c.2017, DaCapo Press
$28 ($36.50 Canada)
403 pages

Difficult.

We all know someone like that, who could charitably be called a challenge. Someone who swims against the current, who rubs people the wrong way, who makes you growly. In the new book โ€œSoul Survivor: A Biography of Al Greenโ€ by Jimmy McDonough, ruffled feathers can come from surprising places.

Born to sharecroppers, Albert Leorns Greene (he later dropped the โ€œeโ€) entered the world in April, 1946, on the floor of a two-bedroom house near a town so small it barely registered on a map. Greeneโ€™s family was churchgoing and always had food on the table but life was hard, and young Greeneโ€™s father often didnโ€™t have but a few hundred dollars to last a year. Some people said he had a temper.

โ€œThose who know Al,โ€ says McDonough,โ€ described him much the same way.โ€

Even so, the family was close and singing was an important part of their lives. When Albert was still a child, his father assembled a gospel group with his sons, leaving Albert out of the mix. McDonough says that Al โ€œwatched with envyโ€ as his brothers performed, and vowed that he would become famous one day.

He was a โ€œdifferentโ€ child, a โ€œsensitiveโ€ one, but determined: all he ever wanted to do was sing and if he had to, heโ€™d do it โ€œon my own without anyone.โ€ Despite his set mind, Al was shy and didnโ€™t make friends easily; a family move north didnโ€™t help.

After a successful second try at high school. Al Green scrabbled to find fame in Michigan and in New York before heading for Memphis, a recording hot spot. He wrote songs and had a few minor hits, although McDonough says he was โ€œan โ€ฆ idiosyncratic songwriterโ€ and had a โ€œstrange relationshipโ€ with the guys in his band. Still, what he had, โ€œoddโ€ as it was, worked: by 1972, heโ€™d finally achieved his fame.

Today, the Rev. Al Green has returned to his roots, at his own church. Heโ€™s supposedly reticent to talk about parts of his past, or about the women who came to him in lusty waves. Heโ€™s, in fact, sometimes said to be reluctant to talk about much at all; he even turned author Jimmy McDonough away. McDonough was able to interview some of Greenโ€™s friends and family โ€” or he tried to โ€” and what he learned, plus what he gleaned from elsewhere, is the basis of โ€œSoul Survivor.โ€

Here, McDonough offers a level of respect and praises Greenโ€™s musical genius, even as he interjects secondhand anecdotes of Greenโ€™s quirks and conflicting stories. He says Green is โ€œthe crazy-old-coot uncleโ€ whoโ€™s perpetually unpredictable, which underscores a biography thatโ€™s interesting but shockingly less-than-complimentary. McDonough says heโ€™d been thinking of writing this book โ€œfor over 20 yearsโ€ but, based on narrative here, readers may rightly wonder why.

With the feel of side-whispered gossip in a dark alley, scandal fans may enjoy this book but, for others, it might be a harder sell. โ€œSoul Survivorโ€ is good enough, but wanting it on your bookshelf may be a decision thatโ€™s difficult.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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