
By SALINA POST
A five-time Grammy Award winner is coming to the Stiefel Theatre.
Robert Cray will be live at the Stiefel Theatre at 8 p.m. Aug. 27. Tickets start at $39 and are now on sale. Buy in person at the Stiefel Theatre Box Office or online at stiefeltheatre.org.
Artist information provided by the Stiefel Theatre
Over the past four decades, Cray has created a sound that rises from American roots, blues, soul and R&B, with five Grammy wins, 20 acclaimed studio albums and a bundle of live albums that punctuate the Blues Hall of Famer’s career. On his latest album, That’s What I Heard, Cray celebrates the music of Curtis Mayfield, Bobby “Blue” Bland, The Sensational Nightingales and more, alongside four newly written songs.
The music on That’s What I Heard falls into two camps, the sweet and the funky. Of the former, You’re the One comes from the Bobby “Blue” Bland songbook.
“There’s this thing where I feel you kind of gotta get out of your own head when you're covering one of your heroes,” Cray explained. “Bobby’s one of those. You just let yourself go, and do the song because you love it.”
Don Gardner’s My Baby Likes to Boogaloo and the Billy Sha-Rae minor hit, Do It are acknowledged rarities (the originals can be heard on the compilation, Groove & Grind: Rare Soul). Do It is leaner and meaner, the sort of bare-bones funk that defined the Detroit club sound in the early ’70s with Sha-Rae, Dennis Coffey, and Earl Van Dyke. Cray’s steamroller rendition gets a little extra push from guest guitarist Ray Parker, Jr., who played in Sha-Rae’s band as a teen.
Burying Ground is a sacred song from the Sensational Nightingales, inspired by Cray’s youth, when Sundays on the stereo were reserved for his parents’ gospel records. Curtis Mayfield wrote You’ll Want Me Back for Major Lance, and Cray wrote To Be with You for his late friend, Tony Joe White. Hot is another Cray original. As for the lyrics, “We always say to ourselves, ‘I’m old, but I’m hot,’” he said, and laughed.