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Wide Awake In A Dream : James Brown Productions From The Pre-Funk Years

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2010年05月24日
国内/輸入 輸入(イギリス盤)
レーベルAce/BGP
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 CDBGPD208
SKU 029667520829

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      I LOVE YOU

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    2. 2.
      MY MAN

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    3. 3.
      NEVER, NEVER LET YOU GO PTS 1 & 2

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    4. 4.
      I WON'T BE BACK

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    5. 5.
      YOU SEND ME

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    6. 6.
      WIDE AWAKE IN A DREAM

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    7. 7.
      NOBODY CARES

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    8. 8.
      DON'T MESS WITH BILL

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    9. 9.
      NOWHERE TO RUN

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    10. 10.
      THE FEELING IS REAL

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    11. 11.
      THINK

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    12. 12.
      I'LL WORK IT OUT

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    13. 13.
      (SOMETHING MOVES ME) WITHIN MY HEART

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    14. 14.
      TEARS OF JOY

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    15. 15.
      ALL IN MY MIND

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    16. 16.
      HERE IS MY EVERYTHING

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    17. 17.
      LOVING YOU

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    18. 18.
      NO MORE HEARTACHES, NO MORE PAIN

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    19. 19.
      WHAT THE WORLD NEEDS NOW IS LOVE

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    20. 20.
      LET IT BE ME

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    21. 21.
      YOU'LL NEVER FIND A LOVE LIKE MINE

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    22. 22.
      DON'T PLAY THAT SONG

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

    23. 23.
      IN THE LAND OF MILK AND HONEY

      アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Vicki Anderson

オリジナル発売日:2010年

商品の紹介

ジェイムズ・ブラウン・レヴューに、1965年からマーヴァ・ウィットニーと交代する1967年まで在籍した女性シンガー、ヴィッキ・アンダーソン。その後も、1975年までJBファミリーとして活動した、おなじみ、ボビー・バードの奥方でもあり、カーリーン・アンダーソンの母親としても知られる彼女のKing/Brownstone音源コンピレーション。サム・クックやマーサ&ザ・ヴァンデラス、ベン・E・キングらのカバー曲、さらには当然JBとの共演曲も収録という充実の内容。
P-VINE
発売・販売元 提供資料(2010/05/26)

The Mainstream label might be most known to the, um, mainstream for the rock it recorded during the psychedelic era, especially the Amboy Dukes and Big Brother & the Holding Company. By the early 1970s, however, it was focused almost solely on jazz, as (according to the liner notes of this compilation) Mainstream mainman Bob Shad "had become tired of the amount of money needed to break rock acts." Subtitled "Deep Spiritual Jazz from Mainstream Records 1970-1973," A Loud Minority has 75 minutes of jazz that the label issued during the period. Some of the artists are fairly well known, like Blue Mitchell, Harold Land, and Charles McPherson; others are less so. Although some of the annotation to this reissue intimates that the music was informed by growing African-American activism and spiritual growth, and more acoustic-oriented than the fusion that became a major trend in jazz during this era, in fact, much of this seems fairly straight-ahead. While the liner notes at one point characterize the anthology's music as "almost acoustic," it's not devoid of fusion influences, with electric keyboard work that seems, on Mitchell's "Mi Hermano," for instance, informed by some of Miles Davis' fusion excursions. Hadley Caliman's "Watercress," in the meantime, launches with a mightily funky bassline. These aren't criticisms, as the music is well done, but it's only fair to note that it's not always as cutting edge or daring as one might expect. An exception is Frank Foster's lead-off track "The Loud Minority" which, with its spoken declarations (by the estimable jazz singer Dee Dee Bridgewater), has more than a hint of militancy. Perhaps not coincidentally, it's the most memorable of the dozen selections, with suitably boisterous, dramatic accompaniment (including Jan Hammer on keyboards). While some of the rest is just fair early-'70s inside contemporary jazz, there are some definite high points, like McPherson's "Charisma," which swings hard (with help from the great drummer Billy Higgins); Johnny Coles' engagingly skittering interpretation of the Miles Davis-Gil Evans composition "Petits Machins"; and the fluttering high wailing on Foster's "E.W. Beautiful People." While this CD isn't outstanding enough or possessed of enough stylistic identity to be hailed as a major archive compilation, it has some good early-'70s jazz that was relatively commercially and critically overlooked. ~ Richie Unterberger|
Rovi

The Mainstream label might be most known to the, um, mainstream for the rock it recorded during the psychedelic era, especially the Amboy Dukes and Big Brother & the Holding Company. By the early 1970s, however, it was focused almost solely on jazz, as (according to the liner notes of this compilation) Mainstream mainman Bob Shad "had become tired of the amount of money needed to break rock acts." Subtitled "Deep Spiritual Jazz from Mainstream Records 1970-1973," A Loud Minority has 75 minutes of jazz that the label issued during the period. Some of the artists are fairly well known, like Blue Mitchell, Harold Land, and Charles McPherson; others are less so. Although some of the annotation to this reissue intimates that the music was informed by growing African-American activism and spiritual growth, and more acoustic-oriented than the fusion that became a major trend in jazz during this era, in fact, much of this seems fairly straight-ahead. While the liner notes at one point characterize the anthology's music as "almost acoustic," it's not devoid of fusion influences, with electric keyboard work that seems, on Mitchell's "Mi Hermano," for instance, informed by some of Miles Davis' fusion excursions. Hadley Caliman's "Watercress," in the meantime, launches with a mightily funky bassline. These aren't criticisms, as the music is well done, but it's only fair to note that it's not always as cutting edge or daring as one might expect. An exception is Frank Foster's lead-off track "The Loud Minority" which, with its spoken declarations (by the estimable jazz singer Dee Dee Bridgewater), has more than a hint of militancy. Perhaps not coincidentally, it's the most memorable of the dozen selections, with suitably boisterous, dramatic accompaniment (including Jan Hammer on keyboards). While some of the rest is just fair early-'70s inside contemporary jazz, there are some definite high points, like McPherson's "Charisma," which swings hard (with help from the great drummer Billy Higgins); Johnny Coles' engagingly skittering interpretation of the Miles Davis-Gil Evans composition "Petits Machins"; and the fluttering high wailing on Foster's "E.W. Beautiful People." While this CD isn't outstanding enough or possessed of enough stylistic identity to be hailed as a major archive compilation, it has some good early-'70s jazz that was relatively commercially and critically overlooked. ~ Richie Unterberger
Rovi

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