Mixed Bag

Label: PolygramYear: 1967Artist Website: www.richiehavens.com
Review by Michael Broyles
3 Min Read

Ever have one of those days? You know what I am referring to – when you wake up and think: What’s the point of getting up? I’d rather stay in bed and listen to Simon And Garfunkel. If you have ever had this experience, Richie Havens’s hit 1967 album Mixed Bag is for you.

“Morning/ Morning/ (I) feel so lonely in the morning,” sings Havens in the beautifully folksy “Morning, Morning.” This hopeful melancholy remains a theme of the album. Although Mixed Bag is truly a “mixed bag” musically, ranging from protest folk (“Handsome Johnny”) and Bossa Nova (“Sandy”) to meditational spiritualism (“Adam”), all the songs are thematically similar: self doubt, loneliness, failure, and fear.

Take Havens’s swing rendition of Jesse Fuller’s “San Francisco Bay Blues.” The song is about a woman he loves dearly, described as “the best girl I ever had.” But nothing good lasts and Havens treated her so badly that she left on an ocean liner. Life is ugly!

While “San Francisco Bay Blues” is disheartening, it pales in comparison to the aforementioned “Morning, Morning.” Starting out the day with loneliness and fear is one thing, but one would hope our minstrel feels differently in the evening. Not for Havens. He softly admits, “Nighttime / Nighttime / Does not bring me to relief.” Poor sap!

Since Havens did not write most of the album, some may wonder why I am focusing so much on its lyrical content. Well, whether Havens is singing Gordon Lightfoot (“High Flyin’ Bird”), Bob Dylan (“Just Like A Woman”), the Beatles (“Eleanor Rigby”), or an original, he masters the art of staying thematically intact. His dark baritone voice and famous “open D” guitar-tuning echo the hopeful melancholy chronicled in the lyrics. So when Havens belts “What’s the use of singing this song? / Some of you are not even listening” in his protest original “Handsome Johnny,” his self-doubt is entirely believable.  He has something to express with Mixed Bag. He just relies on both his and other’s compositions to do it.

What is the point of listening to an album filled with fear, loneliness, and self-doubt? Maybe it reflects a stark reality. The late 1960s brought a plethora of failed attempts. The peace movement did not stop the Vietnam War, civil rights leaders were murdered, politicians betrayed the American people, and Jonestown and Charles Manson permanently scarred hippie movements. Our own lives are filled with failures, doubts, and fears. Havens reminds us that we are not alone. That is enough for me.

Share This Article
BORN: 1985 JOINED THE DV STAFF: December 2008 HOMETOWN: Phoenix, AZ NOW LIVING IN: Tempe, AZSPOUSE / KIDS?: Single without children. FAVORITE ARTIST: Thelonious Monk OTHER ARTISTS I LIKE: Alice Coltrane, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Otis Redding, Marvin Gaye, Charles Mingus, Motown and Staxx, Simon and Garfunkel, Nina Simone, The Clash, Wu-Tang Clan, and others.  Mostly jazz and soul. BEER: Oyster Beer at The Porterhouse in Dublin, Ireland. OTHER HOBBIES: Fighting tyranny and exercising. PERSONAL MOTTO: No doubt alcohol, tobacco, and so forth, are things that a saint must avoid, but sainthood is also a thing that human beings must avoid.—George Orwell I WRITE MUSIC REVIEWS BECAUSE: …somebody needs to tell people why the Duke Ellington Trio recordings are SO hip!

Album Cover

Search

Weather

Weather
30°C
Florida
clear sky
31° _ 30°
69%
Thu
34 °C
Fri
34 °C
Sat
34 °C
Sun
33 °C
Mon
29 °C
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *