I Can't Quit You Baby Royal Albert Hall

Dejection standard written by Willie Dixon

"I Can't Quit You Baby"
I Can't Quit You Baby.jpg
Single past Otis Rush
B-side "Sit Down Baby"
Released 1956 (1956)
Recorded c. July 1956
Studio Boulevard Recording, Chicago
Genre Blues
Length 2:56
Label Cobra
Songwriter(southward) Willie Dixon
Producer(south) Willie Dixon

"I Can't Quit You Baby" is blues vocal written by Willie Dixon and outset recorded past Chicago blues artist Otis Rush in 1956.[one] It is a slow twelve-bar dejection ensemble piece, with lyrics near the consequences of an adulterous human relationship which is difficult to end.

"I Can't Quit Yous Baby" was Blitz's start recording and Cobra Records'south debut single. It became a record chart hitting too as a blues standard. Blitz updated the vocal in 1966 with a modified system, which was adjusted by Led Zeppelin for their 1969 debut anthology.

Original vocal [edit]

According to biographer Mitsutoshi Inaba "the song bailiwick is the consequences of adultery and the feeling that a man cannot give up a relationship":[2]

I can't quit you, baby
But I've got to put you down for awhile
You know I can't quit y'all, babe
Just I've got to put you down for awhile
Well, yous messed upward my happy domicile, baby
Fabricated me mistreat my only child[3]

In his autobiography, Willie Dixon explained that "I Can't Quit Yous Baby" was written about a relationship Rush was preoccupied with at the time; Dixon used this to draw out an impassioned performance past Rush.[three] Despite being solely credited to Dixon, Rush felt that the song's identity is very much his own:

Willie would but hum the sound, he never played annihilation, you know. He would endeavour to give me some phrases how the vocal go and I pretty much did it on my own, the mode it sounded. The manner I sang the song and the mode I played my guitar is what I wanted to play.[ii]

Inaba added: "Otis' passionate song tune with alternations of natural vocalism, falsetto, shouts, and growls, is his singing style indeed".[2] The song is notated in the key of A major in 12/eight time with a "dull blues" tempo.[four] Rush'south original version consists of four twelve-bar song sections with lead guitar fills. It was Rush's first recording and took identify in Chicago effectually July 1956.[5] Accompanying Rush on lead guitar and vocal are Big Walter Horton on harmonica, Red Holloway on tenor sax, Lafayette Leake on pianoforte, Wayne Bennett on second guitar, Dixon on bass, and Al Duncan on drums.[5]

"I Can't Quit You lot Infant" was a vehicle for arranger-producer Dixon to launch Blitz and Cobra Records, equally it was the first single for both.[3] In this regard, information technology was a success, reaching number six on Billboard'due south Rhythm & Dejection Records chart in 1956.[6]

Otis Rush revisited "I Can't Quit You Baby" several times over the years. His 1966 re-recording for the 1966 dejection compilation Chicago/The Blues/Today! Vol. 2 [seven] uses an altered arrangement with an unusual turnaround (tonic chord followed by a half-step to a higher place the tonic chord) and staccato guitar fills. Most cover versions are based on Rush's Vanguard rendition.

Led Zeppelin versions [edit]

"I Can't Quit You Baby"
Song past Led Zeppelin
from the album Led Zeppelin
Released January 12, 1969 (1969-01-12)
Recorded Oct 1968
Studio Olympic, London
Genre Dejection rock
Length four:42
Label Atlantic
Songwriter(south) Willie Dixon
Producer(s) Jimmy Page

English language rock band Led Zeppelin recorded "I Tin can't Quit You Baby" for their 1969 debut album Led Zeppelin.[8] Co-ordinate to music journalist Cub Koda, their rendition is "a notation-for-note copy of Otis Rush'southward" 1966 Vanguard version,[nine] although with different instrumentation and dynamics.[x] It besides incorporates a interruption during the guitar solo where Jimmy Page plays a 4-bar unaccompanied set-upwardly before relaunching into the solo. Although biographer Keith Shadwick notes Page's fluff on the turnaround coming out of the solo, he concludes the song "ends up equally 1 of the well-nigh successful pieces on the first album, with no flat spots and a perfectly symmetrical course, all within the classic blues tradition".[10]

Led Zeppelin regularly performed "I Can't Quit Y'all Babe" in concert from 1968 to early 1970.[eleven] Two alive versions from 1969 are included on the 1997 BBC Sessions. A performance of the song on January 9, 1970, at Regal Albert Hall is included on the 2003 Led Zeppelin DVD (an edited version of this operation was released on the 1982 Coda album). In 1970, the song was dropped from Led Zeppelin's typical concert lineup as they incorporated textile from Led Zeppelin Three into their shows, with "I Tin can't Quit You Baby" substantially being replaced past "Since I've Been Loving You". Information technology was still revived as function of the "Whole Lotta Love" medley during some Led Zeppelin concerts in 1972 and 1973.[11] The song was rehearsed by the surviving members of Led Zeppelin for the May 14, 1988, Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary Celebration, but was not performed during the event.[11]

In a gimmicky review for the Coda album, Kurt Loder of Rolling Stone found the Coda version of "I Tin't Quit You Baby", "tossed off a audio check [in 1970]", "perfectly captures the bluesmania of the period, consummate with a classically overwrought guitar solo."[12]

Recognition and influence [edit]

"I Can't Quit Y'all Baby" is a dejection standard[ane] that has been recorded by more 30 artists.[thirteen] Rush's original Cobra single was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1994 that noted "a Willie Dixon production revealing Blitz as an boggling talent with an impassioned arroyo."[5]

See too [edit]

  • List of Led Zeppelin songs written or inspired by others

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Herzhaft, Gerard (1992). "I Can't Quit You Babe". Encyclopedia of the Blues. Fayetteville, Arkansas: Academy of Arkansas Press. p. 453. ISBN1-55728-252-8.
  2. ^ a b c Inaba, Mitsutoshi (2011). Willie Dixon: Preacher of the Blues. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. pp. 158–159. ISBN978-0810869936.
  3. ^ a b c Dixon, Willie; Snowden, Don (1989). I Am the Dejection. Da Capo Press. pp. 102, 106–107. ISBN0-306-80415-eight.
  4. ^ Hal Leonard (1995). "I Tin't Quit You Baby". The Blues. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Hal Leonard. p. 100. ISBN0-79355-259-1.
  5. ^ a b c Dejection Foundation (Nov 10, 2016). "1994 Hall of Fame Inductees: I Can't Quit You Baby – Otis Rush (Cobra 1956)". The Blues Foundation . Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  6. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1988). Top R&B Singles 1942–1988. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Inquiry. p. 301. ISBN0-89820-068-7.
  7. ^ O'Neal, Jim (Nov 10, 2016). "Chicago/The Blues/Today! Vol. 1-3 – Various Artists (Vanguard, 1966)". Blues Foundation . Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  8. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Led Zeppelin [anthology] – Review". AllMusic . Retrieved Jan 21, 2018.
  9. ^ Koda, Cub. "Chicago/The Blues/Today! – Review". AllMusic . Retrieved March sixteen, 2020.
  10. ^ a b Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Ring and Their Music 1968–1980 (1st ed.). San Francisco: Backbeat Books. pp. 52–53. ISBN0-87930-871-0.
  11. ^ a b c Lewis, Dave (2004). Led Zeppelin: The Complete Guide to Their Music (1st ed.). London: Charabanc Printing. ISBN1-84449-141-2.
  12. ^ Loder, Kurt (January 20, 1983). "Coda". Rolling Rock . Retrieved July 27, 2017.
  13. ^ "Otis Blitz: I Tin can't Quit You Baby – Also Performed By". AllMusic . Retrieved May 5, 2019.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Can%27t_Quit_You_Baby

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