Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!

Most Popular

  • Getting Off
    Attorney Tyler Flood says he wins 80 percent of his clients' DWI trials, even if they were 100 percent drunk as a skunk.
  • City of Coffee
    Is Houston about to become America's coffee capital?
  • Houston's Choice for Mayor
    Black Guy, Rich White Guy, Lesbian or Hispanic Republican
  • Looking for a Bull Market
    Killen's Steakhouse in suburban Pearland is probably best during boom times.
  • Burgers and Hash
    Lola, a modern diner in the Heights is dishing up some top-notch Texas short-order cooking.
Most Popular sponsored by

Reader's Picks

Top Recommendations

A short list of Houston's most popular hot spots.
user content provided by: LikeMe.net & Houston Press

National Features >

  • City Pages

    Michele Bachmann, Unmuzzled

    You don't need to read Sarah Palin's book to hear the ravings of a mad woman.

    By Matt Snyders

  • Miami New Times

    Pimp Daddy

    The rise and fall of a chubby sex-cult leader.

    By Natalie O'Neill

  • Riverfront Times

    Babe 'n' Arms

    Tom was a hot-tempered cross-dresser with a garage full of guns--and then he became Rachel.

    By Nicholas Phillips

Bettye LaVette, The Scene of the Crime

www.bettyelavette.com

Share

  • rss

By Chris Gray

Published on October 09, 2007 at 3:28pm

Note: The following artist performs Saturday or Sunday during the Big State Festival at Texas World Speedway, 17529 State Highway 6, College Station. Besides music, events include stock-car racing, a barbecue cook-off, mechanical bull riding, camping and more. Visit www.bigstatefestival.com or call 512-888-7469 for tickets and/or further information.

The bar in the Muscle Shoals, Alabama, Marriott is called Swampers, after the house band at nearby FAME Studios that played on many of the greatest soul records ever made — Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, Clarence Carter and so forth. Detroit-born Bettye LaVette's 1972 album Child of the Seventies could have been on that list, but was inexplicably shelved by Atlantic Records. Scene of the Crime, recorded at FAME with Swampers keyboardist Spooner Oldham bridging past and present and Drive-By Truckers standing in for the rest of the group, can't change what might have been, but it furthers LaVette's reputation as America's greatest unsung soul singer and suggests Oldham should consider joining the Truckers full-time. LaVette has an impeccable ear for inadvertently autobiographical material — here, it's Willie Nelson's "Pick Up My Pieces," Victoria native Frankie Miller's smoldering "Jealousy," Don Henley's "You Don't Know Me At All" — one of the few songs that allows the Truckers to stretch out — and, most improbably, Elton John's "Talking Old Soldiers." Accompanied only by Oldham's soft piano, LaVette's raspy voice burns with the aftertaste of memories that don't rest easy. "I've seen enough to make a man go out his brains," she sings, and only a fool would doubt she has.