Pure Smokey | |
Caption: | 1977 single face label |
Artist: | George Harrison |
Album: | Thirty Three & 1/3 |
Released: | 19 November 1976 |
Genre: | Soul, jazz rock |
Length: | 3:56 |
Label: | Dark Horse |
Producer: | George Harrison with Tom Scott |
"Pure Smokey" is a song by English musician George Harrison, released in 1976 on his debut album for Dark Horse Records, Thirty Three & 1/3. The song was the second of Harrison's musical tributes to American soul singer Smokey Robinson, following "Ooh Baby (You Know That I Love You)" in 1975. Harrison frequently cited Robinson as one of his favourite vocalists and songwriters, and Robinson's group the Miracles had similarly influenced the Beatles during the 1960s. In the lyrics to "Pure Smokey", Harrison gives thanks for the gift of Robinson's music, while making a statement regarding the importance of expressing appreciation and gratitude, rather than forgetting to do so and later regretting it. The song title came from the name of Robinson's 1974 album Pure Smokey.
Harrison recorded "Pure Smokey" at his Friar Park home studio in Henley, Oxfordshire. Jazz musician Tom Scott provided production assistance and the song features musical contributions from Scott, Richard Tee, Willie Weeks and Alvin Taylor, together with a pair of highly regarded guitar solos from Harrison. Several reviewers recognise the song as superior to "Ooh Baby", due in part to its more authentic musical setting; Harrison biographer Simon Leng views the track as its composer's most successful excursion in the soul music genre. "Pure Smokey" appeared as the B-side to the second single from Thirty Three & 1/3 in the UK, which was Harrison's cover of the Cole Porter standard "True Love".
During the Beatles' career, according to author Ian MacDonald, George Harrison had served as the band's "scout" regarding new American music, particularly soul music.[1] In 1975, Harrison released Extra Texture, his most soul-influenced album,[2] [3] with songs such as "You", "Can't Stop Thinking About You" and "The Answer's at the End" all demonstrating his adoption of the genre.[4] Another track, "Ooh Baby (You Know That I Love You)", was a homage to "Ooo Baby Baby" by Smokey Robinson,[5] [6] the Miracles' lead singer whose music had a considerable influence on Harrison and John Lennon during the 1960s.[7] [8] Among the frequent compliments he paid the American singer in interviews, Harrison often praised Robinson as a songwriter,[9] [10] noting in his 1980 autobiography, I Me Mine: "one tends to forget how many good tunes he has written."[11] After coming up with the song's "nice chord changes", as he puts it in I Me Mine, Harrison wrote a more personal musical tribute to Robinson in 1975,[12] titled "Pure Smokey" after Robinson's 1974 album of the same name.
In the lyrics to the song's first verse, Harrison acknowledges the tendency to forget to show appreciation for something:[13]
He then refers to all those who have influenced and inspired him musically,[14] in the line "Love that's filled my ears", before stating: "I want to thank you Lord for giving us Pure Smokey."[15] Harrison offers further praise for Robinson's music in the words "Now anyone who hears, hears that voice so free",[16] and in the same middle eight he references the Miracles' hit song "You've Really Got a Hold on Me". The latter was written by Robinson and, through the Beatles' 1963 cover version, which Robinson himself endorsed in a 1968 interview,[17] one of Harrison's earliest recorded lead vocals (as a duet with Lennon).
In the song's final verse, Harrison compliments what he would describe in a 1987 Musician interview as Robinson's "effortless butterfly of a voice", as well as his willingness to experiment as an artist:
Harrison biographer Simon Leng comments that musically the song reflects "many years' flipping of Atlantic and Stax classics" by Harrison, as well as his work over 1969–70 with two soul/R&B artists signed to the Beatles' Apple record label, Billy Preston and Doris Troy.[18] Christian theologian Dale Allison describes "Pure Smokey" as a "prayer of thanks to God for the music of Smokey Robinson".
Having fulfilled his contractual obligations to EMI-affiliated Apple Records with Extra Texture,[19] Harrison recorded "Pure Smokey" for his debut album on his Dark Horse record label, Thirty Three & 1/3.[20] Beginning in May 1976, the album sessions took place at FPSHOT, Harrison's home studio at Friar Park in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire.[21] The musicians accompanying him on the track were jazz saxophonist and arranger Tom Scott, Richard Tee on Fender Rhodes piano, bassist Willie Weeks and drummer Alvin Taylor.[22] The latter had recently played on 2nd Resurrection by Chicago soul group the Stairsteps,[23] one of a number of acts signed to Dark Horse Records since 1974.[24] Together with the Taylor–Weeks rhythm section,[25] Scott's role as assistant producer on Thirty Three & 1/3 gave the album a sound that was more authentic in the American soul genre compared with Harrison's self-produced Extra Texture.[26] Author Michael Frontani describes Taylor and Weeks as "one of the best rhythm sections to appear on a Harrison album".[27]
The released recording begins with a gradual fade-in, creating an effect that author Elliot Huntley describes as "shimmering". Over this introduction and during the mid-song instrumental break, Harrison overdubbed electric guitar solos that mark a rare departure from his traditional preference for slide guitar soloing throughout his post-Beatles solo career.[28] Overdubs on the track, including Harrison's backing vocals and Scott's various horn parts, were completed by 13 September 1976, after Harrison had been waylaid with hepatitis for much of the summer.[29] [30]
Thirty Three & 1/3 was released in November 1976, with "Pure Smokey" appearing as track 3 on side two of the original LP format,[31] sequenced between Harrison's remake of the Cole Porter standard "True Love" and "Crackerbox Palace".[32] As with "Ooh Baby" on Extra Texture,[33] the album cover included text dedicating the song to Robinson.[34] In Britain, "Pure Smokey" appeared as the B-side to the second single off Thirty Three & 1/3, "True Love", issued in February 1977.[35]
Music critics praised Thirty Three & 1/3 as Harrison's finest work since All Things Must Pass,[36] [37] and noted the quality of the production after the more downbeat Dark Horse (1974) and Extra Texture.[38] [39] In a review for Melody Maker, Ray Coleman listed the song among "plenty of high-spots" on the album and commented: "Interesting to observe from this how flexible George's vocal styles have now become: he handles ['Pure Smokey'] with a black soul feeling, showing commendable understanding, but without resorting to embarrassing copying techniques."[40] Although he admired Harrison's guitar work throughout the album, the NMEs Bob Woffinden derided its lyrics and opined that a second Robinson tribute in as many years "serves to delineate even more his inability to find fresh material and themes".[41] Writing in The Beatles Forever in 1977, Nicholas Schaffner included "Pure Smokey" as an example of Thirty Three & 1/3s standing as "the most varied and tuneful collection of Harrison melodies to date" and described the song as "similar to Extra Textures 'Ooh Baby' but better".
Among other Beatles biographers, "Pure Smokey" is viewed as superior to Harrison's previous Robinson tribute.[42] Simon Leng considers "Pure Smokey" to be both "the most successful, and succinct, summation of his attachments to the [soul] genre" and "one of its author's most appealing songs".[43] Leng praises Harrison's guitar solos for their understated, melodic approach – in which he detects "a nod to Eric Clapton, but with added Carl Perkins twang" – and concludes: "A fact often overlooked is that none of the other Beatles came close to offering convincing soul moods, whereas they were a fundamental part of the Dark Horse's musical vocabulary." Ian Inglis summarises "Pure Smokey" as "a wonderful example of Harrison's obvious affection for sweet soul, both as a singer and a songwriter", and includes it among lesser-known Harrison compositions such as "Your Love Is Forever", "Life Itself" and "That's the Way It Goes", all of which are "often overlooked" yet possess "great charm, energy, and beauty".[44]
In the 2005 publication NME Originals: Beatles – The Solo Years 1970–1980, Adrian Thrills named "Pure Smokey" and "See Yourself" as two highlights of Thirty Three & 1/3 and placed the former track seventh in his list of Harrison's "ten solo gems".[45] Former Mojo editor Mat Snow includes "Pure Smokey" and "True Love" among the "standouts" on an album that found its creator with "his groove back". Snow describes the track as "the soul fan George's second and best tribute to the Motown legend".[46] Speaking to the music website HazyRock in 2014, Robinson said that he had got to know Harrison in Los Angeles during the 1970s and he was still "very flattered" by the song.[47]