| | Thelma Houston Woman's Touch CD Thelma Houston Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
For her first new album in 17 years, Motown and disco veteran Thelma Houston doesn't exactly dive into the deep water, but instead sort of gets her feet wet by putting her touch on a series of soul and pop covers from the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s originally done by male singers Houston has long admired, giving these classic songs, as the album's title states, a woman's touch. The end result is sort of a mixed bag, but it is good to have this fine singer back in the game. A Woman's Touch has a rather smoothed-out, thin sound, and producer Jeff Palo obviously had some budget concerns to deal with, which is probably why there are programmed horns here rather than the real deal, but Houston's voice is what truly matters, and thankfully she is in fine form, bringing a blues approach and a gospel fire to the table. She shines on a pair of Marvin Gaye tunes, the powerful "Distant Lover" and a slowed-down, completely unique version of "Ain't That Peculiar" that recasts the song with a tone of weary resignation into a whole new realm. Houston also sticks her old disco shoes back on for driving renditions of Sylvester's "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" and the Luther Vandross-penned "Never Too Much," and tackles pop fare like Jimmy Webb's (who produced her debut album back in 1969) "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" and Sting's "Brand New Day" with pleasing if not exactly groundbreaking results. In the end, A Woman's Touch feels a bit like a test run for Houston, a way of easing back into things, and for that, it's a fine outing. Aside from her magnificent version of "Ain't That Peculiar," though, most of what's here is treading water, and Houston is too good a singer to do that for very long. ~ Steve Leggett
Personnel: Thelma Houston (background vocals); Babalunuenue (chant); Jack Wargo (gut-string guitar); Paul Baker (harp); John Yoakum (flute); Rodney Houston (didjeridu); Katja Riekermann, Larry Klimas (saxophone); Chris Tedesco (trumpet); Peitor Angell (keyboards); Luigie Gonzalez, John Pena (bass guitar); Thomas Neptune (drums); Louis Conte (percussion); Denita James, Myrna Smith, Valerie Pinkerton, Alexis Saunders, Pat Hodges, Portia Griffin (background vocals).
Thelma Houston Woman's Touch Songs Woman's Touch Music Review Purchase Woman's Touch CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Johnny Otis 1945-1947 CD (2002)
Woman's Touch album
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| | B B King Mr. Blues/Confessin' The Blues CD (2005) (Import) Remastered; United Kingdom
Woman's Touch CD music
$18.79 This CD contains B.B. King's first ABC-Paramount studio efforts -- Mr. Blues (1962) and Confessin' the Blues (1965), respectively. While there are inevitable similarities between the projects, offering them back-to-back allows listeners an acute sense ...
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| | Big Road Blues Crossroots CD (2009)
Woman's Touch album
$10.65 Pre-World War II blues can be said to have a dual nature. They are structurally formulaic (both musically and textually), but as a largely solo medium, they provided artists with enormous freedom to create intensely personal styles. In this album Big Road Blues applies these contrasting qualities of uniformity and individuality to fashion new arrangements by combining musical ideas from the recordings of various pre-war blues greats -- the crossing of roots.The roots of blues were complex, and included the intersection of many musical and social forces: cross-fertilization between African and European musical elements, the interplay of folk and popular music, the development of regional styles, and contributions from earlier song genres--all driven by interactions between musicians and their audiences in a social and economic environment that was oppressive toward African-Americans. In addition, the artists who originated this music were crossing both "routes," and “roots,” initially through their travels and touring, and later via records and radio as well, which led to the sharing of different regional and personal styles. Blues reflected the daily struggles and concerns of African-Americans. The massive migrations from rural to urban areas with the end of Reconstruction (accelerated by the imposition of repressive southern “Jim Crow” laws) became a prevalent theme in blues. The name “Big Road Blues” (the title of bluesman Tommy Johnson’s signature song) suggests this theme of movement and travel. As blues writer Michael Taft puts it, "Although the main theme of the blues is love...its supplementary themes are movement and the anxiety caused by this movement"* (not to mention the "anxiety" caused by poverty and inequality enforced by the threat of violence), often expressed as a subtext in verses about difficulties in personal relationships. Blues speaks to all of these issues and, as a powerful survival mechanism, encourages the joy of life even in the face of them. We have tried to make ...
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