Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin I Can't Quit You Baby

Blues standard written by Willie Dixon

"I Can't Quit Yous Babe"
I Can't Quit You Baby.jpg
Single by Otis Blitz
B-side "Sit Downwardly Baby"
Released 1956 (1956)
Recorded c. July 1956
Studio Boulevard Recording, Chicago
Genre Blues
Length 2:56
Label Cobra
Songwriter(s) Willie Dixon
Producer(s) Willie Dixon

"I Tin can't Quit You lot Infant" is blues song written by Willie Dixon and kickoff recorded by Chicago blues artist Otis Blitz in 1956.[1] Information technology is a slow twelve-bar blues ensemble piece, with lyrics well-nigh the consequences of an adulterous relationship which is hard to end.

"I Can't Quit Yous Infant" was Rush'south starting time recording and Cobra Records's debut single. It became a record chart hit as well as a blues standard. Rush updated the song in 1966 with a modified arrangement, which was adapted by Led Zeppelin for their 1969 debut album.

Original song [edit]

According to biographer Mitsutoshi Inaba "the song subject is the consequences of adultery and the feeling that a homo cannot requite upward a relationship":[2]

I can't quit you, baby
But I've got to put you downwardly for awhile
You know I can't quit yous, baby
Merely I've got to put you downwards for awhile
Well, you messed upwards my happy home, babe
Made me mistreat my only kid[three]

In his autobiography, Willie Dixon explained that "I Can't Quit You lot Baby" was written near a relationship Blitz was preoccupied with at the fourth dimension; Dixon used this to draw out an impassioned operation by Rush.[3] Despite existence solely credited to Dixon, Blitz felt that the song's identity is very much his own:

Willie would only hum the sound, he never played anything, you know. He would try to give me some phrases how the vocal go and I pretty much did it on my ain, the manner it sounded. The way I sang the vocal and the way I played my guitar is what I wanted to play.[2]

Inaba added: "Otis' passionate vocal tune with alternations of natural vocalization, falsetto, shouts, and growls, is his singing style indeed".[two] The song is notated in the key of A major in 12/eight time with a "slow blues" tempo.[4] Rush's original version consists of four twelve-bar vocal sections with pb guitar fills. It was Rush'southward first recording and took identify in Chicago around July 1956.[5] Accompanying Rush on lead guitar and vocal are Big Walter Horton on harmonica, Cherry-red Holloway on tenor sax, Lafayette Leake on piano, Wayne Bennett on second guitar, Dixon on bass, and Al Duncan on drums.[5]

"I Can't Quit Yous Baby" was a vehicle for arranger-producer Dixon to launch Blitz and Cobra Records, as it was the first single for both.[3] In this regard, it was a success, reaching number six on Billboard'south Rhythm & Blues Records chart in 1956.[half-dozen]

Otis Rush revisited "I Tin't Quit You lot Babe" several times over the years. His 1966 re-recording for the 1966 blues compilation Chicago/The Blues/Today! Vol. 2 [seven] uses an altered arrangement with an unusual turnaround (tonic chord followed by a half-footstep above the tonic chord) and staccato guitar fills. Virtually cover versions are based on Rush'southward Vanguard rendition.

Led Zeppelin versions [edit]

"I Tin can't Quit You lot Baby"
Song past Led Zeppelin
from the album Led Zeppelin
Released Jan 12, 1969 (1969-01-12)
Recorded October 1968
Studio Olympic, London
Genre Blues rock
Length 4:42
Characterization Atlantic
Songwriter(s) Willie Dixon
Producer(s) Jimmy Page

English stone ring Led Zeppelin recorded "I Can't Quit You Infant" for their 1969 debut album Led Zeppelin.[8] According to music journalist Cub Koda, their rendition is "a note-for-note re-create of Otis Rush's" 1966 Vanguard version,[9] although with different instrumentation and dynamics.[10] It besides incorporates a break during the guitar solo where Jimmy Page plays a four-bar unaccompanied ready-upwardly before relaunching into the solo. Although biographer Keith Shadwick notes Page'southward fluff on the turnaround coming out of the solo, he concludes the song "ends upwards as one of the virtually successful pieces on the first album, with no flat spots and a perfectly symmetrical form, all within the archetype dejection tradition".[10]

Led Zeppelin regularly performed "I Can't Quit You Babe" in concert from 1968 to early 1970.[11] Two alive versions from 1969 are included on the 1997 BBC Sessions. A performance of the song on January 9, 1970, at Royal Albert Hall is included on the 2003 Led Zeppelin DVD (an edited version of this performance was released on the 1982 Coda album). In 1970, the song was dropped from Led Zeppelin's typical concert lineup every bit they incorporated textile from Led Zeppelin III into their shows, with "I Can't Quit You lot Baby" essentially being replaced by "Since I've Been Loving Yous". Information technology was yet revived every bit part of the "Whole Lotta Beloved" medley during some Led Zeppelin concerts in 1972 and 1973.[11] The vocal was rehearsed by the surviving members of Led Zeppelin for the May 14, 1988, Atlantic Records 40th Ceremony Celebration, but was non performed during the event.[11]

In a contemporary review for the Coda album, Kurt Loder of Rolling Stone constitute the Coda version of "I Can't Quit You lot Infant", "tossed off a sound check [in 1970]", "perfectly captures the bluesmania of the flow, complete with a classically overwrought guitar solo."[12]

Recognition and influence [edit]

"I Can't Quit You Babe" is a blues standard[1] that has been recorded past more xxx artists.[13] Blitz's original Cobra unmarried was inducted into the Dejection Foundation Hall of Fame in 1994 that noted "a Willie Dixon production revealing Blitz as an boggling talent with an impassioned arroyo."[5]

See also [edit]

  • Listing of Led Zeppelin songs written or inspired by others

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Herzhaft, Gerard (1992). "I Can't Quit You lot Babe". Encyclopedia of the Blues. Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas Printing. p. 453. ISBNi-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 Blues. Da Capo Printing. pp. 102, 106–107. ISBN0-306-80415-8.
  4. ^ Hal Leonard (1995). "I Can't Quit Y'all Infant". 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 Tin can't Quit You Baby – Otis Rush (Cobra 1956)". The Blues Foundation . Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  6. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1988). Summit R&B Singles 1942–1988. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Tape Inquiry. p. 301. ISBN0-89820-068-7.
  7. ^ O'Neal, Jim (Nov ten, 2016). "Chicago/The Blues/Today! Vol. i-3 – Various Artists (Vanguard, 1966)". Blues Foundation . Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  8. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Led Zeppelin [album] – Review". AllMusic . Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  9. ^ Koda, Cub. "Chicago/The Blues/Today! – Review". AllMusic . Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  10. ^ a b Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band 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: Omnibus Press. ISBN1-84449-141-2.
  12. ^ Loder, Kurt (January 20, 1983). "Coda". Rolling Stone . Retrieved July 27, 2017.
  13. ^ "Otis Rush: I Can't Quit You Infant – 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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