“Need You”, written by Jessie Hill and presumably cut at the same session, is an even stranger thing. “Doo doo,” sings La La for the unaccompanied intro. “Waaaah, wha wha whaa,” answers the backing chorus. Again, the production is drowned in echo, another Latin beat, a slowish 6/8 with inexact inferences of Cuban bolero, the Bo Diddley beat and doo-wop, in which the murky sound fuses insistently doomy bass, woodblock, clanking metal, guitar chords and Boudreaux’s pattern of mallet-struck tom-toms, conjuring the soundworld of a nocturnal forest. La La’s sudden high-pitched shrieks pierce the agitated density, unexpected and unnerving, while Harold Battiste improvises around his voice with soprano saxophone. Like the flute in “Things Have Changed”, soprano saxophone was an unusual choice, almost certainly influenced by John Coltrane’s recording of “My Favorite Things”, released just a few years earlier. Battiste would have been well aware of Coltrane’s innovative use of soprano – which modern jazz musician was not? – but perhaps also conscious of an ancestral connection to one of the greatest of all New Orleans jazz musicians, Sidney Bechet, one of the pioneers of the instrument.