**** Millie Jackson
SEX AND SOUL
(BMG)
Twenty years and more after Millie Jackson reigned over soul and disco as the bitch
queen of sexual situation comedy comes this reissue of her best-loved hits. Actually,
Sex and Soul is a second volume of Jackson’s hits, covering the years 1977 to
1979 — her early work appears on Between the Sheets. That CD compiles Jackson’s
hits of her “red-clay soul” period; this one chronicles the songs that, without much
stylistic alteration other than an occasional rhythm break, took her into the discos.
Her basic approach was the remake: she took hits by guy singers and made them woman
songs. Her field of play was vast — from the red-clay work of Banks & Hampton’s
“(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don’t Want To Be Right” and the Womack Brothers’ “Put
Something Down on It” to radio pop like Kenny Loggins’s “This Is It,” disco (“If That
Don’t Turn You On”), and Eurodisco (Keith Forsey & Mats Bjorklund’s “Never Change
Lovers in the Middle of the Night”), all the better to ýring her putdowns of male macho
to every man’s attention. And her specialty was the Isaac Hayes–style rap, intimately
stated, from her to her lover — none nastier, or truer, than the one in “This Is It.”
Jackson conveyed sarcasm and frustration but also a loving concern: she was tough love
personified. With plenty of talk about man’s you-know-what: “Logs and Thangs” and “wet
noodles,” and, finally, an admission: “Ladies, we cannot do without the almighty club!”
Disco’s deep skepticism about masculinity loved every bit of it.
— Michael Freedberg
|