Aaron Neville's A&M Debut Remains a Musical and Sonic Treat

Well before Aaron Neville's gorgeous warble turned to wobble and he began using it as vocal ground cover—so much so that Saturday Night Live easily satirized it—his was a gorgeous instrument capable of both technical excellence and exquisite emotional communication as this impeccably produced and recorded 1991 release demonstrates.

Warm Your Heart combines savvy A&R work that provided the New Orleans native with songs that touched his innards, warm and inviting instrumental backdrops that complement both the singer and the songs, and production and engineering by a George Massenburg led team that produced glorious sonics.

The tunes range from Randy Newman's "Louisiana 1927" (choral arrangement by Van Dyke Parks) to the closer "Ave Maria". In between are John Hiatt's "It Feels Like Rain" (with Ry Cooder on slide and Willie Greene and Bobby King adding background back-up),, Burt Bacharach's oft-covered "Don't Go, Please Stay" first recorded by The Drifters and the remake of Main Ingredient's '70s hit "Everybody Plays the Fool" that was also one for Neville. It's one of the album's sonic highlights too and almost alone worth the price of admission, though the sound is more honest on "It Feels Like Rain" clearly recorded at Ocean Way.

Two Allen Toussaint songs, "With You In Love" and "That's the Way She Loves" help keep the album rooted in the Crescent City. as does "Angola Bound" the one Neville original and the album's hardest edged track (Angola is the Louisiana State penitentiary).

The arrangements veer between complex and synth infused ("Everybody Plays the Fool") and the basic ("It Feels Like Rain") and that variety keeps the backdrops interesting throughout.

The three songs on side one, "Louisiana 1927", "Everybody Plays the Fool" and "It Feels Like Rain" are a potent opener to an album that has no low points.

The production yields a great deal of eye and ear candy (eye in the sense that it's all laid out with surgical precision on a wide, deep and ultra-dynamic soundstage) but it's Neville's vocals that produce most of the fireworks. His voice was then peaking with suppleness and firm control, the trademarked warble/yodel used sparingly. The vocal recording is magnificent like everything else placed before the microphones.

A parade of well-known celebs like Linda Ronstadt, Rita Coolidge, Dr. John and Bob Seger and famous studio guys like Jim Keltner contribute to the album's rock-solid excellence. Ronstadt's duet with Neville on Chuck Willis's "Close Your Eyes" is another standout track. There's not a weak track on this album.

Bernie Grunman mastered this A&M release when it was first issued and he does the honors here at 45rpm from the original analog master tapes (though given the numerous recording venues and complex production as well as some sonic variance among the tracks I can't help but thinking that some elements were produced digitally). "Tip on" gatefold packaging adds luster. About the only negative I can add to this well-packaged "must have" reissue is that RTI let me down. My copy was well pressed, but the second record was abraded from what looks like poor handling and so had occasional crackling sounds on side 3.

A highly recommended demo disc— if you can splurge on a $54.95 reissue. If you do, I am certain you will not be disappointed.

Music Direct Buy It Now

COMMENTS
AndrewWilliams's picture

He is really good and talented. I am a fan of this man actually. - Casa Sandoval

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