Commodores - I Feel Sanctified (DJ Gizmo Redrum), by DJ Gizmo

from the album Redrums 3

DJ Gizmo
Commodores - Nightshift (Official Music Video)

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Commodores Play “Easy”

Listen to this track by funk soul purveyors turned pop crossover chart-toppers Commodores. It’s “Easy”, a smash hit single from their 1977 self-titled record that puts their wide range of musical capabilities on display. Released on Motown, the group followed in that label’s well-established traditions by aiming for as broad spectrum when it came to audiences as possible. At the height of disco and the culture that supported it, they had their bases well covered and then some. With this cut, they strayed into new territory – rock balladry – while still retaining their own sound.

A big part of their success in doing so is down to writer and lead vocalist Lionel Ritchie. His distinctive singing style hooks into R&B conventions. But the arrangement and textures, while adhering to the same with the expected brass, strings, and gospel-inspired piano, add a truly incendiary rock guitar break into the mix, that solo being one of the most iconic of the era along with the now-famous “guitar glide” effect in the bridge section. Alternative rock band Faith No More recorded this song fifteen years later with their tongues at least partially in cheek in covering a mainstream hit like this. Yet still, the band replicated its arrangement in attentive detail. Ironic or not, it gave Faith No More a hit with a new generation who had heard the Commodores’ original on the radio as children.

Commodores would continue to pursue a wide range of styles on their records after this song was a hit, with dance floor-oriented songs paired with MOR ballads. But “Easy” was an important proof of concept to that approach. Since its release, it’s become a pop standard, covered by many, and still belonging to no single genre. This stands to reason. “Easy” takes its cues not just from rock music and R&B. It also borrows from an approach that’s most associated with the confessional singer-songwriter fare of the era as well. As such, its emotional content goes well beyond that of the standard break-up song in any period up until then. Its palette is downright sophisticated on that score.

Commodores in 1970 in a Motown publicity shot, two years after their formation.

The anger and sadness that characterizes so many pop tunes about break-ups, even at the time, are not found here at all. This is no “I Will Survive” or “Please Don’t Leave Me This Way”. Instead of heartbreak, tears, desperation, regret, or lyrical lashing out, Ritchie sets a completely different tone by rooting it in feelings of resignation and relief instead. There’s even a hint of Seventies Me-Generation-style self-actualization in there for good measure. The narrator isn’t ending the relationship because of cheating or jealousy, at least not that we know of as revealed in the narrative. He’s doing it because he’s not happy when he tries to fake it. He wants to be free to be “just me”.

I wanna be high, so high
I wanna be free to know the things I do are right
I wanna be free
Just me …

There’s an argument to be made perhaps that “Easy” is something of a Boomer anthem of supreme self-absorption, with a very fine line between that and the aforementioned self-actualization quotient. There’s another argument perhaps that the song might have hit differently at the time if it were written and sung by a woman. Check out Sky Ferreira’s version as featured in 2017’s Baby Driver to test that theory. And what of the other side of this conversation? Are we getting the full story of why this relationship has come to an end? There is another angle to be found here, then, that perhaps might make for a good old-fashioned response song from the other side.

All of this is purely speculative, of course. So is the idea that this song hinted at Lionel Ritchie’s plans for a solo career which would kick off with his 1982 self-titled debut after he left the Commodores around the same time. In the meantime and besides all that, “Easy” remains to be a complex exploration of decidedly adult themes, the biggest being that relationships don’t necessarily end dramatically or even tragically all the time. Sometimes, they just end because it makes perfect sense that they should; when the pain gets too much, and when one finds themselves having to fake it instead of finding solace, safety, and contentment within it.

Yet even then, the music is decidedly wistful and contemplative instead of purely joyous and liberating. The best songs in pop history sometimes tell more than one story, with lyrics telling one while the music tells quite another, with each story being just as valid. Melodically and in terms of the moods evoked by its changes, there is still a sense of loss and sadness to be found weaved into this hit song that scored Commodores top ten and twenty positions all over the world. This blend of emotional undercurrents only adds to how sophisticated “Easy” is as a piece of songwriting and as a performance. Among other things, it deftly reflects the well-known grey areas of any relationship dissolution, relatable to anyone who’s ever experienced one.

Perhaps this is where “Easy” wins the most in the relatability stakes; that even in the relief we experience when a trying relationship is over, there is still respect being paid to that which is lost.

After Lionel Ritchie’s departure, Commodores continued to enjoy radio hits well into the next decade, the biggest being 1985’s “Nightshift” from the album of the same name. They are an active band today. You can learn about them at commodoreslive.com.

Lionel Ritchie continues as a solo artist with an impressive list of hit songs behind him. His site is lionelrichie.com.

Enjoy!

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"Brick House" is a song from #theCommodores' 1977 self-titled album (released as Zoom in the UK). The single peaked at number 5 in the U.S. and number 32 in the #UKSinglesChart.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzOJaHHlIcQ
Commodores - Brickhouse (Live)

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🎼Playlist #MusicSky #Mixtapestry #NowSpinning #Music 1.4k songs on my playlist, help me hit 5k by end of the year. 1) Suggest something new, ok to plug your own songs 2) Give me an awesome cover 3) Leave me an alternative to this Easy #TheCommodores youtu.be/7XcTyEKSnYg?...

Easy - The Commodores
Bluesky

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"Nightshift" - The Commodores

Now without Lionel Richie (some sort of dispute about a clay head, or something); vocals are handled by Walter Orange and JD Nicholas.

It's a tribute song to Jackie Wilson and Marvin Gaye, who had both died the previous year.

Sadly, their only big hit in the post-Lionel lineup; always bring back memories of sneaking a listen to Robbie Vincent on Sunday nights.

#TOTP #TheCommodores

#nowplaying
#faithnomore - #easy (1992)
ich bin kein freund von #coversong , aber DAS ist ein richtig gutes von den #TheCommodores

~ Genre v Genre I~
Quarter Finals 2/4
Vote for the song you like the most

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Sundown
0%
Love is the Drug
100%
Fox on the Run
0%
Three Times a Lady
0%
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2nd Rnd
Vote for the song you like the most

#Wings
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Silly Love Songs
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20%
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0%
Don'tknow/like them
20%
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