5 歳でステージに立ち、9 歳でプロとしてのキャリアをスタートしたシンガー/コメディ女優レイチェル・スウィートのStiff Records 時代のレコーディングを完全収録。ディスク1にはファーストアルバム『Fool Around』(78 年)に加え、コンピレーションアルバム『Akron Compilation』(78 年)から「Truckstop Queen」「Tourist Boys」、『Fool Around: The Best Of』から「I?ll Watch The News」、 Be Stiff ツアーのバックシンガーとして参加した「Be Stiff」、そして「Wildwood Saloon」のライブバージョンを収録。ディスク2には、セカンドアルバム『Protect The Innocent』(80 年)に最後のシングルのB 面「I Go To Pieces」を追加。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2014/02/10)
It's very easy to remember Rachel Sweet as little more than a juvenile novelty within the Stiff Records canon, one more in a long line of headline-grabbing oddities who vanished from the radar around the same time as people stopped caring what the label itself was up to. To do so, however, serves up a dreadful injustice, to Sweet of course, but also to anyone who actually sits down to listen to Sweet's Stiff Records output and discovers there a treasure trove of excellence. Her Fool Around debut album, in particular, was a masterpiece, a country-new wave hybrid a decade ahead of its time, and littered with some sensational performances -- "Who Does Lisa Like" is only the most obvious, the almost shockingly mature "Wildwood Saloon" only the most surprising. Of course there were a few obligatory bubblegum boppers in there, but when the novelty factor gets too grating, it's the songs ("Cuckoo Clock," "Girl with a Synthesizer") that jar, not the singer. Sweet's second album, Protect the Innocent, was less enthralling, although a lovely cover of the Velvet Underground's "New Age" and a strange take on the Damned's "New Rose" both thrill, while Sweet also unleashed a positively beautiful take on the oldie "I Go to Pieces." All of which lines B.A.B.Y. up as an excellent collection, and a fitting tribute to a singer who should never have been allowed to fade away as she did. At her best, she really was one of the best. ~ Dave Thompson|
Rovi