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Dusty in Memphis, Dusty Springfield's beautiful and bizarre magnum
opus, remains as fine a hybrid of pop and rhythm and blues as has
ever been made. In this remarkable book, Warren Zanes explores his
own love affair with the record. He digs deep into the album's
Memphis roots and talks to several of the key characters who were
involved in its creation; many of whom were - like Zanes -
outsiders drawn to the American South and mesmerized by its hold
over the imagination. EXCERPT The love that is the subject of
'Dusty in Memphis' is different from the love of her earlier songs:
it is a love that is all at once diffuse, dark, unpredictable,
ecstatic, and a terrible deal. It is a love too big for the lyrical
(and for that matter musical) framework of Dusty's earlier pop
productions, no matter the breadth of that work. Like Memphis
itself, the love that is the subject of 'Dusty in Memphis' is
indeed bursting with the contrary: it happens not simply when you
yearn for it, as in some adolescent dream, but when you're not
prepared for it; it reveals itself not simply under the star-filled
skies where a moon hangs low--in fact, as the first and last tracks
on side one attest, it might be at its best when the sun's just
arriving at work.
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