Chuck Carbo, Life’s Ups and Downs (504)

Several people with well-regarded opinions will, without prodding, tell you that the most distinct voice of the classic period of New Orleans rhythm and blues belonged to Chuck Carbo. That’s quite a compliment considering Carbo graduated from the same class as Johnny Adams, Danny White, Aaron Neville and Roland Stone. carboCarbo was the lead vocalist with the Spiders, who had a couple of national hits—and several great records—in the mid-1950s, and had a locally successful solo career
in the early-1960s. The demise of the New Orleans sound hamstrung his career in the mid-1960s and Carbo was forced to deal with such mundane activities as finding a nine-to-five, raising a family, making car payments and such. Thankfully, Carbo’s career was resurrected by Mike Dine at 504 Records in the late 1980s when New Orleans R&B was enjoying a brief resurgence. What helps this album is the inclusion of several members of the old guard in the trenches, including Edward Frank, Charles Burbank and “Shine” Robinson. Those old enough to remember might recall that the centerpieces of this album, “Second Line on Monday” and “Meet Me With Your Black Drawers,” deservedly got lots of airplay (not just WWOZ) around every Mardi Gras in the early- 1990s. Carbo did a good job recycling several previous successes, including a couple of Spiders titles, the best being the tried-and-true “Witchcraft,” but his own “Bells in My Heart” still rings true. Carbo does a few passable Imperial-era covers (the Spiders recorded for Imperial), and he does a superlative version of Earl King’s “Life’s Ups and Downs,” a rather appropriate song for our man. The sound is vintage here without being dated. Perhaps this was attained by putting the then up-and-comer Shannon Powell behind the drums. Good to see this one out on CD finally.