His California Album
His California Album is an album by the American musician Bobby "Blue" Bland, released in 1973. The album introduced Bland to a larger pop audience. It peaked at No. 136 on the Billboard 200. Bland supported the album with a North American tour.
Production
The album was produced by Steve Barri and arranged by Michael Omartian. Mel Brown and Larry Carlton were among the guitar players who contributed to the recording sessions. "Goin' Down Slow" was written by St. Louis Jimmy Oden. " [I Don't Want to Be Right]" is a cover of the Luther Ingram song. "I've Got to Use My Imagination" is a version of the song made famous by Gladys Knight & the Pips.Critical reception
The Omaha World-Herald called Bland "a most persuasive vocalist" whose "style loses little of its bite". The [Ann Arbor News] praised Bland's "exquisite, huskily expressive voice". The Berkeley Daily Gazette opined that the album "is a successful merger of blues and soul with Bland's Sam Cookish strains partying on both sides." Robert Christgau lamented that Bland " his stamp on nothing." The Los Angeles Times deemed "It's Not the Spotlight" "one of the best 'lost love' songs of the year." The Herald considered His California Album to be one of the best blues albums of 1973.Joel Selvin, in a 1991 San Francisco Chronicle article, called the album "a lost classic". In 2000, the Evening Standard labeled it "a masterpiece of gritty crossover soul."