Dionne Farris, Charlie Hunter - DionneDionne (2014)
Artist: Dionne Farris, Charlie Hunter
Title: DionneDionne
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Ropeadope
Genre: Soul, R&B, Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:34:11
Total Size: 138 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: DionneDionne
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Ropeadope
Genre: Soul, R&B, Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:34:11
Total Size: 138 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Alfie
02. Walk The Way You Talk
03. Always Something There To Remind Me
04. Don't Make Me Over
05. Wives And Lovers
06. Loneliness Remembers (What Happiness Forgets)
07. Déjà vu
08. Walk On By
09. You're Gonna Need Me
In title and concept, the new tribute album Dionne Dionne is a great gimmick. But if you've followed the career of Dionne Farris, having her record an entire album of Dionne Warwick covers isn't an obvious move, names aside. It's an idea that took root some 20 years ago: Farris met guitarist Charlie Hunter while the two were on tour as members of hip-hop groups, she with Arrested Development and he with The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy.
The musicians' decision to record as a duo — Farris singing, Hunter playing his custom seven-string guitar — pays off handsomely. If you're accustomed to hearing Warwick's songs played with lush orchestration behind them, to hear everything stripped down to bare wisps of melodies and rhythms reveals nuances and highlights not always obvious in the originals. Another pair might have been tempted to fill in all that open space with endless runs or virtuoso solos, but Hunter and Farris keep things smartly sparse and seductively intimate.
Not surprisingly, most of the songs are from Warwick's popular '60s catalog of Burt Bacharach and Hal David tunes, but the album also dips into her 1970s soul records, when she worked with such R&B songwriters as Isaac Hayes and the power trio of Holland-Dozier-Holland. Farris and Hunter tackle the latter's 1973 song "You're Gonna Need Me" with a subtle, funky touch serving as a reminder that both guitarist and singer began their careers in hip-hop.
If I have any complaint about the album, it's that nine tracks feels too short, least of all for an artist whose output was as prolific as Warwick's. Maybe there will be a second volume down the road, or maybe the duo can work on a tribute album to country star Charley Pride next and call it Charley Charlie. All jokes aside, part of what makes Dionne Dionne so enjoyable is how Farris and Hunter take this potential pun and turn it into something richer — but still fun.