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HOLIDAY, BILLIE / COMPLETE COMMODORE & DECCA MASTERS

HOLIDAY, BILLIE


complete commodore & decca masters
3 CD
USD$71.58
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Description

Although many of Billie Holiday's recordings for Commodore and Decca are often overlooked -- at least in comparison to the songs that bookend her career (for Columbia and Verve) -- they include some of her best work, beginning at the end of the '30s with "Strange Fruit" and stretching to the end of the '40s with "God Bless the Child." In 1939, Billie Holiday was a jazz sensation without a hit record. She gained that hit record, and began her journey to musical immortality, when her label Columbia refused to record "Strange Fruit," and jazz fan Milt Gabler welcomed her to his aficionado label, Commodore. Gabler recorded Holiday often over the next ten years, both at Commodore and through his work at Decca in the mid-to late '40s. While on Commodore, Holiday focused on downcast ballads, including "I Cover the Waterfront" and "I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues" (dubbed "loser" songs by Gabler), but she also excelled with warm and affectionate material too, "Embraceable You" and "On the Sunny Side of the Street." Regardless of the material, her backing consisted of small groups usually led by a pair of saloon-sound maestros: Doc Cheatham on trumpet and Eddie Heywood on piano. That sound was in for a switch when Holiday moved to Decca, however, beginning with another big hit, "Lover Man," a pop ballad with the full crossover treatment -- strings and all. (Gabler had no compunction about false notions of purity, and he happily recorded Holiday with strings and backing choruses whenever the song demanded it.) Even more than her work for Commodore, Holiday's work for Decca was melancholy and resigned in the extreme, with sterling treatments of yet more loser songs: "Don't Explain," "Good Morning Heartache," "You Better Go Now," and "What Is This Thing Called Love." Individually, the songs are excellent, and as a package, The Complete Commodore & Decca Masters can hardly be beat. It's a splendid accompaniment to similar sets devoted to Billie Holiday's Columbia and Verve output, and while completists will bemoan the lack of the many alternate takes -- most of the Commodore sides have two alternate takes for each master recording, available elsewhere -- this is all the war-years Billie Holiday one could hope for. John Bush.

Details

Released: Mon 16 Nov 2009
Catalogue Number: 2710997

Track Listing

Disk 1
1.  Strange Fruit
2.  Yesterdays
3.  Fine And Mellow
4.  I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues "#2"
5.  How Am I To Know?
6.  My Old Flame
7.  I'll Get By (As Long As I Have You) (Take 2)
8.  I Cover The Waterfront
9.  I'll Be Seeing You
10.  I'm Yours
11.  Embraceable You
12.  As Time Goes By
13.  He's Funny That Way
14.  Lover, Come Back To Me - "Original Choice"
15.  Billie's Blues
16.  On The Sunny Side Of The Street
Disk 2
1.  Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)
2.  No More
3.  That Ole Devil Called Love
4.  Don't Explain
5.  You Better Go Now
6.  What Is This Thing Called Love?
7.  Good Morning Heartache
8.  No Good Man
9.  Big Stuff
10.  Baby, I Don't Cry Over You
11.  I'll Look Around
12.  The Blues Are Brewin'
13.  Guilty
14.  Deep Song
15.  There Is No Greater Love
16.  Easy Living
17.  Solitude
18.  Weep No More
19.  Girls Were Made To Take Care Of Boys
Disk 3
1.  I Loves You, Porgy
2.  My Man (Mon Homme)
3.  'Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do
4.  Baby, Get Lost
5.  Keeps On A Rainin' (Papa He Can't Make No Time)
6.  Them There Eyes
7.  Do Your Duty
8.  Gimme A Pigfoot And A Bottle Of Beer
9.  You Can't Lose A Broken Heart
10.  My Sweet Hunk O' Trash
11.  Now Or Never
12.  You're My Thrill
13.  Crazy He Calls Me
14.  Please Tell Me Now
15.  Somebody's On My Mind
16.  God Bless The Child
17.  This Is Heaven To Me

Availability

Estimated despatch 5-10 days after ordering.
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