Sharon Davis reminisces with black music fan
Dusty
Springfield - tagged Britain's "white negress".
So, here we were, sipping diet coke, lounging in The Churchill Hotel late
one Tuesday night, when Dusty Springfield - dressed in soft spring colours,
with her large expressive, mascara-ed eyes and long pink fingernails
flashing to emphasise a point - was an absolute treasure as we
sauntered down a musical memory lane.
The two hour journey wasn't without interruption ("Can't you see I'm trying
to do an interview here!!") but nonetheless she persevered and perhaps
spent a little longer talking than originally intended.
Black music lovers will recall Ms Springfield's two critically acclaimed
1969/1970 albums "Dusty in Memphis" and "A Brand New Me"
(UK - "From Dusty . . . With Love"), her regular involvement with the racey,
innovative Friday night music TV programme Ready Steady Go, hosting "The
Sound of Motown" and her participation in an American Motown Revue. And
naturally some of these came into the conversation.
However, before getting into these "rather heady days", Dusty spoke of her
current soul favourite, Luther Vandross. "He's a master at making the
most of a song" she gushed. "Sometimes he decorates too much, but that's Luther.
"If I wanted to do very soulful things now, I don't think I would. I have
influences but I don't think I'd try to do that here. We have our own ways.
I think bands like Soul II Soul are soulful but in a different way; it's
that wonderful mixture of sounds which I couldn't do. The closest I come to
this on my new album (Reputation released this month) where I sound free
and happy is on "Send It To Me". It has a slight wit to it and kinda lopes
along; it's also very sparse. What you have is a Womack & Womack quality.
It's simplicity and was a reaction to a lot of complicated stuff. I just
wanted a song that was straight ahead."
It was over two decades ago when Dusty first flew her Motown crusading flag;
she promoted the music in interviews, performed cover-versions on TV and
recorded the company's tracks on albums. Why Motown?
"It was so obviously better than a lot of things that were happening.
They were really good songs done extremely rhythmically. It was the first
time there had been that type of song structure. Some of them were sloppy but
it was this sloppiness that made them attractive. I noticed a lot of it was
to do with the bass player, the drummer's licks, Holland, Dozier and
Holland, and musicians like James Jamerson if you were lucky! That was the
'motor' of Motorcity. You could put anything on top of it and it would
still sound like Motown.
"The artists were probably secondary, and certainly there were a lot of
people who sang but who didn't last. Whether it was because they got worn out by the
situation, I don't know. They were talented and certainly you could put
all sorts of vocal people over an absolutely splendid bass line and have a
hit."
Her love of this music inevitably got her into trouble, particularly with
British musicians in the studios. "I was swiping things left, right and
centre to record, wasn't I! It was pretty phenomenal to get that sound
because the guys I had to work with - they were all sweethearts (she
smiled) - but they were all playing standard basses. I was actually the
first person to ask them to play a Fender bass. I really was a stickler
for just getting there, just as close as I could, and that's where my
reputation came from because I kept saying 'no, that's not it' and
so on."
Despite Dusty's close involvement with the artists, nobody asked her to join Motown,
a move, she said, that wouldn't have been right at the time. "The climate wasn't
right. I would have been intimidated because I was in awe of them and I
don't sing well when I'm in awe. I usually sing better in England.
"A few white singers did try it and they didn't last . . . Chris Clark,
Kiki Dee . . . I think Motown was right not to ask me. In retrospect,
I'm glad they didn't because I might have accepted, and I wanted to
stumble along on my own, make my own blunders."
Mid way through the Sixties, the lady flew to America to join a touring Motown Revue
comprising some of the company's finest like Martha and the Vandellas,
The Supremes, The Temptations and Marvin Gaye, under the auspices of
deejay Murray the K.
"I remember it was the era of Beatlemania and Murry the K liked to consider
himself as the fifth Beatle. He thought I was from Liverpool and decided he'd got
to have me! There were a couple of other white acts on the show, I think Jay and the Americans
were there . . . Murry hedged his bets with a few white acts.
"I mostly hung out with The Ronettes who, as you know weren't Motown, and
shared a dressing room with them, which was an extraordinary experience!
Y'know, it was like 104 degrees in this very, very small dressing room, and
all our beehives were in there - three black beehives and one white one!
It was collisions constantly!
"Next door were Martha and the Vandellas, and the other side The Supremes.
I remember Mary Wilson was always reading Latin books and Diana Ross' mum
helped me turn my hems up because I was always buying things that were too long!
I had a lot of good times, very heady times being involved in that period.
After all, what could be more stimulating than listening to the brass
arrangements of The Temptations from the side of the stage. That was heaven
to me. Mind you, I didn't like performing there or anything else but I
wanted to stand at the side of the stage and soak it all up so that I could
use it.
"But I could never get anyone to do it! And this is where I got this
priceless reputation of being difficult in the studios over here
because I was always asking the musicians to do things they couldn't
understand."
Apart from performing on this tour, Dusty became one of Martha's Vandellas.
The blonde singer laughed - "We started the show at ten in the morning and
it went on until one/two the following morning. We only sang two or three
songs each but it meant being in the theatre all the time, and there was
always a Vandella missing! Since they were singing back-up for Marvin Gaye from
the wings, I used to do it. I never actually got to go on stage with them
but I knew exactly how to sound like a Vandella . . . and a Shirelle if it
came to that.
"I know how to do that stuff to this day. I can still go off into my
Shirley Alston impression. Whoever it was I wanted to be, I'd slavishly
copy them because we hadn't caught on to them in this country so I could
get away with it."
Her involvement with and influences from black music showed so dramatically
in Dusty's recordings (check her first album A Girl Called Dusty and
"I certainly wasn't offended" she smiled, trying to get her lighter to
ignite, before adding "In fact I don't think it had any impact on me at all."
However, the title did cause a lot of resentment and she cited one instance.
"It's not much fun having a glass of whisky thrown in your face by Nina Simone
who called me a honky and resented me being alive! She was having a few
problems which I thought I could solve by being nice. Huh, I was still as
naive as ever! I was on a crusade of being helpful to people who had
problems and I was warned not to approach her but . . . I knew better,
didn't I?"
Ms Springfield might have resisted joining Motown but she did sign with
Atlantic Records to release the two previously mentioned superb albums.
Ahmet Ertegun heard "Some Of Your Lovin'" and begged her to record for
Atlantic once she was contractually free. Dusty said the albums were largely
recorded from fear as she remembered her first visits to the studios.
"I got destroyed when someone said 'stand there, that's where Aretha stood'
or 'stand there, that's where Percy Sledge sang "When A Man Loves a Woman"'.
I became paralysed by the ghosts of the studio! I knew that I could sing the
songs well enough, but it brought pangs of insecurity . . . that I didn't
deserve to be there. I just knew that Aretha's drummer was going to say
'ain't she a piece of shit'. It's the most deflating thing you can say to
me that somebody I adore and worship actually stood there and probably
delivered an effortless performance while I'm slogging away trying to get
it right. They meant well but they didn't realise what they were doing."
Yet, after playing the albums again, the fear brought out some of the
finest tracks Dusty has recorded, and probably is likely to. She agreed.
"It's funny because I hated those sessions. But the albums do say
everything about the patience those guys had. They worked with me until they
got it out of me.
"Probably the irony of those whole sessions was that I was so crippled
with laryngitis they could only record me two or three words at a time.
Yet, there are notes on the albums that I've never sung again, they're
stratospheric. They're so high. I'd be revving up and I'd
just go for it. When I didn't make it I'd do it again until I did.
It was rough!"
Rough or not, I bet she loved every damned minute.
Sharon Davis
Blues & Soul, Vol.564, 1990