EXCELLENT!!! | Her All-Time Greatest Hits | Dionne Warwick
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Her All-Time Greatest Hits
Dionne Warwick
Rhino / Wea, 1989
average customer review:
based on 61 reviews
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highly recommended
I'll be brief (for once)
This is simply delightful! Practic
all
y every track is a polished little pop gem, beautifully sung, well-produced and well-engineered. Light R&B, yes, but the singer projects abundant grace and charm, with drama kept to a minimum. And you just don't realize how many
hits
Dionne really had in the 60's until you hear them all like this, one after another. If you are a fan of her 60's work, and especially if you remember AM radio, this collection will be to your liking.
The Dionne Warwick Collection: Her All-Time Greatest Hits
OUTSTANDING! Dionne at her best.
All
the songs
that made her one of the
greatest
.
EXCELLENT!!!
I LOVE Dionne Warwick----Burt Bacharach couldn't have produced and cultivated any better VOCAL TALENT!!!
this cd is PERFECT for me b/c it has
ALL
of the songs that I love by her! I love MANY of her songs, but there were specific ones that I was looking for and they were on there!!!! and even a few that I didn't know were on there! I picked the right one!
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Music that wafted down from Heaven
Since Dionne Warwick found it necessary to consult psychics later in her career, how I wish she had done it much earlier! Perhaps one of those fortune tellers -- if they had been worth their money -- would have told her to NEVER leave the tunesmith team of Bacharach & David!! With their compositions and her voice, the last great chapter of the American Popular Songbook was written. The sophistication, expression, and downright aching that many of these songs exude is undeniable. 'Anyone Who Had a Heart,' for example, drips with such poignancy that it'll stop you dead in your tracks. And that goes for most tunes on this cd. Thank God that Warwick, Bacharach, and David got together to create such wonderful, sublime music!
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Classy Collection of a Winning Team
Has any solo act ever been so closely associated with a songwriting team as Dionne Warwick's collaboration with Burt Bacharach and Hal David? The only combination that comes close is Frank Sinatra and Sammy Cahn/James Van Heusen from the 1950s and early 1960s. But Cahn/Van Heusen were one of the sources for Frankie's hit songs; almost
all
of Dionne Warwick's
hits
from the 1960s and early 1970s were penned by Bacharach/David. An exception in this excellent collection is the theme from The Valley of the Dolls, by André and Dory Previn, but they pretty much mimic Bacharach/David. Also included here is the obligatory Broadway tune, Who Can I Turn To?, but that was probably dropped in to show Dionne's range, and it wasn't a hit.
Burt Bacharach's noticing Dionne Warwick was one of the most fortuitous meetings of talent in the history of pop music. Warwick was singing background vocals for recordings in New York City as the standout member of a group called the Gospelaires when her versatile vocal talent pricked up Bacharach's ears and he asked her to record demonstration recordings for Bacharach/David songs. One demo so impressed the head of Scepter records that she encouraged Bacharach and David to write songs for Warwick, which Scepter would release. The first single, Don't Make Me Over, was a hit and the winning team was off and running. Warwick was, however, unintentionally made over. Born Marie Dionne Warrick, a misspelling on the cover art for her first single made her Dionne Warwick for her career.
Bacharach/David found in Warwick the perfect interpreter for the musical direction that they wished to take in the 1960s. Warwick's strong, supple voice could handle the interval leaps and tricky rhythms that Bacharach increasingly employed, and her emotional sensitivity perfectly conveyed the shadings of David's lyrics. Warwick/Bacharach/David became the outstanding American presence on the record charts, along with The Beach Boys and especially The Supremes. during the British Invasion of the 1960s, racking up twenty-two Top Forty singles in six years, eight of those making the Top Ten.
This sterling compilation includes just about all of the notable Warwick/Bacharach/David songs, except for the last single to chart, Make It Easy on Yourself, and, mercifully, Warwick's cover of This Guy's in Love With You, the insipid Herb Alpert hit (with appropriate changes in the lyrics).
After four decades of popular music that has become ever more densely multitracked, aurally assaultive, and often nasty in its point of view, the Bacharach/David songs come as something of a revelation. The arrangements are mostly relatively spare, providing just enough background to establish a beat, and just enough solo instrumental work to complement the singer. The music became increasingly sophisticated in the middle period of the Warwick/Bacharach/David collaboration, to the point where pop song met art song. Listen to the sinuous opening of Message to Michael (how many notes does Bacharach use in the words Kentucky Bluebird fly?), or the unexpected directions the music takes in (There's) Always Something There to Remind Me as the song builds aria-like to its hook refrain? Most of Bacharach's music sounds fresh after all these years. David staked out his lyric territory in Wistful Land, Missing You state, Lost Loves county. That is, after all, what the charts told them the public wanted from Dionne. David wrung as much variation on this mood as is humanly possible, and managed, at his best, not to lay it on too thick. The poignance of the simple phrase Walk on By, the light sweetness of I Say a Little Prayer, the inescapable yearning of (There's) Always Something There to Remind Me, the jaunty jadedness of Do You Know the Way to San Jose? are all high points of pop music lyric writing. David could get sticky at
time
s, as if he had drunk some dessert wine that day instead of Chardonnay, but we forgive him.
This compilation has been superbly produced. The sound is almost startlingly clear, the balances carefully realized. Buy it and listen to some of the most finely done popular music ever recorded.
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Dionne Warwick's vocals were never more strong, more vulnerable than when she sang the songs of Burt Bacharach and Hal David--and, oh, yeah, "Who Can I Turn To" and the theme from "V
all
ey of the Dolls," the two non-Bacharach/David songs included among the 24 singles collected here. Both technically and emotionally, this was an unstoppable team: from the drama of "Don't Make Me Over" to the tongue-in-cheek backing singers on "Are You There (With Another Girl)," the barely veiled civil-rights message of "Reach Out for Me" to the deceptively bouncy "Do You Know the Way to San Jose," this CD sheds light on one of the most perfect marriages of pop form and content this side of Sinatra's classic Capitol work. --Rickey Wright
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Tracks
Don't Make Me Over | This Empty Place | Anyone Who Had a Heart | Walk on By | You'll Never Get to Heaven (If You Break My Heart) | A House Is Not a Home | Reach out for Me | Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me) - Dionne Warwick, Bricusse, Leslie | Looking With My Eyes | Are You There (With Another Girl) | Message to Michael | Trains and Boats and Planes | I Just Don't Know What to Do With Myself | Another Night | Alfie | The Windows of the World | I Say a Little Prayer | Theme from Valley of the Dolls | Do You Know the Way to San Jose? | (There's) Always Something There to Remind Me | Promises, Promises | The April Fools | I'll Never Fall in Love Again | The Green Grass Starts to Grow
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