VA - A Date With John Waters (2007)

  • 02 Oct, 10:20
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: A Date With John Waters
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: New Line Records [NLR 39059]
Genre: Soul, Folk, Jazz, Pop, Rock
Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue, log)
Total Time: 42:04
Total Size: 98 mb / 211 mb
WebSite:

In the liner notes to Waters writes 'Come on Over, Let's listen to some tunes. Have a seat on my sofa. Think I invited you over here to discuss the future of independent film? Hell no, I'm looking' for a little action'. The album is a heartfelt and touchingly bizarre compilation of love songs selected by the legendary filmmaker himself. This is the album follows up to Waters' Christmas album (scanned over 25,000) 'Go ahead, turn up the v volume. Feel like go-go dancing? Hit it!' - John Waters.

The last time the beloved cult director released a mix album under his own name, he gathered together an odd, intriguing, and nonstop fun passel of Christmas tunes. This time the auteur behind Hairspray, Pink Flamingos, and Polyester would like to suggest tunes to play on your next date -- with him. Of course, were you actually to date John Waters (and it's hard to imagine that John Waters has ever been on a real date), you should be aware going in that the man has pretty eclectic taste and a real sense of humor, and that he's something of a perv. So you would have to appreciate a collection that sets off with Patience and Prudence's virginal '50s ballad "Tonight You Belong to Me" (with a name like Patience and Prudence you expected something lurid?) and then dives right into Elton Motello's late-'70s punk onslaught "Jet Boy Jet Girl," with its graphic account of gay sex ("Jet boy, jet girl, gonna take you 'round the world/Jet boy, I'm gonna make you penetrate, I'm gonna make you be a girl"). It doesn't get any less kooky from there. Clarence "Frogman" Henry's "Ain't Got No Home" is a classic N'awlins R&B AM radio staple, but in this context it somehow ends up sounding nasty. Ditto for Ray Charles' "Night Time Is the Right Time." Of course, Waters would want to spin the late "Egg Lady" Edith Massey's version of the Four Seasons' "Big Girls Don't Cry," but it's a mite surprising that the mustachioed one would choose something as relatively sedate as "In Spite of Ourselves," by the singer/songwriters John Prine and Iris DeMent. (Maybe he thought her name was Iris Demented.) Josie Cotton's '80s sensation "Johnny Are You Queer?" is a natural fit, as is Mink Stole's "Sometimes I Wish I Had a Gun." Less so Dean Martin's "Hit the Road to Dreamland" and Eileen Barton's "If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked a Cake." Well, maybe not such a surprise on that last one, if you know how John Waters' mind works.

:: TRACKLIST ::

1. Patience & Prudence – Tonight You Belong To Me (01:54)
2. Elton Motello – Jet Boy Jet Girl (03:10)
3. Clarence "Frogman" Henry – Ain't Got No Home (02:22)
4. Mildred Bailey And Her Swing Band – I'd Love To Take Orders From You (02:41)
5. John Prine & Iris Dement – In Spite Of Ourselves (03:34)
6. Ike & Tina Turner – All I Can Do Is Cry (05:34)
7. Edith Massey – Big Girls Don't Cry (02:43)
8. Earl Grant – Imitation Of Life (02:18)
9. Mink Stole – Sometimes I Wish I Had A Gun (03:04)
10. Josie Cotton – Johnny Are You Queer? (02:45)
11. Ray Charles – The Right Time (03:20)
12. Dean Martin – Hit The Road To Dreamland (02:49)
13. Eileen Barton & The New Yorkers – If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked A Cake (02:37)
14. Shirley And Lee – Bewildered (03:13)

Many thanks for lossless.