Closer to You | |
Type: | album |
Artist: | J. J. Cale |
Cover: | Closer to You cover.jpg |
Released: | August 23, 1994[1] |
Studio: | Capitol Studios, Hollywood, California, USA |
Genre: | Blues, Americana, Tulsa Sound |
Length: | 43:55 |
Label: | Delabel/Virgin |
Producer: | JJ Cale |
Prev Title: | Number 10 |
Prev Year: | 1992 |
Next Title: | Guitar Man |
Next Year: | 1996 |
Closer to You is the 11th studio album by J. J. Cale, released in 1994. It was published under the independent French label Delabel and distributed by Virgin Records.
Closer to You is best remembered for the change in sound from Cale’s previous albums due to the prominence of synthesizers, with Cale employing the instrument on five of the twelve songs. Although the use of synthesizers may have seemed like a left turn for hardcore fans used to his laidback, rootsy sound, it was not new; Cale had used synthesizers on his 1976 Troubadour album. In an interview with Vintage Guitar in 2004, Cale acknowledged the dismay some fans felt, recalling:
On Closer to You Cale used two bass players (electric and acoustic), three percussionists (including Jim Keltner), three guitarists (including Cale), two keyboardists (Spooner Oldham and Bill Payne), and three horn players. The horns are used on the closing track “Steve’s Song,” which AllMusic describes as a “hypnotically groovy instrumental.” The same review also complements the electronic treatment of Cale’s vocals on the title track, a technique that surprisingly makes him sound as down-to-earth as ever.” In truth, the majority of the songs boast the sound that Cale is so well-known for. The lusty “Slower Baby” and the breezy “Sho-Biz Blues” are characteristic Cale tracks, with the latter documenting the bleak realities of a musician’s life. (“The bus breaks down and the motel’s bad, you’re always in a stew…”) The foreboding “Borrowed Time” and “Brown Dirt” are meditations on mortality, the latter from the perspective of a Mississippi cotton picker who observes, “Brown dirt, somebody told me, be the last place you lay.” The gentle love song “Rose in the Garden” appeals for affection while the more direct “Like You Used To” asks a lover to “Tell me that you really love me, even if it ain't true.” The album also includes one live track, “Hard Love.”
AllMusic: “With the dazzling Closer to You, J.J. Cale finds ever-newer surprises in his own remarkable corner of the musical world.”
All songs written by J. J. Cale.
2. "Sho-Biz Blues" – 3:39
3. "Slower Baby" – 5:00
4. "Devil's Nurse" – 3:45
5. "Like You Used To" – 3:02
6 "Borrowed Time" – 4:13
7. "Rose in the Garden" – 3:00
8. "Brown Dirt" – 3:26
9. "Hard Love" – 4:18
10. "Ain't Love Funny" – 2:43
11. "Closer to You" – 2:46
12. "Steve's Song" – 4:02