Dodo Greene - My Hour Of Need (Remastered) (2021) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Dodo Greene
Title: My Hour Of Need (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: RevOla
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/96, FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:58:37
Total Size: 1.1 GB / 412 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: My Hour Of Need (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: RevOla
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/96, FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:58:37
Total Size: 1.1 GB / 412 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01 - My Hour Of Need 04:54
02 - Trouble In Mind 04:45
03 - You Are My Sunshine 03:01
04 - I'll Never Stop Loving You 04:01
05 - I Won't Cry Anymore 03:45
06 - Lonesome Road 04:13
07 - Let There Be Love 03:28
08 - There Must Be A Way 03:30
09 - Down By The Riverside 04:06
10 - Little Things Mean A Lot 04:07
11 - You Don't Know Me 02:44
12 - Not One Tear 03:03
13 - I Hear 03:38
14 - Time After Time 03:33
15 - Everybody's Happy But Me 03:11
16 - Jazz In My Soul 02:38
My Hour of Need is an album by jazz vocalist Dodo Greene featuring performances accompanied by the Ike Quebec Quintet recorded in 1962 and released on the Blue Note label. The 1996 Connoisseur Series limited edition CD reissue features another six previously unissued tracks recorded at later sessions for a proposed follow-up album.
Review by Scott Yanow
This set (reissued on CD) was a very unusual release for Blue Note. Greene's mixture of R&B and soulful blues in a voice very reminiscent of late-period Dinah Washington is much more pop and blues-oriented than the music on any other Blue Note release from the period. What other Blue Note album has a full program of soul ballads clocking in between three to five minutes apiece? Although Dodo Greene (who had recorded one slightly earlier record for Time) was apparently signed to an exclusive contract, her only other Blue Note session (six of its nine numbers conclude this CD) had never been previously released. In reality, the main reason to acquire the relaxed set is for the warm tenor of Ike Quebec (who is perfect in this setting) and the occasional guitar of Grant Green. A true obscurity.
Review by Scott Yanow
This set (reissued on CD) was a very unusual release for Blue Note. Greene's mixture of R&B and soulful blues in a voice very reminiscent of late-period Dinah Washington is much more pop and blues-oriented than the music on any other Blue Note release from the period. What other Blue Note album has a full program of soul ballads clocking in between three to five minutes apiece? Although Dodo Greene (who had recorded one slightly earlier record for Time) was apparently signed to an exclusive contract, her only other Blue Note session (six of its nine numbers conclude this CD) had never been previously released. In reality, the main reason to acquire the relaxed set is for the warm tenor of Ike Quebec (who is perfect in this setting) and the occasional guitar of Grant Green. A true obscurity.