Possessor of the most majestic voice in '50s pop,
Roy Hamilton was perfectly poised to score on the charts during the Eisenhower Era, with a flair for high melodrama but also a subtle sense of R&B and swing to appeal to pop audiences. His versions of "You'll Never Walk Alone" and "Unchained Melody" were full-throated bravura performances, while he seemed to transition well to the teenaged world with his 1961 hit, "You Can Have Her." Still, his hits dried up that year, and he moved from MGM to RCA to small independent labels before his untimely death from a stroke in 1969. The Raven disc
Dark End of the Street compiles his last six years, hitless as they were, portraying a great voice with great intentions who was perpetually the victim of misguided label intentions (most of them predicated on exposing him to the widest variety of record buyers). Although
Hamilton's style of singing was going against the grain of rock music in the '60s, it was suited well for the quickly maturing sound of soul and pop, led by a raft of Brill Building eggheads like
Burt Bacharach,
Phil Spector, and
Jerry Leiber/
Mike Stoller. Indeed,
Hamilton's first sessions for MGM paired him with
Leiber & Stoller, and produced the sophisticated pop of "Let Go" and "Midnight Town -- Daybreak City." Meanwhile, other sessions were pointed toward the LP-buying public, and included the familiar songs "For Your Precious Love," "Crying in the Chapel," "Answer Me, My Love," and a remake of his first hit, "You'll Never Walk Alone." His songs for RCA were also a mixed bag, but the best of them are certainly worth hearing, including a remake of the
Hank Ballard hit "Tore Up Over You" and a bewitching version of the contemporary
Bacharach hit "Reach Out for Me." No chart entries were forthcoming, and
Hamilton drifted into independent contracts. One of them, however, found him working with
Chips Moman at American Studios in Memphis, and the results of these sessions -- quiet brilliance embodied by a great reading of the oft-covered "The Dark End of the Street," "100 Years," and more stirring drama in "Angelica" (one of two
Hamilton songs later covered by
Scott Walker) -- were up to the standards of his earlier successes. Even fans of
Roy Hamilton might think they can safely skip everything from this period, but
Dark End of the Street 1963-1969: The Operatic Soul of Roy Hamilton makes the case for
Hamilton's greatness -- despite constant label miscues -- right up to his death.
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John Bush, Rovi