LINER
NOTES FOR BOB GIBSON'S YES I SEE
By
Richie Unterberger
Bob Gibson
had recorded
several albums in the mid-to-late 1950s before joining Elektra Records,
and would record several others on a sporadic basis in the
quarter-century or so after his stint with the label ended in the
mid-1960s. Arguably, however, the four LPs he issued on Elektra (one as
part of a duo with Bob Camp, aka Hamilton Camp) are considered his best
and certainly most influential recordings.
The first of these, Ski Songs (also reissued on CD by
Collectors' Choice Music), was a somewhat misleading introduction to
Gibson's folk repertoire, even if it was (according to Bob himself) the
biggest-selling album of his entire career. For it was entirely
dedicated to songs about skiing, evolving from a musical that Gibson
had written, though ultimately it wasn't produced. In contrast its
follow-up, the 1961 LP Yes I See,
was far more reflective of his folk background and roots, its songs and
tone generally covering far more serious territory than its
predecessor. One thing it did have in common with Ski Songs, however, was Gibson's
willingness to experiment with different kinds of full-bodied musical
accompaniment and backup vocalists, at a time when many folk albums
stuck rather stodgily to the acoustic guitar-and-voice format.
Though Ski Songs
had even gone as far as to include some low-key electric guitar,
neither it nor Yes I See was
anything as radical as pre-folk-rock. Nonetheless, it was unusual, for
a folk LP on Elektra or one by any other noted solo artist of the
early-'60s folk revival, to feature as many musicians as Yes I See did. Among those
accompanying Gibson were Tommy Tedesco, one of the top Los Angeles
session guitarists of the era, who in the 1960s would play on records
by everyone from the Beach Boys and Judy Henske to the Monkees, the
Fifth Dimension, Van Dyke Parks, Randy Newman, and Frank Zappa. Though
not as famed, James E. Bond, Jr. played bass on innumerable jazz, folk,
and rock sessions of the 1950s and 1960s.
Other musicians listed on the original LP were
Joseph Robert Gibbons, Herbert O. Brown, Eddie Lee Kendrix, Joe L.
Clayton, and Nick Bonney. Though the specific nature of their
contributions is not detailed, bongos and a piano can be heard as well
as the expected stringed instruments, and it's likely Gibbons and
Bonney pitched in on guitar. Perhaps the most imaginative additions
were the backup vocals of Bessie Smith and the Gospel Pearls, a Los
Angeles gospel quintet.
While many early Elektra Records were recorded close
to its New York base, this particular one was done in RCA studios in
Hollywood. Apparently there was also some input from Bumps Blackwell,
thanked in the liners "for his assistance in the preparation of this
album." An A&R director for Specialty Records in the 1950s,
Blackwell had played important roles in the early careers of Little
Richard and Sam Cooke. Most of the liner notes, however, were not given
to personnel listings, but to praise by Studs Terkel—today recognized
as one of the premier oral historians of the United States, yet in the
early 1960s primarily known as a Chicago radio personality.
Though Elektra chief Jac Holzman and Mark Abramson
are credited as production supervisors on the LP, Gibson maintained in
his autobiography I Come for to Sing
(co-written with Carole Bender) that he was really the producer. "Jac
Holzman couldn't believe it because we spent $1,600 to produce it," he
exclaimed. "He told me he was outraged! 'I spent $1,600 on this
album!!' And I thought, 'Well, that's not so very much. You got all the
instruments and those voices and everything'...I mean, the playing was
hot. I love that album and it was one of the first times where a white
guy sang with black women." Gibson also felt that "there's stuff on
this album that people weren't doing until much later. It wasn't until
the early '70s that this was a common format, but I did it ten years
earlier."
The twelve songs on Yes I See were a mixture of Gibson
originals, traditional material, and contemporary songs by other
writers. Some of the tunes Gibson himself wrote or made compositional
contributions to would become among his most celebrated. None was more
celebrated than the Gibson-Hamilton Camp collaboration "You Can Tell
the World," which became the very first track on the first Simon &
Garfunkel album, Wednesday Morning,
3 AM. Another Gibson-Camp effort, "Well, Well, Well," likewise
was honored with covers from top folk acts when Peter, Paul & Mary
made it the closing song of their 1966 Peter, Paul and Mary LP, the
Seekers doing their own interpretation of the number in the mid-1960s
as well.
On the title track of the album, as well as some
other points, you can hear how Gibson's songwriting and vocal delivery
were strong influences on the young Phil Ochs, who would in fact write
a couple of the songs on his 1964 debut LP All the News Fit to Sing with Bob.
Gibson himself would soon revive "Yes I See" as part of the "Civil War
Trilogy" on the live album he recorded with Hamilton (then known as
Bob) Camp in 1961, At the Gate of
Horn. That record also included a version of "Daddy Roll 'Em,"
though Gibson put a solo recording on Yes I See. This rousing
tune—influenced, like many of Bob's songs from the time, by
gospel—would became one of his most popular numbers, the arrangement on
the Yes I See album almost
verging close to rock'n'roll with its dynamic soulful backup harmonies
and driving bongos.
Other songs of note on Yes I See included "Springhill Mine
Disaster," written by two of the most noted songwriters on the British
folk scene, Ewan MacColl and his American-born wife Peggy Seeger. "John
Henry" and "Motherless Children" were revisitations of famous
traditional songs, though Gibson added new words and music to his
arrangement of the latter tune. More of Gibson's blues sensibilities
came to the fore on "Trouble in Mind," covered by literally hundreds of
blues, country, and pop singers before and since, from Louis Armstrong
to Bob Dylan. More Gibson-Camp collaborations were also heard on "By
and By" and "Blues Around My Head (When the Sun Comes Up in the
Morning)," neither of which would be reprised by the duo on the At the Gate of Horn album.
Yes I Can See
would soon be followed, and perhaps a little overshadowed, by At the Gate of Horn. Both that
album and Gibson's final solo effort, 1964's Where I'm Bound, have also been
reissued on CD by Collectors' Choice Music, the latter marking the
singer's return to the straightforward solo folk he'd first presented
on Elektra with the Yes I See
LP. -- Richie Unterberger
unless otherwise specified.
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