iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from 'Justments by Bill Withers, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

'Justments

Bill Withers

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Back in March 2004 music magazine Mojo included Withers' fourth album on a list of "67 Lost Albums You Must Own." Whether 'Justments is indeed the stuff of legend remains debatable. Surely no holy grail like the similarly mentioned Cold Fact by Sussex labelmate Sixto Rodriguez, it seems at least unfairly ignored. Nothing here might be as compelling as "Grandma's Hands" or "I Can't Write Left-Handed," but there are plenty of melancholy reflections from a genuine soulman who came across more as a West coast singer/songwriter. Replacing the hired hands of his debut with former employees of Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band proved equally important in shaping Withers' identity. Not only had they been instrumental in creating a landmark with his second album Still Bill, follow-up Live at Carnegie Hall showed how easily they could replicate their unrestrained approach on-stage, performing quite a few tunes which hadn't yet appeared on a studio album. This experience further tightening a natural combination, the band was set for Withers' third studio album. The moody overtones of 'Justments suggest both band and singer might have suffered a bit from fatigue, a notion not altogether far-fetched since they would dissolve upon completing it. Not even Spanish minstrel José Feliciano could rescue a song like "Railroad Man" from getting stuck in a not unpleasant but ultimately unrewarding jam mode. Still, a few gems are worth mentioning. The spine-tingling string sections for "You" and "Ruby Lee" for instance invoke the memory of Still Bill's intriguing "Who Is He and What Is He to You." The former would be released as a single and crack the Top 15 R&B chart, as would "Heartbreak Road" and "The Same Love That Made Me Laugh." The demise of Sussex led to both the labels' catalog and Withers himself being transferred to Columbia. Though some of its feel would always shine through his releases for his new employer, 'Justments stands out for being the last album where the artist's unique character takes the foreground rather than being mostly left to drown in a glossy production. Thus, while its "lost album" status is mostly due to it being out of print for ages, in a just world it would be re-released back to back with 1975's Making Music. This just might turn out historically interesting, as it would document Withers' evolution towards the guilty pleasure of "Lovely Day."

Customer Reviews

in my top 100 records this ranks number 16

marvin gaye's here my dear is often praised as the ultimate soul divorce album.

but as genius as it is all over the place, one must also investigate (well ---now we get that chance via this long OVERDUE reissue) the classic known as +'justments.

for starters its way more focused shorter and to the point than "Dear"

press shy withers really didn't play up his painful divorce to actress denise nichlas in 1974. and if i didn't know any better i would only assume that this personal painful document of its failing wasn't a motivation for him to reissue it as fast as the other albums in withers' discography have been reissued.

my father constantly played withers in the household when i was a baby. so thus before i discovered michael jackson via my sister finally getting control over the family stereo, i made withers my first childhood idol. even going so far as to make the family tennis racket my guitar trying to emulate him.

mind you i was 4 or 5 when i discovered this album (ruby lee, and railroadman were staples in my home) but even not being emotionally mature enough to "get it"---- i knew there was a difference in this record than say live at carnegie hall or just as i am. there is a sad fluidness and a somewhat lonley isolated feeling throughout this record.

so by default many have made 1978's Menagerie their favorite simply because they weren't even aware this album existed.

but i guarantee once you get to side two (im so old school lol) ---start with Heartbreak Road, you will see a vulnerability not seen much in soul albums of the 70s.

this is a long time coming folks. spread the word!

Finally available again--Bill's lost classic

This never came out on CD, but thankfully you can download it here. Another fantastic Bill Withers album in the same pocket as Just As I Am and Still Bill, which means the kind of down-home sanger/songwriter groove that nobody has done before or since. Own it.

Wow!

Ran across this album and rediscovered my youth. "Can We Pretend," "Make A Smile for Me" -- pure, innocent, timeless. This is Bill Withers at his best!

Biography

Born: July 4, 1938 in Slab Fork, WV

Genre: R&B/Soul

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

Songwriter/singer/guitarist Bill Withers is best remembered for the classic "Lean on Me" and his other million-selling singles "Ain't No Sunshine" and "Use Me," but he has a sizable cache of great songs to his credit. Al Jarreau recorded an entire CD of Withers' songs on Tribute to Bill Withers (Culture Press 1998). His popular radio-aired...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.