
Mr Heartache
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Freddie Scott ranks among the greatest soul singers. Thatâs all you really have to know.
It was some time in the early 60s when I first came across copies of Scottâs emotive âHey Girlâ and his inspired, slow-burning version of âI Got A Womanâ, both of which resided in a dumper box. I purchased them, lovingly placed the gold-labelled Colpix singles on my aged Garrard deck and was instantly blown away. Things havenât changed much in the past 40 years or so. Every now and again, I pull the records off the shelf to remind myself, or others, of these moments in sheer soul supremacy.
Everything Iâve since learnt about Freddie Scott has set me wondering why the man from Rhode Island failed to become a star of some magnitude. I read somewhere that, on one occasion, he had even failed to win a Harlem Apollo Amateur Night contest. It must have been one hell of a contest that evening! There were moments of triumph. In 1968 his gritty rendition of âAre You Lonely For Meâ on Bert Bernsâ Shout label topped the US R&B chart. A few other chart singles by Freddie emerged but the death of Berns at the age of 38 in 1967 led to Shoutâs early closure.
Luck and Freddie Scott were often not the best of companions. In a way, âMr Heartacheâ is a document of further failure, for it spans the period that Scott spent with Columbia following the demise of Colpix and prior to his arrival at Shout. During this stay he logged not one chart record, but great music cannot be considered purely in terms of chart success. Freddie Scott rarely delivered anything less than superb music. Columbia dubbed him âThe Million Dollar Babyâ and urged him to try his luck as a sepia Sinatra. âI actually wanted to be that kind of pop singer,â Freddie confessed, âThat was my idea.â Certainly he could be whatever he wanted to be. Easy-listening classics such as âEverything I Have Is Yoursâ and Johnny Mercer and David Raskinâs fabulous film theme âLauraâ have rarely sounded so rich, so heartfelt.
Freddie Scott could sing anything and make it matter, whether organ-backed soul-sated songs like âBlow, Windâ, the Spanish-tinged âLonely Manâ or more Nashville-inclined fare like Freddieâs own âOne More Time Before I Goâ â a creation which acts as a reminder of a songwriting ability that once linked him to the Brill Building and the opportunity to provide material for such as Paul Anka, Bobby Darin, Jackie Wilson and Aretha Franklinâs sister Erma, whom he also produced.
Though his name virtually disappeared from the mainstream following some activity in the 70s and 80s â âI sort of took off for a whileâ he confessed â covers of âHey Girlâ by Billy Joel and others plus a Jon Tiven-produced blues album in 2001sought to revive Freddie Scottâs position in the soul firmament prior to his death at the age of 74 in 2007.
Now âMr Heartacheâ has arrived to confirm that Freddie Scott ranked among the greatest soul singers. Which is where we came in.
Tracklist
01 Lonely Man
02 Giving You My Heart
03 Blow, Wind
04 My Arms Aren't Strong Enough
05 One More Time Before I Go
06 I'm Too Far Gone (To Turn Around)
07Â Just One Love
08 It's Been Like This (All Of My Life)
09 Sing, Girl
10 I'll Try Again
11 Don't Let It End
12 Mr Heartache
13 One Heartache Too Many
14 Come Up Singing
15 Forget Me If You Can
16 One Iddy Biddy Needle (And A Little Bit Of Thread)
17 Let It Be Me
18 For Your Love
19 Spanish Harlem
20 Bring It On Home To Me
21 Everything I Have Is Yours
22 Laura
23 There Goes My Heart
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More Info
Freddie Scott ranks among the greatest soul singers. Thatâs all you really have to know.
It was some time in the early 60s when I first came across copies of Scottâs emotive âHey Girlâ and his inspired, slow-burning version of âI Got A Womanâ, both of which resided in a dumper box. I purchased them, lovingly placed the gold-labelled Colpix singles on my aged Garrard deck and was instantly blown away. Things havenât changed much in the past 40 years or so. Every now and again, I pull the records off the shelf to remind myself, or others, of these moments in sheer soul supremacy.
Everything Iâve since learnt about Freddie Scott has set me wondering why the man from Rhode Island failed to become a star of some magnitude. I read somewhere that, on one occasion, he had even failed to win a Harlem Apollo Amateur Night contest. It must have been one hell of a contest that evening! There were moments of triumph. In 1968 his gritty rendition of âAre You Lonely For Meâ on Bert Bernsâ Shout label topped the US R&B chart. A few other chart singles by Freddie emerged but the death of Berns at the age of 38 in 1967 led to Shoutâs early closure.
Luck and Freddie Scott were often not the best of companions. In a way, âMr Heartacheâ is a document of further failure, for it spans the period that Scott spent with Columbia following the demise of Colpix and prior to his arrival at Shout. During this stay he logged not one chart record, but great music cannot be considered purely in terms of chart success. Freddie Scott rarely delivered anything less than superb music. Columbia dubbed him âThe Million Dollar Babyâ and urged him to try his luck as a sepia Sinatra. âI actually wanted to be that kind of pop singer,â Freddie confessed, âThat was my idea.â Certainly he could be whatever he wanted to be. Easy-listening classics such as âEverything I Have Is Yoursâ and Johnny Mercer and David Raskinâs fabulous film theme âLauraâ have rarely sounded so rich, so heartfelt.
Freddie Scott could sing anything and make it matter, whether organ-backed soul-sated songs like âBlow, Windâ, the Spanish-tinged âLonely Manâ or more Nashville-inclined fare like Freddieâs own âOne More Time Before I Goâ â a creation which acts as a reminder of a songwriting ability that once linked him to the Brill Building and the opportunity to provide material for such as Paul Anka, Bobby Darin, Jackie Wilson and Aretha Franklinâs sister Erma, whom he also produced.
Though his name virtually disappeared from the mainstream following some activity in the 70s and 80s â âI sort of took off for a whileâ he confessed â covers of âHey Girlâ by Billy Joel and others plus a Jon Tiven-produced blues album in 2001sought to revive Freddie Scottâs position in the soul firmament prior to his death at the age of 74 in 2007.
Now âMr Heartacheâ has arrived to confirm that Freddie Scott ranked among the greatest soul singers. Which is where we came in.
Tracklist
01 Lonely Man
02 Giving You My Heart
03 Blow, Wind
04 My Arms Aren't Strong Enough
05 One More Time Before I Go
06 I'm Too Far Gone (To Turn Around)
07Â Just One Love
08 It's Been Like This (All Of My Life)
09 Sing, Girl
10 I'll Try Again
11 Don't Let It End
12 Mr Heartache
13 One Heartache Too Many
14 Come Up Singing
15 Forget Me If You Can
16 One Iddy Biddy Needle (And A Little Bit Of Thread)
17 Let It Be Me
18 For Your Love
19 Spanish Harlem
20 Bring It On Home To Me
21 Everything I Have Is Yours
22 Laura
23 There Goes My Heart









