The Sound of Wilson Pickett was one of the three albums Atlantic issued by the Wicked One in 1967. Produced by
Jerry Wexler (who got co-writes on a couple of tracks), it featured great session players like
Chips Moman and
Spooner Oldham, to name just two. Looking at the track list, it looks like a slew of hits. But it wasn't. In fact, it was two sides packed with singles. While it contains his absolutely classic, wailing read of "Funky Broadway," it also features both parts of "I Found a Love" (renamed "I Found a True Love" for the 1968 album
The Midnight Mover), the
Oldham and
Dan Penn suggestive classic "I Need a Lot of Loving Everyday."
Pickett's reading of the song with a killer female backing chorus smolders with nocturnal nether-hipped fire.
Pickett's version of
Rudy Clark's swaggering "You Can't Stand Alone" is a burning throw-down with awesome guitar and horn charts and a killer little Farfisa break in the middle. He also sings the deep Memphis blues on "Something Within Me." The set closes with one of his finest performances, his signature reading of "Love Is a Beautiful Thing." Arguably,
The Sound of Wilson Pickett may be his finest album performance of the entire decade. ~ Thom Jurek