J.J. Cale’s first album Naturally was
released in 1971 and attracted a lot of attention in the Netherlands, no
hits, but an artist worth paying attention to.
It would have been cool perhaps to say that
I was a Cale fan
from the beginning, but
truth to be told he was nowhere on my musical radar at the time.
I guess it was several years later when I
received his ’5’
album as a birthday present that turned me onto his laid back guitar playing
and singing style right away.
As a result I started backtracking,
bought his earlier albums (all on Shelter Records),
and started following his career.
His last album I bought was 1982’s Grasshopper,
his first one for Mercury Records,
but not much difference in style, except perhaps for the 2 instrumentals; Grasshopper and Dr. Jive.
Due to my move from Netherlands to Thailand, I
lost track a bit of Cale, but
still found a few new albums (on bootleg cassettes) occasionally.
Cale
passed away in 2013 and Eric Clapton paid
respect 1 year later by recording a tribute album: The Breeze: An Appreciation of JJ Cale
Cale was
more than happy to see what other artists could make of his music. "I kind
of write songs hoping that musicians will take them and make them better and
more accessible," he said.
Clapton
changed
Cale’s career massively by turning his After Midnight and Cocaine into
rock standards.
"I'd probably be selling shoes today if it
wasn't for Eric," Cale
said
in 2006.
Despite the Clapton Appreciation
and 2 volumes of Tribute to J.J. Cale (2010)
no compilation has been released of his earlier covered work…
This seemed a good reason for JOKONKY to
jump in again and rectify this poor state of affairs.
Cale’s songs were covered as
soon as he released Naturally
and this got repeated which each succeeding album for a while.
Whereas Cale
liked to keep his songs as laid back as possible, the cover versions usually
added quite a bit of instrumentation on top.
Even so several hits were the results, besides
the already mentioned Clapton
covers, Lynyrd Skynyrd was successful with Call Me The Breeze and
Santana
didn’t do too bad either with The Sensitive Kind.
While researching possible covers I was
very surprised by digging up a few Dutch
ones, I knew already about Rob Hoeke & Alan Price covering
Cale, but new were both Liesbeth
List and Herman Brood & His Wild
Romance to me!
Even weirder, Dutch singer Cornelis
Vreeswijk
spent
considerable time playing in Sweden
and recorded After Midnight and Clyde in Swedish…
Oh, we got a French version of After as well, complete with Cale on guitar!
Also intriguing, in Jamaica The Pioneers recorded
a track called Let It All Hang Out in
1971, supposedly written by someone named Cunningham,
but it’s obviously a reggaefied
version of After Midnight!
Indian
singer Asha
Puthli recorded
2 covers (Lies and Right Down Here)
in 1973 which add a new twist to Cale
songs, not to mention the wild Psychemagik Remix of Right Down Here!
Most Cocaine covers
follow the Clapton
one which is a shame really, but I did manage to dig up 3 very different
versions; Nazareth
live, an Italian disco band called Eric’s Friends,
and Earl 16 does
it reggae.
Spread out across 2 volumes you’ll find a
wide variety of Cale covers that should make it clear once and
for all that he was a cool song writer as well!