
Alex Chilton Set Vinyl LP Colour RSD 2025
Tracklist:
TBC
In February last year, the often-elusive Alex Chilton was in New York City for a couple of gigs at the late, great East Village dive Coney Island High, with bassist Ron Easley and drummer Richard Dworkin. The trio had enough of a groove on playing mostly vintage soul tunes that they went into a Manhattan recording studio, Sear Sound, and kept the music rolling. In a single night, they cut 19 cover tunes, and Alex produced the session himself. That sort of approach was common in the studios of Memphis, Tennessee and Muscle Shoals, Alabama during the classic era of the sixties soul, though this think-on-your-feet, overdub-free style is an anomaly today. For the Memphis born-and-bred Alex, thatâs the way he always liked it.
Alex and his cohorts had a list of songs for Set, based on what theyâd been cooking up on stage, but, as Alex put it, âwe thought of a few more once we got there.â
As he recently explained to a British reporter, âI had probably ten or twelve in mind when we went into the studio. As the evening wore on, band members would suggest tunes to do, and weâd do them. I think we only did more than one take of two or three of the songs we did, and I donât think we used any second takes on the album. There are all different approaches to do things. Over the years, I have come to think spontaneity and doing things live as much as possible is worth something. Somehow, when you layer things by overdubbing them, that seems to lose an element of spontaneity and live thatâs very important.â
The material on Set ranges from the modern to the classic, the playful to the sexy. It stays in an R&B groove, save for a trio of jazzy numbers (âApril In Paris,â âThere Will Never Be Another You,â âShiny Stockingsâ) and a country tune from the even more elusive Gary Stewart (âSingle Againâ) What links the lineup is that all these tuners are part of Alexâs personal hit parade. âI know a few scholars of old R&B,â he explains, âthey play things for me to get me going. Plus I remember things from my teenage years, stuff that was even obscure then.â
Growing up in Memphis, Alex would listen to deejay George Klein on WHBO-AM, would sign off each night with Jesse Blevinâs âGoodnight My Loveâ âwhich reappears here as Alexâs send-off to Set. âLipstick Traces,â written by Allen Toussaint but published under his motherâs name, is another youthful fave. But other cuts, like the Randy âYouâve Got a Booger Bear Under There,â are fresh off the car radioâif you happen to be driving around the Deep South, that is.
*Limited to 1 copy per customer/household, multiple orders will be cancelled without notice.
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Description
Tracklist:
TBC
In February last year, the often-elusive Alex Chilton was in New York City for a couple of gigs at the late, great East Village dive Coney Island High, with bassist Ron Easley and drummer Richard Dworkin. The trio had enough of a groove on playing mostly vintage soul tunes that they went into a Manhattan recording studio, Sear Sound, and kept the music rolling. In a single night, they cut 19 cover tunes, and Alex produced the session himself. That sort of approach was common in the studios of Memphis, Tennessee and Muscle Shoals, Alabama during the classic era of the sixties soul, though this think-on-your-feet, overdub-free style is an anomaly today. For the Memphis born-and-bred Alex, thatâs the way he always liked it.
Alex and his cohorts had a list of songs for Set, based on what theyâd been cooking up on stage, but, as Alex put it, âwe thought of a few more once we got there.â
As he recently explained to a British reporter, âI had probably ten or twelve in mind when we went into the studio. As the evening wore on, band members would suggest tunes to do, and weâd do them. I think we only did more than one take of two or three of the songs we did, and I donât think we used any second takes on the album. There are all different approaches to do things. Over the years, I have come to think spontaneity and doing things live as much as possible is worth something. Somehow, when you layer things by overdubbing them, that seems to lose an element of spontaneity and live thatâs very important.â
The material on Set ranges from the modern to the classic, the playful to the sexy. It stays in an R&B groove, save for a trio of jazzy numbers (âApril In Paris,â âThere Will Never Be Another You,â âShiny Stockingsâ) and a country tune from the even more elusive Gary Stewart (âSingle Againâ) What links the lineup is that all these tuners are part of Alexâs personal hit parade. âI know a few scholars of old R&B,â he explains, âthey play things for me to get me going. Plus I remember things from my teenage years, stuff that was even obscure then.â
Growing up in Memphis, Alex would listen to deejay George Klein on WHBO-AM, would sign off each night with Jesse Blevinâs âGoodnight My Loveâ âwhich reappears here as Alexâs send-off to Set. âLipstick Traces,â written by Allen Toussaint but published under his motherâs name, is another youthful fave. But other cuts, like the Randy âYouâve Got a Booger Bear Under There,â are fresh off the car radioâif you happen to be driving around the Deep South, that is.
*Limited to 1 copy per customer/household, multiple orders will be cancelled without notice.













