![]() The night did not seem unique at the time, we treated it like any other, but there was one thing my friend said that stood out to me.Īs if to sum up the evening’s purpose my friend gave me a quick synopsis of his situation. That something was beer, that someone was me. This was the night that my friend's first love had left him, and he wanted something to distract him and someone to talk to. I believe the year was 2003 I got a phone call from my friend who was looking for someone to drink with. Songs can take on radical new meanings if they come into your life at unique times, and speaking of Black Sabbath whenever I hear “Changes,” I think about a very specific moment in time. Up until a then I only possessed two Black Sabbath CDs, the self titled “Black Sabbath,” and “Paranoid,” I have since rectified that situation by purchasing “Sabbath Bloody Sabbath,” and “Black Sabbath Volume 4.” It is a wonderful thing that after so many years I can still look deeper into bands I have known for years and learn so much more about them. The slower, swinging tempo in Bradley’s version provides a heavier, blues-ier feel that makes the emotion of the song come across in a visceral, genuine way.Īppreciating something about your life that is better now than it was a year ago.A few months back that Craig Kemery told me to dig deeper into Black Sabbath. The organic, analog funk of the Budos Band provides a rich musical backdrop that primes the listener for that unmistakable voice.ģ. The fragile power of Charles Bradley’s voice – like a trumpet lined with sandpaper – is really unlike anything else recorded this century.Ģ. ![]() I didn’t really have to ‘learn’ it it just stuck to my brain.”ġ. “The verse that really stuck to me was, ‘It took so long to realize / That I can still hear her last goodbyes / Now all my days are filled with tears / Wish I could go back and change these years.’ Because it was like my mom saying she was sick and she was leaving me and something about that song … I just took the last lyrics and wow. His version of “Changes” was recorded for his third – and final – record, and it was while he was in the process of recording it that his mother died. Bradley took care of her through her later years, and she lived to see her son’s unlikely career in music take off with the release of his first album (when he was sixty-two!) in 2011. ![]() After years of homelessness and struggle and intermittent contact between the two, she crossed the country on a Greyhound bus to reconnect with him in the late 1990s. When Bradley was eight, his mother reappeared, and they lived together until he ran away at age 14. She abandoned him when he was an infant, leaving his grandmother to raise him. I won’t get into the details of Charles Bradley’s difficult, heartbreaking, and ultimately triumphant life – there is a documentary that can do that nicely for you – but the part of his life most relevant here is his relationship with his mother. Bradley injects into “Changes” the pain and love of a truly extraordinary life. The first line sounds like it’s lifted directly from a thesaurus: “I feel unhappy / I feel so sad.”Īfter the song’s release, Ozzy Osbourne had to appease fans by stating that Sabbath was “certainly not going to get any less heavy” or start bringing string sections on stage in their live shows.Īnd like any good cover song, Charles Bradley’s interpretation takes the best ingredients from the original and pulls them into their potential. Then there are the lyrics which aren’t exactly the peak of poetry. Which makes sense, because it was written…by the band’s guitarist, who was experimenting with a keyboard. With all respect to Black Sabbath (whom we featured way back in week 46) the piano part sounds childishly simple, as if it was written by a guitarist who was experimenting with a keyboard. The original version of this song, in the context of Black Sabbath’s catalogue of guitar-driven riff-rock anthems, is a bit of an oddball.
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