The Soul Truth
Shemekia Copeland
Shemekia
Copeland has no patience with the wrong kind of men on "The Soul Truth"
(Alligator). She doesn't just leave them; she tells them exactly why
she's going, what they did wrong and how much better she's going to feel
when she's back on her own. Ms. Copeland is the 26-year-old daughter of
the bluesman Johnny Clyde Copeland, who grew up in Texas and moved to
New York City, and she was born to belt. She has a big, bright voice
with a switchblade rasp, and on "The Soul Truth" she finds the ideal
settings for it.
Ms. Copeland
has sung plenty of blues on previous albums, but "The Soul Truth" is
unabashed 1960's soul. The album is produced by Steve Cropper, the
guitarist and songwriter from the great Stax Records studio band in the
1960's. He collaborated on some of the songwriting, and his guitar is at
the center of arrangements with a lean backbeat, rollicking piano (by
Chuck Leavell from the Allman Brothers Band and the Rolling Stones) and
an ever-alert horn section. Unlike many soul-revival productions, the
album supplies her with songs worthy of the treatment.The melodies are
chiseled and the lyrics are tough and funny: "Breakin' Out" compares
divorce to a jailbreak, while in "All About You," which Ms. Copeland
helped write, she realizes that "We're all through, because I could
never love you as much as you do." Even when she's complaining about the
state of the airwaves in "Who Stole My Radio?" - "I want passion, I want
feeling/ I want to be rocked from the floor to the ceiling" - her terms
are amorous and uncompromising.
--
JON PARELES