Recorded in the wake of the collapse of Stax Records in 1976,
Friend of Mine brushed up against a long fallow period in
Little Milton's recorded output, and was also unavailable for many years, thus making it one of his least-known albums. Produced by
Milton for
Henry Stone's TK Records and issued on the Glades Records imprint, this is a soulful blues workout drenched in sweaty vocals and long, sustained performances, of which perhaps the best is the five-and-a-half-minute "You're Gonna Make Me Cry," which also includes some impressive guitar. The record's strongest body of songs are the smooth soul ballads such as "Baby It Ain't No Way," the rousing "Don't Turn Away" (a song that one wishes
Elvis Presley could have discovered and considered covering), "I'm in Love With My Best Friend's Wife," and "Bring It on Back," but it also includes one really hot lament, "Sundown," that crosses into soul territory without compromising its solid blues credentials. There's a lot of solid playing here, by bassist
Bernard Reed and guitarists Danny Raye and John Bishop (and
Milton), among others, and the Haywood Singers give excellent singing support. This album and its immediate follow-up,
Me for You, You for Me, represent the bridge between
Little Milton's Stax and Malaco recordings, both chronologically and stylistically.