Sunday, February 12, 2023

Happiness is Just Driving Me Around the Bend

So there was I thinking that Cuba Gooding was the source for "there's something's going round inside my head" +  "it's something I feel" + "it's something unreal" +  "my vision is clear" - all those repurposed-for-E samples most famously deployed in nuum-cornerstone "Aftermath" by Nightmares on Wax and appearing innumerable times subsequently....  


But then I learn that the original was written and first recorded by Brian Auger!  In 1973.


Brian Auger's Oblivion Express to give the full name (an oddly rave-attuned sort of name, you could imagine a house alias being Oblivion Express, or maybe it could be the title of a slightly cheesy German trance track).

I rather like the original, in its Georgie Fame-ish nifty groover way. 

Then there was a successful - and wonderful  - interpretation by The Main Ingredient in 1974.



And then we get Cuba Gooding's fab 1983 take, which seems molded on The Main Ingredient's version rather than the Auger original.  (Update 2/14" As Anonymous points out in comments, it's actually Cuba Gooding singing on The Main Ingredient's version, which helps to explain the resemblance!). This solo version, which came with an a cappella version on the 12-inch for ease of isolating the vocal bits as samples,  is the source for all the soundbites that nuumheads know so well..



 
Here's a playlist I made that traces the journey of "Happiness Is Just Around the Bend" from Auger, through The Main Ingredient and  the various Gooding mixes, onto the many different tracks in which all those lovely samples got embedded. 

"Started again" is another lyric-lick that got a fair bit of use 


 
Check out the lyric to "Happiness Is Just Around the Bend" and spot just how many lyric-phrases got repurposed. 

The 'Selena' is a mistranscription - it's clearly "something" that is going round inside his head. But apparently the song was inspired by falling in love with a woman. (Which sort of makes the "highly unreal" line a bit jarring).


Selena is going round inside my head

I think it's somethin' I feel

That's highly unreal

So I see my world is upside down

But there is nothing to fear

My vision is clear

All my roads lead nowhere

What lies at the end

Reach your destination

What you find, is your love bird

It's your birth

Started again

So get up

Get it on

Try it again now

Get up

Happiness, is just around the bend now

Selena is going round inside my head

I think it's somethin' I feel

That's highly unreal

So I see my world is upside down

But there is nothing to fear

My vision is clear

All my roads lead nowhere

What lies at the end

Reach your destination

What you find is your love bird

It's your birth

Started again

So get up

Get it on

Try it again now

Get up

Happiness, is just around the bend now


Brian Auger - his other great moment is this cover of "This Wheel's On Fire" with Julie Driscoll


Some good bits with Brian grimacing as he fondles his organ in this one 


The "It Girl" of late-psych, was Jools 




I really enjoy the name of this album Brian & Julie did together with the Trinity - Streetnoise -  but have not been able to bring myself to listen to it - I fear it might be turgid with organ swells and have that sort of oaken, brownish sound-palette that quite a bit of Brit stuff, as '68 heads into '69, tended to have. 











































Then Julie marries Keith Tippett and becomes Julie Tippetts, avant-jazz vocalist, collaborator with the likes of Robert Wyatt, etc 




But back-tracking to the Auger-Driscoll days... here's another connection to UK '90s dance

Brian, Julie and the Trinity did this song "Indian Rope Man" (original by Richie P. Havens) (their version has exactly that oaken, brown-ish sound I was talking about) 


And then there was an act on Skint Records called Indian Rope Man, who also covered "Indian Rope Man" 

At least I think it's a cover - can't seem to find it on the YouTube. At one point, in a phase of Skintmania that now seems faintly inexplicable to me, I scooped that and a whole bunch of other Skint 12's up, but can remember absolutely nothing of IRM's "I R M".

They - or rather he, one Sanjiv Sen - also did this Cream / "Sunshine of Your Love" cover so it's almost certainly going to be a cover of the Havens / Auger-Driscoll tune


Quite a lot of Big Beat had that flashback to the sound of Brit beat boom groups with thick, brownish-swirl keybs kinda sound.  Distorted Hammond etc organs. 

Like this one by Indian Ropeman 


It also comes in a Pub Rok mix... 



Moog-slurry-swirl as mulligatawny jacuzzi








Truly around-the-bend tripped-out reinvention of "Aftermath" by Villalobos + Loderbauer with faintest trace glimmers of Cuba Gooding / Brian Auger





3 comments:

yt said...

Don't forget this Sharon Dee Clarke cover, from 1993 - and it sounds very much of its era! Nice vocal though.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXtEK-HKU5o

Anonymous said...

Lovely stuff! I think you know, but I’m not so sure from the timeline you’ve drawn, but Cuba Gooding IS the lead in the Main Ingredient. Everybody plays the fool, and all that.

SIMON REYNOLDS said...

I did not know that! that's interesting that he would return to do this new version of one of his previous group's famous songs. i wonder if anyone else has ever done that.