Today is the birthday of Laura Nyro, whose songs were big hits
for the likes of the 5th Dimension and Three Dog Night, vocal groups in the Top
Forty in the late Sixties and early Seventies. The song of hers I knew and
liked best was “And When I Die” as recorded by Blood, Sweat and Tears. I didn’t
hear Nyro’s versions of her own songs till way later—early this century, in
fact. One thing the internet did,
besides making lyrics to most any song available, was make info on almost any
musical artist available. Searching for figures who had become somewhat “obscure”
by then led me to a few finds. Nyro died in 1997, and that fact caused a
certain revival which is probably what made me seek her out.
Today’s song is from the album of hers I like best. It’s the
second of the three I know—the earliest, which was recorded for Verve in 1967,
was re-released by Columbia as The First
Songs and features “And When I Die” and “Stoney End,” two of my favorites
as well, but the recording quality—or maybe it’s the CD quality—isn’t as good
as on the second album. The third, which
seems to be the critics favorite, is New
York Tendaberry (1969), which is certainly the most complex but less “pop”
in arrangements. It’s the pop quality of Nyro’s writing that allowed others to
have such big hits with her songs, and I miss that quality when she lets it
languish for too long. There are other qualities as well—particularly, on Eli and the 13th Confession, a gospel
feel that lets her “rave” a bit. She has a very aggressive singing style, not
at all “pretty,” full of passion and, at times, subdued frenzy. It takes some
getting used to. To say nothing of an operatic register.
“Eli’s Coming” won out as my choice over “Sweet Blindness”
which is an infectious rave-up that always makes me feel good—listen to how she
slurs “ain’t gonna tell ya what I been drinkin.’” “Eli” is more brooding, a
song that Three Dog Night treat to way too much bombast. Nyro’s version is
slinkier, sultry, with an interplay between her voices, multi-tracked to sing
with herself. And her piano playing is so insistent. The horns kicking in with
the “better walk, walk, but you’ll never get away” really stir it up.
My favorite parts are the opening and the siren-song-like
return around 2:47, then that funkier groove, 3:00, with the breathy “better
hide your heart, girl” (3:07), setting off the intertwining of different vocal
lines that carries the whole thing up a notch for a full minute of wailing
vocals overlapping at the end. The caution against Eli starts to feel like a “play
hard to get” strategy, though not without risk. “You’ll never get away”
because, apparently, you can’t really hide your heart from yourself. So even if
you can elude Eli, you can’t deny what you want. “Cry, but he’s never gonna
follow” might be suggesting that, after all, Eli’s not the one in need. “He’s
comin’ to get me, mama” as though there’s just something about him that gets to
her and that, if she doesn’t hide her heart, she’s lost.
As a song sung by a woman to herself, that dimension of
trying to deny the pull to Eli gets registered in how stirred up the vocals
are. And yet there’s no denying that the hiding feels necessary, a coping
mechanism, as does the urgency of trying to get away “from the burn and the
heartache.” What I love about the song is the way it’s so torchy and yet also
has this insistence that it won’t let that flame subsume the spirit. She might
be able to get away from it, intact, in the end.
2 comments:
I've Loved this song since childhood, but I only recently got to hear the true version. Laura should have been the one to have the hits - none of the covers can compare with the sheer amount of Heart and Soul this amazing Lady packed into her performances.
Agreed!
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