Coming from Reality
Coming from Reality is the second and final studio album by American singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez (1942–2023), released in late 1971 by Sussex Records.[1] Recorded primarily in London at Lansdowne Studios with producer Steve Rowland, the album features contributions from British session musicians including guitarist Chris Spedding and represents Rodriguez's vision of a polished pop record, blending folk-rock, psychedelic elements, and socially observant lyrics.[1] It includes ten tracks such as "Climb Up on My Music," "Sandrevan Lullaby – Lifestyles," and "Cause," exploring themes of urban disillusionment, relationships, and personal reflection with Rodriguez's distinctive poetic style.[1] Upon its initial release, Coming from Reality received limited attention in the United States and failed to chart, much like its predecessor Cold Fact, leading Rodriguez to largely abandon his music career shortly thereafter.[2] However, the album found a cult following in South Africa, where Rodriguez's music became immensely popular during the apartheid era, often bootlegged and mythologized with rumors of his dramatic demise.[2] This underground success contributed to his global rediscovery in the early 2010s, spurred by the 2013 Academy Award-winning documentary Searching for Sugar Man, which chronicled fans' quests to uncover his fate and revitalized interest in his catalog.[2] Critically, the album has been praised for its introspective songwriting and eclectic production, though some reviewers note it trades the raw edge of Cold Fact for softer arrangements with strings and orchestration.[3] Reissued multiple times, including a 2009 expanded edition by Light in the Attic Records with bonus tracks from uncompleted sessions, Coming from Reality stands as a key artifact of Rodriguez's brief but influential recording career, encapsulating the transitional folk-rock sound of the early 1970s.[1]Background
Development
Following the release of his debut album Cold Fact in 1970, which achieved only modest commercial success, Sixto Rodriguez decided to pursue a second album to further explore his artistic vision.[1] This effort was supported by Sussex Records, his label, which would release it as his final album for the label.[1] Rodriguez's motivations stemmed from a desire for personal growth, aiming to evolve his raw folk-rock style into something more refined and ambitious.[3] Key inspirations for the album drew from Rodriguez's life in Detroit's gritty urban landscape, where he worked manual jobs amid social and economic hardships that informed his introspective songwriting.[4] He sought to incorporate more orchestral elements, such as soft strings and layered arrangements, to add emotional depth and a cinematic quality to his acoustic-driven compositions.[3] In 1970, Sussex Records sent Rodriguez to London to record his second album with producer Steve Rowland, who had been impressed by Cold Fact.[5] These sessions involved songwriting focused on transitioning from Rodriguez's initial acoustic demos to fuller, polished arrangements, emphasizing clear vocals and minimalistic instrumentation to highlight lyrical authenticity.[1] The album was conceived as Rodriguez's vision of a "perfect pop album," blending personal storytelling with sophisticated production achieved through the use of top British session musicians, including guitarist Chris Spedding, to deliver a more international and refined sound.[1]Recording
The recording of Coming from Reality took place at Lansdowne Studios in London during the fall of 1970, marking a shift from the Detroit sessions for Rodriguez's debut album Cold Fact.[6] The studio was selected to leverage the expertise of prominent UK session musicians, providing Rodriguez with access to a level of collaboration unavailable in the United States.[1] Sessions lasted approximately three weeks, allowing Rodriguez to adapt to working internationally for the first time after his prior experience in local Michigan studios.[6] Producer Steve Rowland guided the process with an emphasis on authenticity, limiting most songs to a maximum of two takes to capture raw performance energy while utilizing the studio's natural acoustics for a distinctive spatial quality.[7] Multi-tracking techniques were employed to layer elements such as strings and brass, blending Rodriguez's folk roots with psychedelic rock influences through orchestral arrangements by Phil Dennys on select tracks.[8] Engineered by John MacSwith, the sessions prioritized vocal clarity and minimal overdubs, fostering a live-band feel that highlighted Rodriguez's introspective delivery amid the international setting.[6] This approach drew from initial song sketches developed in the preceding phase, enabling experimentation with electric guitars and horns to expand the sonic palette.[7]Composition
Musical style
Coming from Reality is predominantly characterized by folk rock infused with psychedelic and soft rock elements, marked by acoustic strumming, funky guitar riffs, and orchestral swells that lend a dreamy, atmospheric quality to the arrangements.[3][8] The album's sound blends urban folk-poet delivery—reminiscent of influences like Donovan and Cat Stevens—with pop accessibility, creating a more polished and radio-friendly aesthetic compared to the raw, minimalist grit of Rodriguez's debut Cold Fact.[6][9] This evolution is evident in the shift from Cold Fact's sparse production to fuller, more layered compositions here, emphasizing melodic introspection over aggressive energy.[10] Instrumentation plays a key role in distinguishing the album's sonic palette, featuring prominent strings and electric bass that add depth and texture. Acoustic guitars provide the foundational strumming, while electric elements like Chris Spedding's guitars introduce funky riffs and occasional psychedelic flourishes, supported by keyboards and percussion for rhythmic drive.[3][10] Orchestral swells, including violin contributions, enhance tracks with a cinematic sweep, contrasting the debut's simpler setups and highlighting producer Steve Rowland's influence in crafting a "suburban psychedelia" vibe.[9] Tracks like "Climb Up on My Music" exemplify this fusion through organ-heavy jams, screaming guitar riffs, layered harmonies, and rhythmic shifts that evoke a freewheeling psych-folk energy.[3] The overall production prioritizes airy, soft rock introspection, with strings weaving through the mix to create immersive, suburban-tinged psychedelia that underscores Rodriguez's observational style without overshadowing the musical framework.[10]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Coming from Reality center on themes of urban disillusionment, personal introspection, and sharp critiques of American suburbia and consumerism, capturing the socio-economic tensions of 1970s Detroit through Rodriguez's lived experiences in its working-class neighborhoods.[11] Songs like "Heikki's Suburbia Bus Tour" satirize the emptiness of suburban conformity, portraying manicured lawns and material excess as symbols of spiritual stagnation.[3] These narratives draw from Rodriguez's Mexican-American heritage, subtly weaving in issues of race, class, and identity without didactic preaching, reflecting the era's countercultural push against systemic inequalities.[11] Rodriguez's lyrical style employs frank, poetic observations in a blunt, conversational tone, blending everyday vernacular with vivid, sometimes surreal imagery to convey raw emotional truth.[3] For instance, "I Think Of You" incorporates anti-war sentiments amid its tender introspection, questioning societal violence and personal loss in lines that lament "the politicians and the kings" amid romantic longing.[11] Similarly, "Sandrevan Lullaby – Lifestyles" uses dreamlike, surreal motifs—such as measuring wealth by tangible possessions—to underscore disillusionment with unfulfilled promises and fleeting lifestyles.[11] This approach avoids overt moralizing, instead inviting listeners to confront reality's harsh edges through understated irony and direct address. A key concept in the album is Rodriguez's portrayal of reality's unvarnished harshness, rooted in Detroit's industrial decline and socio-economic struggles, where motifs of escapism through music offer fleeting solace against overwhelming despair.[11] Tracks like "Cause" explore isolation and the search for meaning in a fractured society, positioning songwriting as both a mirror to hardship and a tentative path to transcendence. The lyrics echo 1970s counterculture's emphasis on authenticity, addressing broader societal fractures— from racial divides to class warfare—while maintaining a personal, non-preachy lens that resonates with the era's disillusioned youth.[11] Compared to the debut Cold Fact, the lyrics here mark a maturation, shifting from more abstract, psychedelic explorations to direct emotional vulnerability and grounded storytelling.[11] Where the earlier album leaned into hallucinatory social satire, Coming from Reality delves deeper into introspective confessionals, revealing a more vulnerable Rodriguez grappling with failure and resilience. The musical accompaniment, with its folk-rock arrangements and subtle orchestration, amplifies this thematic delivery by underscoring the lyrics' poignant isolation.[3]Release and promotion
Singles
The lead single from Coming from Reality was "I Think of You", released in 1971 in the US on 7-inch vinyl by Sussex Records, backed with "To Whom It May Concern" from the album. A promo version on styrene pressing was issued alongside the commercial release, featuring simple label artwork with abstract line drawings echoing the album's thematic style of introspective urban imagery. The single targeted pop radio formats but garnered minimal airplay amid Rodriguez's relative obscurity in the American market.[12] These singles were incorporated into early press kits for the album but saw constrained distribution beyond the US and a few overseas territories like Brazil, where a 7-inch single featuring "I Think of You" backed with "To Whom It May Concern" was released in 1972 on A&M Records.[6]Marketing and commercial performance
Coming from Reality was released in November 1971 by Sussex Records in the United States, with a limited distribution in the United Kingdom through A&M Records.[8] Promotional efforts included ads in Cash Box (December 1971) and a Billboard review (November 1971) that praised tracks like "To Whom It May Concern" for potential airplay, though marketing remained minimal overall, hampered by the small independent label's resources and focus on niche folk-rock audiences through radio play and modest print advertisements, including promotional copies distributed to industry insiders.[6] Singles such as "I Think of You" served as key promotional tools to generate airplay, though they received limited support from the label.[6] Commercially, the album achieved little success, failing to chart on the Billboard 200 and selling few copies in its initial run, which underscored Rodriguez's niche appeal amid a competitive 1970s music market.[13] Sussex Records folded in 1975 due to financial difficulties, obstructing any potential reissues or sustained promotion. Internationally, distribution was sparse, with limited initial sales in Australia—where a pressing appeared in 1973 and gradually found an audience—and even weaker performance in Europe, where limited imports through A&M yielded negligible market penetration during the 1970s.[14][15]Reception
Initial response
Upon its release in November 1971, Coming from Reality received a mixed initial reception, with positive notices in trade publications overshadowed by commercial indifference that led to the album sinking without a trace in the United States.[6] While critics highlighted Rodriguez's potential as a distinctive songwriter, the record failed to generate significant sales or radio play, ultimately contributing to his label dropping him shortly after.[16] In a Special Merit Pick, Billboard praised the album for its airplay potential, noting that "with almost any kind of break, Sussex records could make it two in a row" following Bill Withers' success, and comparing Rodriguez's vocal style at times to José Feliciano.[17] The review recommended tracks like "To Whom It May Concern" as deserving of airplay, alongside "Cause" and "Climb Up on My Music," positioning the sophomore effort as promising yet in need of promotion to break through. Similarly, Cash Box in early 1972 described it as "the second LP from a man and a voice who is a pleasantly original amalgam of José Feliciano, Donovan and Cat Stevens," suggesting programmers across formats would find accessible material for listeners.[18] These trade reviews offered positive nods to Rodriguez's originality in folk-leaning outlets, though rock press coverage was scant and often critiqued the lack of a commercial edge amid a crowded market. Media coverage was limited to small articles in industry trades like Billboard and Cash Box, which emphasized Rodriguez's urban poet style through his introspective, socially observant lyrics delivered over folk-rock arrangements. Overall, the album was viewed as a sophomore release brimming with potential but ultimately overlooked in its era.[17]Critical reappraisal
Following the 2009 reissue by Light in the Attic Records, critical attention to Coming from Reality intensified, with reviewers appreciating its lyrical introspection amid the album's softer production compared to Rodriguez's debut. Pitchfork awarded it 6.1 out of 10, highlighting the record's "urban poet" style through frank social observations in tracks like "Street Boy" and "A Most Disgusting Song," which capture pointed critiques of urban life and personal disillusionment.[3] AllMusic gave it 4 out of 5 stars, commending the album's evolution into a refined folk-rock statement, with Rodriguez's songwriting blending poetic imagery and melodic sophistication to create a cohesive, innovative sound.[19] In the 2010s, coverage in outlets like The Guardian emphasized the album's long-underrated status, particularly after the 2012 documentary Searching for Sugar Man brought Rodriguez's work to wider audiences, framing Coming from Reality as a sophisticated follow-up overlooked in its era but resonant in its subtle artistry.[20] This period marked a broader critical consensus shift, elevating the album from commercial obscurity to cult classic, with praise centering on its prescient social commentary on alienation and inequality that gained fresh relevance in modern contexts. Reviews of the expanded editions, including the 2009 reissue's bonus tracks from 1972–1973 Detroit sessions, underscored their value in illuminating Rodriguez's creative arc, offering unpolished demos like "Street Boy" that bridge the gap between his two studio albums and reveal a more intimate, guitar-driven side.[3] While not securing major awards itself, the reissues contributed to Rodriguez's recognition in folk revival circles.Personnel
Musicians
Coming from Reality features Sixto Rodriguez as the lead artist, providing vocals and acoustic guitar on all tracks.[6] The album marks the first major use of non-American players, incorporating British session musicians to add a transatlantic flavor to the sound.[6] Key contributors include bassist Gary Taylor, guitarist Chris Spedding, drummer Andrew Steele, percussionist Tony Carr, keyboardist Phil Dennys (also arrangements on tracks 3, 5, 7, and 9), and Jimmy Horowitz (violin on track 6 and arrangements on tracks 6, 8, and 10).[6][21]Production
The production of Coming from Reality was led by Steve Rowland, who served as the album's primary producer, overseeing the arrangements, mixing, and overall sound.[3] Recorded at Lansdowne Studios in London, the sessions featured engineering by John MacSwith, who captured the album's intimate folk-rock textures.[6] Rowland's prior experience producing The Family Dogg, including their 1969 hit "Way of Life," informed the polished, pop-inflected production that balanced Rodriguez's raw songwriting with orchestral flourishes.[22] Additional creative support came from Milton Sincoff, who handled packaging and merchandising direction, contributing to the album's distinctive visual presentation.[23] The cover artwork, featuring a die-cut jacket with illustrative elements, was photographed and illustrated by Hal Wilson.[24] Other credits include creative coordinator and album title originator Rainy M. Moore, and impresario Clarence Avant.[6][21]Track listing
All songs written by Sixto Rodriguez.| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Climb Up on My Music" | 4:54 |
| 2. | "A Most Disgusting Song" | 4:49 |
| 3. | "I Think of You" | 3:25 |
| 4. | "Heikki's Suburbia Bus Tour" | 3:22 |
| 5. | "Silver Words?" | 2:05 |
| 6. | "Sandrevan Lullaby – Lifestyles" | 6:45 |
| 7. | "To Whom It May Concern" | 4:22 |
| 8. | "It Started Out So Nice" | 3:53 |
| 9. | "Halfway Up the Stairs" | 2:25 |
| 10. | "Cause" | 5:11 |