Steve Cropper
Dedicated – A Salute to the 5 Royales
(429 Records)
[Rating: 4 stars]
Rock and soul musicโs back pages are littered with terrific, even legendary backing musicians who unsuccessfully tried to shift into the spotlight with disappointing results. Booker T. & the MGโs guitarist Steve Cropper is one of them.
But heโs been on a late career upswing recently, releasing two co-headlining projects with Felix Cavaliere and finally this โsoloโ set. The title is a sharp play on words since it functions as both a tribute album to one of Cropperโs first guitar influences, Lowman Paulingโthe largely unsung guitarist and primary songwriter for the 5 Royalesโand is the operative word of that groupโs biggest hit, โDedicated to the One I Love.โ Cropper and producer Jon Tiven rummage through their musician contact lists to call in high profile guest vocalists such as Sharon Jones, Steve Winwood, Lucinda Williams, B.B. King and Bettye Lavette to give a retro yet far from musty spin to some pretty terrific 5 Royales hits.
Like Pauling, Cropper keeps his solos on low boil, preferring to punctuate the music with a similar mix of leads and rhythm lines that provided so much of the gutbucket groove on all those timeless Stax records from Otis Redding, Sam & Dave and dozens of others that bear his distinctive stamp. A few instrumentals like โHelp Me Somebodyโ and โThink,โ the latter best known through James Brownโs iconic version, give Cropper a chance to stretch out. But heโs more of a team player, letting Delbert McClinton and John Popper take center stage while he stays in a supporting yet crucial role, spitting out bluesy staccato lines as on his most storied work.
The 5 Royalesโ songs mix 50s doo-wop with soul, gospel and a Coasters-styled hopped-up pop that still leaves room for short, tight guitar playing from Cropper. Williams appears twice, slathering her laconic, blowzy, slurred Southern vocals over the classic title track and the closing โWhen I Get Like This.โ Lavette, Jones and Shemekia Copland inject the high-octane R&B, and the 15 sizzling tunes are clearly labors of love for all involved. The black and white cover shot of a serious 21 year old Cropper sets the retro mode for whatโs inside.
Credit Cropper and producer Tiven for playing to the guitaristโs often laid back strengths while spiffing up the dusty legacy of one of the more influential if overlooked acts (and guitarists) in pop and soul history.

