Terry Callier's
1972 album, What Color Is Love, is available on vinyl once again following
nearly two decades of being out of print in the resurgent format. Released
today via Verve/UMe, the album is on standard weight black vinyl and housed in
a high-quality wrapped jacket. Produced and arranged by the legendary Charles
Stepney, the revered album is a portal into Callier's socially conscious,
musically kaleidoscopic blend of soul, jazz, funk, rock and classical.
A childhood friend of Curtis Mayfield and Jerry Butler — the
latter would go on to co-write a track on What Color Is Love — Callier began as
a relatively conventional folk singer, releasing an album for Prestige, The New
Folk Sound of Terry Callier, in 1968. But it was increasingly clear that
Callier was thinking beyond coffeehouses. A musical omnivore who couldn't shake
his soul roots, he was commensurately inspired by classical music, sinewy
Chicago blues and the orthodoxy-breaking tenor work of John Coltrane.
Callier pivoted hard from his folkie days. By the 1970s,
Callier was recording for Chess' jazz imprint, Cadet Records, mainly known for
releasing albums from hard-bop giants like Kenny Burrell, Lou Donaldson and
Ahmad Jamal. But the creatively restless Callier fit like a glove in this
unconventional environment. The three albums he produced for the label — 1972's
Occasional Rain and What Color is Love and 1974's I Just Can't Help Myself —
transcended genre descriptors to conjure a distinct sonic universe that was
purely his.
While Rain, its predecessor, was often misty and diffused —
a "blue" listen — What Color Is Love has dynamic fire to its
performances. This was even down to its provocative cover sleeve that carried
strong undertones of racial and sexual disharmony. And the music follows suit.
On key tracks like "Dancing Girl" and "You Goin' Miss Your
Candyman," Callier displays a polyphonous, kitchen-sink version of Chicago
soul complete with sparkling string arrangements and driving rhythms.
Despite its ecstatic, genre-blending brilliance, What Color
Is Love would eventually fall into relative obscurity, as Callier retired as a
singer in the 1980s to become a computer programmer. He eventually returned to
the fold of the music business on the Verve Forecast label in the late 1990s,
when burgeoning interest in his work in London led to celebrated collaborations
with Paul Weller, Beth Orton and Massive Attack. As he said to The New York
Times of his triumphant return to the stage in 1998, "It was like a dream
come true. A couple of times I had to stop the show because it was just too
over the top emotionally for me to continue. People knew all the words to my
songs."
Callier sadly passed away in 2012 at age 67 from cancer, but
we all continue to know the words to those songs — especially What Color Is
Love, which stands among his finest work to this day.
WHAT COLOR IS LOVE TRACK LISTING
SIDE A
1. Dancing Girl
2. What Color Is Love
3. You Goin' Miss Your Candyman
SIDE B
1. Just As Long As We're In Love
2. Ho Tsing Mee (A Song of the Sun)
3. I'd Rather Be With You
4. You Don't Care
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