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by Bill Dahl
Otis Clay made most of his best-known records in Memphis during the early 70s, but hes still universally hailed as Chicag 更多>
by Bill Dahl
Otis Clay made most of his best-known records in Memphis during the early 70s, but hes still universally hailed as Chicagos deep soul king. In a city filled to overflowing with legendary blues artists, Clay has become the proud standard-bearer for Chicagos enduring soul tradition.
Like so many of his contemporaries, Clays intense vocal style reflects a gospel background. He made the secular jump in 1965, signing with Chicagos One-derful Records and issuing a series of gospel-tinged soul records that were a lot grittier than the customary Windy City soul sound. Clay inaugurated Atlantics Cotillion subsidiary in 1968 with a supercharged cover of the Sir Douglas Quintets Shes About a Mover, produced by Rick Hall in Muscle Shoals shortly before the singer joined forces with Hi Records boss Willie Mitchell. With the relentlessly driving Hi Rhythm Section in tow, Clay waxed his biggest seller in 1972, Trying to Live My Life Without You, later covered very successfully by Bob Seger.
Although Clays tenure on Hi may have been his most commercially potent, he steadily recorded and gigged ever since. He is a genuine hero in Japan, where hes recorded two sizzling live albums filled with the churning grooves, punchy horns, and searing vocals that inevitably characterize the best deep soul — no matter where its recorded, a fact proved by another live set recorded in Switzerland in 2003, Respect Yourself, and released in 2005 by Blind Pig Records. In 2007, Clay returned to the studio and recorded the gospel album Walk a Mile in My Shoes on his Chicago-based Echo label.