Albert Collins, Robert Cray & Johnny Copeland
Showdown!
Alligator Records |
Note: At the end of November, Alligator Records released a
“Deluxe Reissue” edition of one of the label’s most popular
albums. Showdown! was originally issued in 1985, so this effort
is in celebration of the recording’s 40th Anniversary. It’s been
remastered as a Clear Vinyl LP with a deluxe gatefold jacket
with expanded artwork. Also included are remembrances from
Alligator founder and album co-producer Bruce Iglauer, plus a
bonus track (the excellent “Something To Remember You By,” which
originally appeared on Alligator’s 25th Anniversary Collection).
We originally reviewed the album as a Flashback in November of
2003, which appears below.
Albert Collins and Johnny Copeland were longtime
associates, going back to the days when Collins took a teenaged
Copeland under his wing and taught him a few licks on his
guitar. Many years later, a young teenager in Tacoma, Robert
Cray, was blown away by the musical act at his high school
graduation dance, none other than Albert Collins. As he had done
with Copeland years before, Collins took young Cray under his
wing and taught him some nasty Texas Blues guitar.
By the mid ’80s, Collins was one of the most visible bluesmen
this side of B. B. King, having recorded five scorching albums
for Alligator (including THE Albert Collins album, Ice Pickin’)
and appeared at Live Aid. At the same time, Copeland had
recorded four powerful albums for Rounder, including the
essentials Copeland Special and Texas Twister
(which featured Stevie Ray Vaughan on a couple of tracks).
During this time, Alligator Records, Collins’ label, decided to
team up Collins and Copeland, along with Gatemouth Brown, on an
album. When Brown was unable to join them due to scheduling
conflicts, Cray was brought in. During this same time, Robert
Cray had nearly equaled both Collins’ and Copeland’s fame,
coming off two impressive releases on the Hightone label, Bad
Influence and False Accusations. The final product of
the union was Showdown!
To put it simply, this is as perfect a blues album as there is.
The vocals and guitar solos are split evenly, with Collins
appearing on all nine tracks, sharing four with Copeland, three
with Cray,. The trio appeared together on the opening
track, a splendid cover of “T-Bone Shuffle,” and the closer, Ray
Charles’ “Blackjack”, which features some outstanding solo
fretwork by all three.
On his four tracks, Copeland displays all-out intensity on
guitar and with his feral vocals. He never sounded better on
tracks like “Lion’s Den,” “Bring Your Fine Self Home”, and the
Hop Wilson tribute, “Black Cat Bone”. Cray’s contributions are a
bit more restrained, including a nifty cover of Muddy Waters’
“She’s Into Something,” but his fervent vocal on “The Dream” is
chill bump-inducing.
As for Collins, for the most part he serves as the master of
ceremonies, allowing the other two to have their moments. But
when it’s his turn to take the guitar spotlight he shows why he
was known as The Master of the Telecaster, infusing each song
with the icy tone that made his sound so instantly recognizable
(witness the outstanding Collins/Copeland instrumental,
“Albert’s Alley”). While his vocals are not as strong as
Copeland’s or Cray’s, they are a nice fit with the songs he
does.
The band supporting these three are a veritable Who’s Who in
Chicago Blues, with Allen Batts on organ, Johnny B. Gayden on
bass, and the great Casey Jones on drums.
Collins would later move to the Virgin/Pointblank label and
record several other fine albums, but none as great as this one,
before dying in November of 1993 after a battle with lung
cancer. Copeland recorded several albums for Verve and survived
a heart transplant, before dying in 1997 from complications from
additional heart surgery.
Cray is largely credited for helping to trigger the resurgence
of interest in the blues. He’s recorded numerous albums of his
Stax/Hi Records soul variation of the blues, with varying
success, including 1986’s Strong Persuader, which is
considered by many to be his masterpiece.
If you’ve read this far, you probably already own Showdown!.
If not, your blues collection is incomplete.
--- Graham Clarke