Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Robert Palmer |
Cover: | Robert_Palmer_Sneakin_Sally.jpg |
Released: | September 1974 |
Length: | 35:24 |
Label: | Island |
Producer: | Steve Smith |
Next Title: | Pressure Drop |
Next Year: | 1975 |
Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley is the debut solo album by Robert Palmer, released in 1974. It was his first effort after three album releases co-fronting the band Vinegar Joe.[1] [2]
Palmer is backed by The Meters and Lowell George of Little Feat. Multiple reviewers have commented that Palmer sang confidently on this album, despite being backed by more accomplished musicians such as Lowell George, Art Neville and New Orleans singer-songwriter Allen Toussaint.[3] [4]
The album peaked at No. 107 in the Billboard 200. "Get Outside", which was released as the B-side to "Which of Us Is the Fool", a single from Palmer's next album Pressure Drop, bubbled under the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 105. Neither the album nor its singles charted in the UK however.[5]
Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley is based in rhythm.[6] Steve Sutherland called it "a polished and energetic primer in sophisticated body rhythms."[7] As with Palmer's other early albums, it is a synthesis of "improvised funk grooves, New Orleans R&B and tasty original". Charles Shaar Murray described the music as being "of the precision-tooled remote-control funk variety".[8] Tony Stewart considered the record to be, "considering his company of musos and recording locations, a predictable achievement in style: rhythmic R&B funk."[9] According to Richard Williams, the tracks are "suffused with southern soul." As Smash Hits writer Mary Harron describes, the album set the tone for Palmer's next few albums in that it is characterised by "stylish funk" and "an immaculately tasteful choice of cover versions plus his own material," and notes that the material was contemporaneously labelled blue-eyed soul.
Much of the music was improvised in the studio as Palmer encouraged the rhythm musicians to play while he improvised his own percussive vocals atop. This was a process he later abandoned, saying in 1996: "I don't work that way anymore. I know better now. But I was trying for that funk-jam feel. The point was to get this groove I always had a feel for. And I got it, even more than I'd even hoped for."[10] Palmer was initially intimidated by his assemblage of session musicians; in 1988, he commented: "The studio was full of these big black men from a heavy R&B church tradition, and I walked in and thought Yoiks! I was paying the bill but it felt like an audition. I swallowed hard and said, OK, everybody plugged in? Let's go. And 16 bars into the first tune they went, Hey, wait a minute. What did you say your name was?"
While most of the songs on the album were originals, the album also contained a few covers:
The striking album cover was the first of several Palmer covers photographed by Graham Hughes, and depicts "a stylishly dressed Palmer fleeing through a tunnel with a model clad in a lacy slip and a string of pearls."[11] Harron wrote that the cover – showing "a beautifully groomed playboy Palmer accompanied by a model in a minimum of clothing", set the tone for Palmer's next few album sleeves.[12] The image was inspired by scenes from Jean-Luc Godard's 1965 film Alphaville. As described by Nick DeRiso of Ultimate Classic Rock, Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley was "both novel idea and noble failure", as it only reached number 107 on the Billboard Top LPs & Tape chart in the US and did not chart anywhere else. Robert Sandall called the album "tailored for the American white R&B market" and noted its significant airplay on American college radio.[13]
In his contemporary review for New Musical Express, Charles Shaar Murray believed Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley to be too clean, neat and restrained as an album, commenting that "it just doesn't catch fire anywhere" and writing that although Palmer "phrases nicely and slides round the notes with an admirable deftness," his voice is "too pale and cool" to offset Steve Smith's restrained production. He considered "How Much Fun" to be the only successful song. In Phonograph Record, Steve Sutherland named it an "irresistible" album on which Palmer had developed as a singer from his stint in Vinegar Joe, praising his confidence and ebullience and calling his singing a "controlled style that slips neatly through the album's percolating rhythms." He praised the album's overall "spirit of playfulness and underlying structural economy".
Retrospectively, Vik Iyengar of AllMusic wrote that although Palmer became a slick pop star in the 1980s, Sneakin' Sally displays his roots as a "soul singer deeply rooted in R&B and funk". He commented on the music's "laid-back groove" and wrote that while it is tight and solid, Palmer's voice is "revelatory", praising his supreme confidence around the "talented musicians", who in turn "feed off his vocal intensity". He recommended the album to fans of the Meters. In a review of a 1988 reissue, a writer for Rhymney Valley Express commented that the "infectious" record it is often considered Palmer's "classic" album, adding that it displays the singer's "undeniable gift for absorbing musical styles and replicating them", resulting on this instance in "a kind of rootsy Southern USA rock 'n' soul boogie" that would appeal to Little Feet fans.[14] Reviewing a 2013 reissue, Record Collector contributor Terry Staunton called it an album of "laconic funk and R&B", a style best exemplified by "Sailin' Shoes" and the two Toussaint covers, but considered the 12-minute "Through It All There's You" to be the album's "slow-burn tour de force."[15]
Colin Larkin, writing in The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (1997), described the album as "an artistic triumph."[16] In The Rough Guide to Rock (1999), Chris Coe praised the opening medley of "Saiin' Shoes", "Hey Julia" and the title track for being "fifteen minutes of some of the most joyous white funk ever recorded." However, he considered the album's second half to be "disappointingly restrained" and adds that it prevents the whole album from being "a true classic."[17] A writer in The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004) refers to Sneakin' Sally as Palmer's "New Orleans stopover" and considered there to be a "cool blue sense of detachment" throughout the album. In The Great Rock Discography (2006), Martin C. Strong praised the "seamless" cover of "Sailin' Shoes" and the Touissant-penned title track, but believed that many of the songs suffered "a characterlessness that coloured much of Palmer's subsequent output."[18]
All tracks are written by Robert Palmer, except where noted.
Per sleeve notes[19]
Musicians
Production
Steve Smith
Phill Brown, Ken Laxton, Alan Varner, Rhett Davies
http://www.robertpalmer.com/sneaking_sally.html