by Jason Ankeny
Singer Clarence Carter exemplified the gritty, earthy sound of Muscle Shoals R&B, fusing the devastating poignancy of the blues with a wicked, lascivious wit to create deeply soulful music rooted in the American South of the past and the present. Born January 14, 1936, in Montgomery, AL, Carter was blind from birth. He immediately gravitated to music, teaching himself guitar by listening to the blues classics of John Lee Hooker, Lightnin Hopkins, and Jimmy Reed. He majored in music at Alabama State University, learning to transcribe charts and arrangements in Braille.
With blind classmate Calvin Scott, Carter in 1960 formed the duo Clarence & Calvin, signing to the Fairlane label to release I Wanna Dance But I Dont Know How the following year. After the 1962 release of I Dont Know (School Girl), Clarence & Calvin left Fairlane for the Duke imprint, renaming themselves the C & C Boys for their label debut, Hey Marvin. In all, the duo cut four Duke singles, none of them generating more than a shrug at radio — finally, in 1965 they traveled to Rick Halls Fame Studio in Muscle Shoals, AL, paying $85 to record the wrenching ballad Step by Step and its flip side, Rooster Knees and Rice. Atlanta radio personality Zenas Sears recommended Clarence & Calvin to Atlantic producer Jerry Wexler, and the label issued Step by Step on its Atco subsidiary — the record failed to chart, and the duo was once again looking for a label.
Backed by a four-piece combo dubbed the Mello Men, Clarence & Calvin spent the first half of 1966 headlining Birminghams 2728 Club. One Friday night in June while returning home from the nightspot, the group suffered an auto accident that left Scott critically injured, initiating an ugly falling-out with Carter over the resulting medical bill. In the meantime, Carter continued as a solo act, signing to Halls Fame label for 1967s Tell Daddy, which inspired Etta James response record, Tell Mama. The superb popcorn-soul effort Thread the Needle proved a minor crossover hit, and after one additional Fame release, The Road of Love, Carter returned to Atlantic with Looking for a Fox, issued in early 1968. Looking for a Fox proved the first of many singles to slyly reference the singers visual impairment, not to mention showcasing the libidinous impulses that dominate many of his most popular records.
But few performances better typified the emerging Carter aesthetic than Slip Away, a superior cheating ballad spotlighting his anguished, massive baritone alongside the remarkably sinuous backing of Fames exemplary backing band. The record was a Top Ten hit, and its follow-up, Too Weak to Fight, also went gold, solidifying Carters newfound commercial appeal. He ended 1968 with a superbly funky Christmas single, the raunchy Back Door Santa, in addition to mounting a national tour featuring backing vocalist Candi Staton, who later became Carters wife as well as a soul star in her own right.
The percolating Snatching It Back was Carters first Atlantic release of 1969 — its B-side, a remake of James Carrs deep soul classic The Dark End of the Street, remains one of the singers most potent efforts, drawing on traditional blues and gospel to explore both the absurdity and anguish of infidelity. Subsequent singles including The Feeling Is Right, Doing Our Thing, and Take It Off Him and Put It on Me were only marginally successful, but in 1970 Carter returned to the Top Ten with the sentimental Patches, his biggest hit to date. He nevertheless stumbled again with a run of 1971 releases like Getting the Bills and Slipped, Tripped and Fell in Love, and in the wake of If You Cant Beat Em — a duet with Staton — Carter left Atlantic in 1972, returning to Fame with Back in Your Arms Again.
Released in 1973, the leering Sixty Minute Man proved a novelty hit, but in 1975 he attempted to reignite his career at ABC, releasing Take It All Off and Dear Abby to little notice. By the end of the decade Carter was relegated to small independent labels like Future Stars and Ronn, and in 1980 signed to Venture for the ill-advised Jimmys Disco and Can We Slip Away Again? In 1985 he resurfaced on the fledgling Ichiban label, returning to the ribald deep soul of his heyday — the LP Dr. C.C. earned positive reviews and spawned the hilariously lewd Strokin, a major word-of-mouth hit. (A sequel, Still Strokin, followed in 1989.) Carter continued recording and touring regularly into the 21st century, maintaining a strong fan base throughout the South.