Posts Tagged ‘Leon Russell And The Shelter People’

reDiscover ‘Leon Russell & The Shelter People’

History tends to record the commercial breakthrough of the Oklahoma singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and session man supreme Leon Russell arriving with 1972’s Carney. Less attention is afforded its predecessor of the year before, which was his second solo release Leon Russell & The Shelter People.

The LP, which followed his self-titled Shelter Records debut of 1970, would be memorable if for no other reason than the fact that it contained ‘The Ballad of Mad Dogs and Englishmen.’ A quintessentially reflective and autobiographical Russell ballad, it was an early favourite of a young Englishman who, decades later, would repay Leon’s influence on his career by cutting an album with him, Elton John .

The Shelter People was Russell’s collective name for the distinguished cast of musicians who played on the album, including bassist Carl Radle and drummer Jim Gordon (described in the above song as the “future Dominos” who inhabited Leon’s world and went on to join Eric Clapton in Derek and the Dominoes ). Others in Russell’s inner circle of the time, and on the disc, included Jim Keltner, Jim Price, Jesse Ed Davis and Chris Stainton.

Leon Russell Stranger in a Strange Land

An assured piece of work from start to finish, the Shelter People album was recorded over a period of several months in late 1970 and early 1971 in London, Los Angeles and at Muscle Shoals Studios in Alabama. The latter location only enhanced the soulfulness of Russell’s delivery and his choice of instrumentation with co-producer Denny Cordell.

Six of the original 11 tracks were Russell originals, and two more co-written with one of the guitarists on the disc, Don Preston. There were two visits to the Bob Dylan songbook, for his 1963 landmark ‘A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall’ and the Highway 61 Revisited highlight ‘It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry.’ The album closed with a version of his friend George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass track ‘Beware Of Darkness.’

One of the contributors to the Muscle Shoals sessions, bassist David Hood, recalled in an interview with Carl Riser: “On the album there were musicians on some tracks from Tulsa – Carl Radle and some of the guys from out there – and tracks by us. And to differentiate, [Leon] wrote down ‘The Muscle Shoals Swampers‘ on the ones we did, and the Tulsa one, I don’t know what he called them, but the Tulsa people on the others. And that just kind of took.”

Leon Russell

Leon Russell and the Shelter People during their whirlwind European tour of 1971. This stopover was in Stockholm and recorded by the venerable Sveriges Radio on November 26th of that year.

Even before his milestone solo career and the Mad Dogs & Englishmen phase, Leon Russell was a very much in demand musician, whose work was heard on hundreds of sessions throughout the 1960s. This was a new phase; the singer-songwriter with his own vision, putting together one of the tightest bands of the late 60s and releasing hit record after hit record and going from an anonymous keyboard player to household name.

And 1971 was proving no different – a lot of familiar tunes in this concert; songs which became a staple in the diet of just about every Rock station in the country, if not the world, at the time.

This concert comes before his mega multi-country tour of 1972 and is most likely a warmup. This one features the band which also played on his Leon Russell And The Shelter People release of earlier that year featuring Carl Radle on bass, Don Preston on guitar.

There was a lot going on in Russell’s career in 1971. Working with Bob Dylan and producing Watching The River Flow, which also featured Russell on piano – sitting in on Badfinger’s Straight Up album, participating in the Concert For Bangladesh.

Much of what he recorded in concert wound up being issued officially via his label Shelter, but this one has escaped. Possibly because other concerts from around this period were issued, this additional one would have been overkill. Still, it’s a great concert with one of America’s greatest musicians during a particularly busy and fruitful time.