Dinah Washington - Gold (2007)
Artist: Dinah Washington
Title: Gold
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Verve Reissues
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:17:22
Total Size: 546 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Gold
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Verve Reissues
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:17:22
Total Size: 546 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Evil Gal Blues
02. Salty Papa Blues
03. Blow Top Blues
04. Embraceable You
05. A Slick Chick (On The Mellow Side)
06. Ain't Misbehavin'
07. Walkin' And Talkin' And Crying My Blues Away
08. What Can I Say After I Say I'm Sorry?
09. Record Ban Blues
10. Am I Asking Too Much
11. Long John Blues
12. It's Too Soon To Know
13. Baby Get Lost
14. It Isn't Fair
15. I'll Never Be Free
16. I Wanna Be Loved
17. I Won't Cry Anymore
18. Trouble In Mind
19. TV Is The Thing (This Year) (Alternate Take)
20. Am I Blue
21. Our Love Is Here To Stay
22. Blue Skies
23. I Don't Hurt Anymore
24. Crazy He Calls Me
25. Lover Come Back To Me
26. Teach Me Tonight
27. You Don't Know What Love Is
28. If I Had You
29. I'll Close My Eyes
30. Back Water Blues (Live At Newport Jazz Festival, 1958)
31. All Of Me
32. What A Difference A Day Made
33. Unforgettable
34. Baby (You've Got What It Takes)
35. A Bad Case Of The Blues
36. This Bitter Earth
37. Love Walked In
38. A Rockin' Good Way (To Mess Around And Fall In Love)
39. September In The Rain
40. Mad About The Boy
Dinah Washington's digital discography is riddled with compilations that brandish the word "Gold," as in "Golden Classics," "Golden Hits," "Golden Songs," "Golden Greats," "Golden Stars," and "Goldies." All that glitter, however, does not necessarily describe or guarantee well-produced collections. Happily, Verve's 2007 double-disc Washington anthology deserves its title, which simply consists of the word "Gold." Opening with her debut session (for Harry Lim's Keynote label on December 19, 1943) and following her progress across most of her 20-year recording career, this excellent chronological survey documents her triumphs as a rhythm & blues, jazz, and pop vocalist. The real jazz selections, in particular the nearly ten-minute take on "Lover Come Back to Me," demonstrate this gorgeous and powerful woman's "Don't Tread on Me" approach to music, love and life. Her formidable, somewhat volcanic interpretations of Bessie Smith's "Back Water Blues" and the torch song "All of Me" come from the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival. This historic episode can and should be enjoyed as a scene in the motion picture Jazz on a Summer's Day. Backed by the Terry Gibbs Sextet, Washington grabs a pair of percussion mallets and smilingly intrudes upon Gibbs' vibraphone solo during "All of Me," bumping him aside with a sway of her hips and demonstrating more than passing familiarity with the instrument (not altogether surprising since she originally appeared on the scene as vibe king Lionel Hampton's precocious upstart vocalist). The startling segue from the explosive climax of "All of Me" into the string-laden, chorally sweetened masterwork "What a Difference a Day Made" provides a healthy contrast that might tweak those who disparage such sugary production techniques. The lesson, of course, is that Washington sounded great under any circumstances. Furthermore, she consciously made the decision to record with strings as did Billie Holiday, Charlie Parker, Ben Webster, and Coleman Hawkins. Each of these artists used the chamber or orchestral format to achieve a number of personal goals that included dignity, delicacy, and of course, economic stability. Complaining about Washington's string section is as pointless as poking fun at her wigs, gowns or tiaras. One doesn't focus on Earl Hines' toupee -- one listens to the music he plays. Put aside all preconceptions and surrender your heart. Verve's Gold portrait of Washington is a superb tribute to a sublime artist beside whom a lot of other singers sound immature, insecure, insincere, or anemic. ~ arwulf arwulf