Product Details
In the Pocket

In the Pocket
The Commodores

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Track Listing

  1. Lady (You Bring Me Up)
  2. Saturday Night
  3. Keep On Taking Me Higher
  4. Oh No
  5. Why You Wanna Try Me
  6. This Love
  7. Been Loving You
  8. Lucy

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #158297 in Music
  • Released on: 2001-06-19
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

The best place to shop for music5
I love to shop at amazon, because not only do they have the music am always looking for, but their CDs are always in good condition, and I can find the music that I can't otherwise find in the stores. Delivery is also always on time. Am completely satisfied with their service. Keep it up!

Lionel Richie's Commodores demise5
Eight great tracks on this album,but unfortunately Lionel Richie decided to call it quits with the Commodores after touring with the other members to promote it. The only Top 10 smash single from this album is LADY(YOU BRING ME UP). The words in parentheses were added to avoid confusion with another composition(minus those words) by Richie and recorded by Kenny Rogers. Around 1974 or '75,the Commodores first formed and were quite successful. The band remained intact without Richie for about two or three more years. Richie first three solo albums,respectively released in 1982,'83 and '86 were huge best-sellers. Before quitting the band,Richie wrote his first non-Commodores hit ENDLESS LOVE and recorded it with ex-Supreme Diana Ross for the 1981 film of the same title starring Brooke Shields. The song was covered later by Mariah Carey with the late Luther Vandross. OH NO was a Top 20 hit but was never positioned higher than #16 on the pop/rock/R&B charts. The other songs are great.

More hits than misses4
IN THE POCKET was Lionel Richie's last album with the Commodores. By the time he exited the band in late 1982, they had gone from being hard-core R&B funksters to masters of the pop power ballad, due to the overwhelming influence of Richie. This album is miles away from previous offerings like CAUGHT IN THE ACT, MOVIN' ON, HOT ON THE TRACKS and the group's self-titled LP that contained smoldering funk and deep, infectious grooves, so don't expect to find much of that here. However, this album does has some highlights worth hearing.

The writing may have been on the wall, as far as Richie's future with his Alabama homies when this album was recorded. Usually his voice dominated the leads on earlier Commodores' LPs, but this time around, the lead vocals are evenly distributed between him and drummer Walter "Clyde" Orange...almost as if he were deliberately being low-key. Also, the only songs Richie leads on are "Lady (You Bring Me Up)" and the ones he wrote, whereas the other Commodores who contributed material to this album seemed to be writing for Clyde at this point. A lot of the songs sound like they could have easily fit onto other R&B acts' albums, like the 1980s version of Kool and the Gang, the Brothers Johnson, Michael Jackson, ConFunkShun and Rufus and Chaka Khan, with thumping bass lines and similar vocal arrangements.

This CD opens with "Lady (You Bring Me Up)"...the Pop Top 20/R&B Top 10 hit single from 1981, an enjoyable and upbeat William King composition that sounds like a Kool and the Gang tune. Next is the underplayed (and sadly overlooked) R&B hit "Saturday Night" - a nice, mellow and rare ballad turn for Clyde, who usually had the lockdown on singing lead on the band's funkiest numbers. On this song, he more than rises to the occasion with some passionate vocals. Next is another Clyde-led tune, "Keep On Taking Me Higher" - a party thumper reminiscent of Michael Jackson's "Get On The Floor" from OFF THE WALL - decent. "Oh No", a Richie tune that was the other pop hit from this album, oozes country/western and it would not have been out of place on his debut solo album. The song isn't bad, in fact it's one of Richie's better ballads - but there's not much R&B to find in it.

"Why You Wanna Try Me", a pop/R&B Brothers Johnson-like dance tune is a great performance by Richie. It was released as a single but was only a minor hit...don't see why, the song is pretty good. Love the ending: "Stop right there - hold on - why you wanna try me?" The next two songs feature Clyde on lead and were both penned by him: "This Love" is an okay R&B ballad, and the cool, playful funk of "Been Loving You" is one of the best tunes on the CD. It seemed to be a reminder that even as far pop as they had gone, they could still funk out and lay it down when the opportunity arose. The CD closes out with "Lucy", a Richie pop ballad that has blatant country overtones. Not really one of my favs, but like "Oh No", it sounds very much like the early ballad material Richie would record as a soloist. The fact that I didn't particularly care for this tune did not keep me from purchasing this album a second time, just to own it on CD.

Overall, IN THE POCKET has more strengths than weaknesses. If you're comparing it to any Commodores LP recorded before 1978, well, of course it will come up short. But if you really enjoy this band's music, then it's a sure bet that you'll want to jump on this. (Rating: 3 1/2 stars)