Description
Canadas finest live band, The Sadies, have reunited with explicit soul singer/cult legend Andre Williams for Night and Day on Yep Roc records. Night and Day is the result of sessions that began in 2008 at Key Club Studio in Detroit and captures Andre, then 70 years old and still using at the time, at his most raw, honest, and immediate. No filter. Andre is aided by a stellar cast of musical friends, dirty bluesers who have earned the trust of the ancient hustler, including Jon Spencer (who directed these sessions) and Matt Verta-Ray of Heavy Trash, Danny Kroha of Detroits own gutter-blues superheroes, The Gories, the unsinkable Mekon, Jon Langford, and of course, behind it all, The Sadies long-time line-up of Dallas Good on guitars and keys, his brother Travis Good on guitars and fiddle, Mike Belitsky on drums, and the mighty Sean Dean on the bass. The result is a raw, gritty slice of raunch rock that has attitude in spades and the hooks and playing to back it up.
The story starts at Key Club Studio,an old school jungle of analogue gear an hour outside of Detroit. Andre had just been sprung from a few days in the county cooler where he was being held until his manager came to bail him out, a charge he would eventually beat, but his most recent stop in stir is well reflected on this record in tracks like I Gotta Get Shorty Out of Jail, featuring fabulously retro cool back-up vocals by Sallie Timms and Kelly Hogan, and Your Old Lady, a song about sending a lover back to her man after he gets out of prison.
Throughout these sessions, Andre kept his rum buzz and his harangue on, and even if he showed up missing his bottom row of dentures he growls I like my rum, coz I got no teeth, I let it flow over my gums he was still able to drawl and percolate his continuing narrative of life in songs. In America he sings that Living in America aint no fun, better have some money or youll be on the run, and its a goddamn shame, without cash youre trash the men are dogs, the women are hogs, but that aint a bad thing its better than living in Africa.
Behind Andres dark take on America, and throughout Night and Day, background vocals are handled by the dynamic duo of Kelly Hogan and Sally Timms, who put Andres worldview into stark contrast with their flawless, hopeful harmonies.
Since these sessions, Andre was able to shake off some of his demons and has been living clean ever since. Says Andre, I like where I am now. My family admires me now. I kindawanna keep it like that.
Dallas Good writes in the liner notes for Night and Day that the first session was good but we were worried for Andre. A couple years later, everything was different. He was sober and sharp. Agile, mobile and hostile. Night and Day. It wouldnt be fair to the new Andre (who Id never met after working together for like, 12 years) to let the old Andre have this album. So we did more.
But stoned drunk or stoned cold sober, nothing ever changes too much in the world of Andre. In Bored he says The worst thing in the world is a black man being bored, and broke and hes in his room alone, getting stoned -you got a problem America! I dont use drugs no more but I will, if I have to. In his most humble moment on the record, I Thank God, he thanks his Creator for letting him live till this hour while also noting that he could shoot a man in five minutes.
Its not all so grim: Andres perverse sense of humor is heard to its brightest effect on the positively ebullient country number, Hey Baby! and he pours on some serious old-school Detroit charm to croon a classic last-call duet with Sally Timms, Thats My Desire.
The resulting record is a modern classic, with Andre showing remarkable range -from heartbreak and bitterness to ribald humor, swagger, raunch, sleaze, fear and retribution, romance gone right and romance gone wrong, and all in the spirit of the sloppy fun that has made him a legend. Andre Williams represents as the first and last of a breed of pimp-rolling R&B wise men, the real deal, an authentic totem of the low-down and disreputable, a man who has played outside the law, and outside the record business, and somehow managed to come out not only alive, but with a fervent cult behind him.
Night and Day, indeed. There is wisdom in these grooves.






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