The very title of Paul Davis' 1971 debut is a nod toward Bert Berns, the founder of Bang records and author of "A Little Bit of Soap," the 1961 Jarmels single Davis covered and brought within flirting distance of the Top 40 in 1970. Ironically enough, "A Little Bit of Soap" winds up being the song that seems out of step with the rest of the bubblegum pop-soul on A Little Bit of Paul Davis, as Davis recasts it as a bit of a sleepy groover -- nice enough, but not as appealing as the bright, snappy pop of the rest of the ...
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The very title of Paul Davis' 1971 debut is a nod toward Bert Berns, the founder of Bang records and author of "A Little Bit of Soap," the 1961 Jarmels single Davis covered and brought within flirting distance of the Top 40 in 1970. Ironically enough, "A Little Bit of Soap" winds up being the song that seems out of step with the rest of the bubblegum pop-soul on A Little Bit of Paul Davis, as Davis recasts it as a bit of a sleepy groover -- nice enough, but not as appealing as the bright, snappy pop of the rest of the record. Like a lot of Bang's late-'60s/early-'70s output -- think Neil Diamond and Andy Kim -- this walks a curious line between AM bubblegum and adult contemporary soft rock, with the hooks coming from the former and the smoothness coming from the latter. Davis gives this a dash of Georgian soul in his phrasing, but that's just flavoring on this batch of bubblegum pop. Impressively, most of the record is written by Davis himself -- only three cuts come from other writers -- and he shows a real talent for propulsive, cheerful pop, but even this has a touch of the laid-back delivery that would become his trademark...just enough to make this distinctive from other Bang LPs and other early-'70s AM pop, and just enough to make this something of an undiscovered little gem of its time. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
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Add this copy of A Little Bit of Paul Davis to cart. $14.80, new condition, Sold by Importcds rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sunrise, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2009 by Wounded Bird.