![]() ![]() “You know you don’t love me.” “I’m growing weaker day by day.” “My life to you don’t mean a doggone thing.” Poor Wilson. The resulting Atlantic single may have only reached #16 on the US R&B chart, but you’ve got to admire the way Pickett breaks the song down midway through, and applies those tortured improvisations as only he can. He further achieved the huge soul sound he wanted by acquiring the services of Cissy Houston and Judy Clay on backing vocals, together with the Cold Grits band, and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Pickett reduced its speed, cut out some of the talk, and gave the song one of his most visceral vocals. He was perhaps more overtly influenced by Vanilla Fudge than was Masekela in this, while continuing a contemporary tradition of performing big and emotional makeovers of pop songs that perhaps began with Joe Cocker’s “With A Little Help From My Friends” (1968). Wilson Pickett – “You Keep Me Hangin’ On” (The Supremes cover)Īlabama soul legend Wilson Pickett made the Supremes’ song his own in late 1969. You can find the finished product on his pretty rare Reconstruction album, though it deserves to be much more widely known. He drew out the anguished words (“You keep me hangin’ o-o-o-on”) and matched them with sorrowful trumpet lines, joined by entrancing electric piano from Joe Sample. Masekela did a similar job, though soaking the song in weary melancholy that seemed to suggest he’d suffered years of emotional neglect from his woman. He was no doubt aware that psych-rock band Vanilla Fudge had slowed the song down considerably for their hit version of 1967, so as to tease out the hurt in the lyrics. ![]() Having escaped apartheid in his native South Africa, trumpeter and singer Hugh Masekela was making jazzy hit records in California by the time he came to cover “You Keep Me Hangin’ On” in 1970. Hugh Masekela – “You Keep Me Hangin’ On” (The Supremes cover) Of all these, there are three who really stand out, who have, I’ll wager, never been mentioned in the same article before: Who, then, would dare cover such a landmark song, one which Ross herself would be performing this summer at Glastonbury Festival, were it not for a certain worldwide pandemic? Well, scores of acts have had a go at it over the years, including Aretha, Reba McEntire, and several of the male variety. Little wonder that it was the Supremes’ eighth #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.Īs a defiant pop record seemingly straight from the mouth of a girl having it out with a troublesome guy, “You Keep Me Hangin’ On” paved the way for such greats as Aretha Franklin’s “Think!” (1968), Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” (1978), Eurythmics’ “Thorn in My Side” (1986), Kelis’ “Caught Out There” (1999), and maybe even the Destiny’s Child anthem “Survivor” (2001). She’s helped, also, by it being a simply massive tune that damns the torpedoes and goes full speed ahead. She’s helped by the especially potent backing vocals of Mary Wilson and Florence Ballard (the latter of whom has a line all to herself!), as well as the reliably tight musicianship of the Funk Brothers, centering on Eddie Willis’ arresting Morse-code-style guitar part. Lead-singer Diana Ross sells the song with her typically cool and sassy vocal, which suggests a girl taking back control of her life as she faces up to the fact that her ex is, basically, a selfish asshole. Lamont Dozier himself explained that they wanted to “make it believable, add some everyday talk, like the girl was really going through this predicament.” Adhering to a formulaic first-person narrative of a female protagonist having to deal with a no-good liar/cheat, they made a point of injecting the song with colloquial language and true-to-life expression, including a brief spoken-word section during the bridge. With it, they unveiled a striking sense of realism. We join a girl at a desperate point in her relationship with her ex(?)-boyfriend: “Set me free, why don’t cha babe? / Get out my life, why don’t cha babe?” She’s had enough and she’s pulling no punches on the subject of staying apart: “You don’t care a thing about me / You’re just usin’ me.” She’s doubtful, too, as to whether the two of them should have any contact at all: “How can we still be friends / When seein’ you only breaks my heart again? / And there ain’t nothin’ I can do about it.”Īs signature tunes go, there aren’t many that deliver such a direct, stark, convincing demand for personal liberation as the Supremes’ huge 1966 hit, “You Keep Me Hangin’ On.” The songwriting team of Holland-Dozier-Holland had originated a string of girl-group masterworks for Motown, including “Locking Up My Heart” (The Marvelettes), “(Love Is Like A) Heat Wave” (Martha and the Vandellas), and “Where Did Our Love Go” (The Supremes), by the time they came to write this one. ![]()
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