The Delta Sweete by Bobbie Gentry

The Delta Sweete

Bobbie Gentry

1968

The Delta Sweete is a Rock album by Bobbie Gentry, originally released in 1968. On Gatefold: 30 pressings tracked, owned by 4 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Rock
  • Folk Rock
  • southern
  • storytelling
  • lush

About

Listeners (and, likely, executives at Capitol Records) looking for a smash sequel to Bobbie Gentry’s iconic “Ode to Billie Joe” on her sophomore album were disappointed: The album flopped on the charts, with just one single—the groovy album opener, “Okolona River Bottom Band”—that became a modest hit. Critics, though, had reason to rejoice. Gentry leaned hard into the eccentric, shadowy, Deep South sound she’d established with her earthshaking debut on her second LP, a concept album depicting her upbringing in Mississippi (a “sweete” of songs, as it were). The resulting project is fiercely idiosyncratic, with spoken-word vignettes, work songs, sweet ballads, and brash pop tunes sharing space on the LP. Gentry’s laconic delivery, which barely hinted at a Southern drawl, gave a seductive flair even to songs about picking cotton on a chain gang as she turned those unsavory slices of Americana into timely pop arrangements listeners couldn’t stand to turn off. There are idyllic visions of rural life on the album: “Mornin’ Glory” sounds like some humid, wisteria-scented dawn breeze through some country house, with Gentry’s voice fuzzing out like she literally just woke up (she even yawns). Mostly, though, it’s a bit darker—or at least more chaotic. The quickly rapped “Sermon” has the air of a threat, while “Reunion” is practically avant-garde in its many-layered soundscape of a family gathering. Gentry’s songwriting remained as evocative and opaque as ever on this album, prompting analysis and interpretation with no clear answers. The lush strings that bookend each track add a cinematic air, lending the album the feeling of a score to some torrid Tennessee Williams adaptation. Somewhere between a country blues, contemporary R&B, and experimental pop, <i>The Delta Sweete</i> was ambitious and totally different than anything Gentry’s peers were making—a decidedly Southern synthesis that was still larger than life.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1Okolona River Bottom Band3:04
  2. 2Big Boss Man2:54
  3. 3Reunion2:37
  4. 4Parchman Farm3:12
  5. 5Mornin' Glory3:10
  6. 6Sermon2:37
  7. 7Tobacco Road2:49
  8. 8Penduli Pendulum1:56
  9. 9Jessye' Lisabeth3:03
  10. 10Refractions2:29
  11. 11Louisiana Man2:39
  12. 12Courtyard3:01

Credits

Performers

4 collectors on Gatefold own this · 30 pressings tracked on Gatefold