ABUSE FORM
Esther Phillips - Home Is Where The Hatred Is: The Kudus Years 1971-1977 (2004)
Posted By :
ajjiger
|
Date :
08 Sep 2010 21:31:17
|
Comments :
2
|
|
Esther Phillips - Home Is Where The Hatred Is: The Kudu Years 1971-1977
EAC | APE-CUE-LOG | MP3 320 kbit/s CBR | 78:28 Min | 456.66 Mb | 192.54 Mb | +Covers
Label: Raven Records (Australia) | Type: Compilation, Original Recording Remastered
Recording Date: December 1971-September 1976 | Release Date: June 22, 2004
Styles: R&B, Soul, Jazz-Blues, Jazz-Funk, Classic Female Blues, West Coast Blues
Review by Richie Unterberger: The Rhino double-CD The Best of Esther Phillips (1962-1970) covered the period that most would agree was the singer's most artistically successful. As an 18-song disc that covers the period immediately following what was documented on the Rhino collection, Home Is Where the Hatred Is: The Kudu Years 1971-1977 is a valuable supplement for those who want more. However, as was the case with another idiosyncratic soul-pop singer who moved to CTI in the 1970s (Nina Simone), Phillips' '70s output was decidedly inferior to her '60s work, even if her vocal skills remained intact. It's respectable enough 1970s soul, with a slicker and funkier feel than her earlier sides, in keeping with the trends sweeping the world of R&B during the decade, getting into disco on her 1975 hit "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes." But while several major writers are covered on the songs selected for this anthology Marvin Gaye, Allen Toussaint, Bill Withers, Joe Cocker, Jackie DeShannon, Gil Scott-Heron, and Gene McDaniels not many of the selections are above average, leaving the most distinctive thing about them Phillips' odd if appealing pinched, slinky vocal tone. Songs really are necessary to raise singers who rely on cover material to a higher level, and the shortage of ace numbers is what separates Phillips' '70s records from those of someone like, say, Gladys Knight. The record's only disappointing, however, in that it doesn't show Phillips at the point where she was getting the most out of her abilities in the studio. It's mildly likable period '70s soul for the most part, if dull in places.
~ Track Listings ~
01. Home Is Where the Hatred Is
02. From a Whisper to a Scream
03. Baby, I'm for Real
04. That's All Right with Me
05. 'Til My Back Ain't Got No Bone
06. I've Never Found a Man
07. Use Me
08. Cherry Red
09. Black-Eyed Blues
10. Justified
11. Doing Our Thing
12. Disposable Society
13. What a Diff'rence a Day Makes
14. I Can Stand a Little Rain
15. Unforgettable
16. Pure Natural Love
17. I Haven't Got Anything Better to Do
18. God Bless the Child (Live)
filesonic.com
part 1 | part 2 || mp3
fileserve.com
part 1 | part 2 || mp3
pass: ajiger
No Mirrors
01. Home Is Where the Hatred Is
02. From a Whisper to a Scream
03. Baby, I'm for Real
04. That's All Right with Me
05. 'Til My Back Ain't Got No Bone
06. I've Never Found a Man
07. Use Me
08. Cherry Red
09. Black-Eyed Blues
10. Justified
11. Doing Our Thing
12. Disposable Society
13. What a Diff'rence a Day Makes
14. I Can Stand a Little Rain
15. Unforgettable
16. Pure Natural Love
17. I Haven't Got Anything Better to Do
18. God Bless the Child (Live)
filesonic.com
part 1 | part 2 || mp3
fileserve.com
part 1 | part 2 || mp3
pass: ajiger
No Mirrors
| ADVERTISING » | High Speed Download | « ADVERTISING |
Posted By:
firepower
Date:
09 Sep 2010 02:13:09
Thanks a lot!
Posted By:
znkp
Date:
09 Sep 2010 21:21:13
Thank you.
Recent searches:



