We'll start with Arkansas' own Bob Dorough:
That handsome young gentleman happened to be one of Miles Davis' favorite singers, recruited after the notoriously prickly trumpeter was impressed by his lyrical rendition of Charlie Parker's "Yardbird Suite." One result of their collaborations was a rare Miles Davis album track with vocals, "Nothing Like You," on the Sorcerer LP. Dorough later experienced some-what of a comeback and gained more mainstream fame as the singer responsible for "Conjunction Junction," "Three is a Magic Number," and a lot of other Schoolhouse Rock fare. I'll pause while you re-live your childhood.
This album, released in 1966, is (for me at least) his definitive
release. It doesn't exactly resemble the Miles Davis' era or the Schoolhouse Rock period
of Dorough's career - but it does seamlessly blend the talents that
make his entire discography worth examining. Backed by the elegant trio
of guitarist Al Shackman, bassist Ben Tucker and drummer Percy Brice,
Dorough's sophisticated piano and idiosyncratic voice carry the record
through jazz, folk and blues without dropping a beat.
Among my
favorite tracks are the spectral "Lazy Afternoon," the traditional
adaptation (but seemingly autobiographical) "Crawdad Song," and a much
better-than-you'd-expect version "Don't Think Twice," by esteemed
contemporary (perhaps you've heard of him?) Bob Dylan.
I picked
up this album during my one and only visit to State College,
Pennsylvania for a measly three bucks, intrigued by Miles' brief
mention of him in his autobiography, and brought it back to Ann Arbor
only to find out Bob Dorough was a life-long friend of my roommate
Theo's family. Theo's father, jazzman Lee Katzman, is a book unto
himself, so I can't begin to expound on him in a mere blog post, but
his close relationship to Dorough is the crowning seal of approval for
this chronically underrated singer.
Link to download Bob Dorough's Just About Everything ripped from my vinyl copy