Well it was a pretty successful breakfast gig But It was Milton's other option that would get me moving in the direction that I wanted to be going About six months later while we were in the studio He told me he was planning one of his trips to Nashville Which he did once or twice a year to record demos of his songs, which he would then pitch to recording artists in Nashville
He had a pretty good track record and he had established pretty good contacts in music city as well He asked me to come along And then explained the plan Travis had moved to Nashville a couple of months earlier when a job opened up as a full time engineer at Spar Recording Studios
He would be engineering Milton's sessions Milton wanted me to do a vocal of one of his contemporary songs called round like a ball When that was finished we would use the time left on the session to record three of my songs With the ace studio players he had hired He told me that the top pedal steel player at the time, Lloyd Greene was from Mobile and a friend and would be playing on the session
Milton had told him about me coming along This would give us a Nashville recorded session of demos that he could then pitch to record companies I thanked him about 1000 times in the minutes after he explained the plan And with Milton's help, it seemed that a few pieces of the puzzle I saw as my future, seemed to be finally fitting together
I was anxious, excited and a bit uncertain as I kept repeating to myself everyday before we boarded the plane, Damn, we're going to Nashville And make no mistake about it, Nashville was the big time
There certainly weren't any major career moves happening for me at the Admiral's Corner or the electrical department at Alabhama [?] Shipbuilding company So as Mark Twain said, I was ready to light out into the territory Meanwhile, back in Mobile, before we left, the tape player kept on recording
This was another favourite Lightfoot song, called the Gypsey About a fortune-teller that was very popular in our Bourbon Street days and I had my fortune read a few times in that town I will blame that habit on my favourite record of that era,, Fortune Teller, written by Allen Toussaint and recorded by Benny Spellman
Benny seemed to have gotten a little more of his money's worth than Gordon did Anyway, Here's one of the last songs that i recorded in Mobile before I went looking for my own fortune... Here is the GypseyTeksty umieszczone na naszej stronie są własnością wytwórni, wykonawców, osób mających do nich prawa.