchronicity became my favorite release by this group, and I forgot about Ghost.
But almost 40 years have passed, and I'm listening to Ghost (remastered) again, not having returned to it until now. I'm not sure what has changed during that time; me certainly, but what about me in relation to changes of judgment? I'm can't find a reason not to like anything about the serious fun that is Ghost in the Machine. The music has aged as well as the great cover art. I know a little about the group's dynamics and its move away from the raw trio sound, but I can put all of that out of mind and listen to this, from start to finish, and over and over.
Favorite cuts for a playlist: the first and the last—"Spirits in the Material World" and "Darkness."
Wow! rarely
When a person has lived as long as I have and sampled as much music as I have, it becomes less frequent that "something new" causes a Wow! reaction. And yet, the less frequent occasion is still as potent and still as humbling as the more common Wows of one's youth.
Sun Ra, Super Sonic Jazz, 1956—Wow! I have seen Pat Patrick play (in concert with NRBQ in the 80s) and I am familiar with Julian Priester and Charles Davis, but my previous exposure to the Arkestra as an ensemble was from later recordings. My previous exposure was not as compelling as this session, which could be explained by my ears being not as open or experienced.
If you haven't been exposed to Sun Ra and His Arkestra, I recommend this date; it's paired with Fate in a Pleasant Mood, from 1961. Both sessions are very enjoyable.
Bud Powell was still alive and playing
Haven't you noticed how the contemporary scene in any domain is often tough on the old lion? Bud Powell was only 38 years old when he recorded with Dexter Gordon on Our Man in Paris. Powell endured a difficult, short life; he sustained serious head injuries during a police beating when he was only 20. So in a sense Powell got old very young.
Powell's playing could be erratic and he was near the end when he recorded with Gordon in Europe. At this time in the idiom's history, Thelonious Monk and Horace Silver and Bill Evans are probably among the most well-known piano players. McCoy Tyner and Herbie Hancock and Andrew Hill were among other rising stars. In the 60s Powell probably wasn't placing in any readers' or critics' polls, but there is a lot to enjoy about his contributions to the Gordon date. The remastered Rudy Van Gelder Edition released in 2007 includes a piano trio playing "Like Someone in Love."