Laura Nyro - Christmas and the Beads of Sweat 1970
Laura Nyro's third Columbia effort is easily the equal of her previous two. The overwhelming strength of her song writing and distinctive arrangements fuel
Christmas and the Beads of Sweat. Her unmistakable style of delivery maintains the continual examination of herself as a performer. The results are uniformly interesting and provocative as she continues to draw upon her love of jazz, folk, and R&B -- which would inform Nyro's next album ,
Gonna Take a Miracle, featuring the soul vocal trio
LaBelle. Conceptually, this album is as potent as her previous effort,
New York Tendaberry, but in a much different way. Rather than hanging together thematically,
Christmas and the Beads of Sweat features two inclusive and distinctive sides of music -- with different musicians and producers for each. The first five tracks feature Nyro backed by the
Swampers from Muscle Shoals, AL, and include the talents of
Roger Hawkins (drums),
Eddie Hinton (guitar),
Dave Hood (bass),
Barry Becket (vibraphone), and
Jack Jennings (percussion), with
Arif Mardin producing. While this pairing might seem initially incongruous, the quintet had been concurrently working with the likes of
Dusty Springfield and
Cher and had gained a rightful reputation as a consummate backup band. The final four pieces are steeped in noir more atypical of her previous efforts. The all-star cast of New York City session heavyweights are led by
Felix Cavaliere (producer) and features fellow
Rascals member
Dino Danelli (drums),
Ralph McDonald (percussion),
Chuck Rainey (bass),
Cornell Dupree (guitar),
Duane Allman (guitar), and
Alice Coltrane (stringed harp), among others. As with all of Nyro's recordings, at the heart of this effort are her ageless compositions and arrangements. A motif connecting such disparate tunes as the upbeat "When I Was a Freeport and You Were the Main Drag" to the hauntingly beautiful "Christmas in My Soul" and "Beads of Sweat" is the aching hollowness that came with the disillusionment that Vietnam, Kent State, and racial relations brought upon America in 1970. As she had done with "Save the Country" some four years earlier, Nyro's cathartic expressionism is captured at its most fervent on this album. AllMusic.
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