iTunes 10 New Releases
MDNA (Deluxe Edition) - Madonna
MDNA (Deluxe Edition) by Madonna
Lively Up Yourself - Bob Marley
Lively Up Yourself by Bob Marley
A Different Kind of Truth - Van Halen
A Different Kind of Truth by Van Halen
Scars & Stories - The Fray
Scars & Stories by The Fray
Scars & Stories (Deluxe Version) - The Fray
Scars & Stories (Deluxe Version) by The Fray
Bamboleo / Hero (Glee Cast Version) - Single - Glee Cast
Bamboleo / Hero (Glee Cast Version) - Single by Glee Cast
NOW That's What I Call Music Vol. 41 - Various Artists
NOW That's What I Call Music Vol. 41 by Various Artists
The Fray - The Collection - The Fray
The Fray - The Collection by The Fray
A Different Kind of Truth (Deluxe Version) - Van Halen
A Different Kind of Truth (Deluxe Version) by Van Halen
Kisses On the Bottom - Paul McCartney
Kisses On the Bottom by Paul McCartney
| Disc 1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mack the Knife | 3:24 | |
| 2 | Back O' Town Blues | 3:17 | |
| 3 | Black and Blue | 3:03 | |
| 4 | Ain't Misbehavin' | 3:14 | |
| 5 | Basin Street Blues | 3:16 | |
| 6 | Cabaret | 2:46 | |
| 7 | When It's Sleepy Time Down South | 1:51 | |
| 8 | All of Me | 3:55 | |
| 9 | West End Blues | 3:17 | |
| 10 | Struttin' With Some Barbecue | 5:19 | |
| 11 | (Back Home Again In) Indiana | 4:38 | |
Armstrong plays great, as always, and the song selection is OK, if you're looking for familiar tunes. But none of his truly great stuff is here. These are live versions, and they aren't all well-recorded. "Cabaret," for instance, has some kind of synch problem that makes you feel as if someone is turning your bass/treble knob back and forth. On "Blueberry Hill" you can hear somebody mumbling at several points. Also, the producer evidently had never heard of that modern recording breakthrough, the VOLUME KNOB. If he had, he would have faded the tunes in and out, rather than going from dead silence to a roaring crowd in a split second, as he does on virtually every tune here.
"Muskrat Ramble," the oldest recording here, is the best performance, and the best recording, on the disk, though even it sounds like a copy of a copy of a copy of the original master recording.
By the way, the reviewer who complemented a version of ""Wonderful World" must have been referring to a different record. "Wonderful World" does not appear on this CD.
You get electrifying versions of "Basin Street Blues," "St. Louis Blues," and a hits medley from his first decade recording, all scatting and swinging manically nearly 70 years later. Then to All-Star recordings (1947's swinging "Sugar," and "Ain't Misbehavin'," "Someday You'll Be Sorry," a sweet "Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans") and, finally, four unusually compelling songs recorded just over a year before his death (busy, adult soul versions of "Everybody's Talkin'," "Mood Indigo" and "My One And Only Love.") No liner notes, photographs, or even a chronological order to the songs, just compiler Chick Crumpacker's tribute putting Armstrong "at the absolute center of American popular music."
The final song is a remake of what today is Armstrong's signature hit, "What A Wonderful World," preceded with a moving introduction. "People say to me, 'Pops, how can you call this a wonderful world? How about all those wars all over the place...and hunger, and pollution...you call that wonderful?" he starts in that beloved growl. "...but if we all learned to love each other, we could solve more problems, and then life would be a gasser!"
This may have been what Mahalia Jackson meant when she said, "If you don't like Louis Armstrong, you don't know how to love." Despite scattershot song choice and skimpy packaging, the inherent love "Satchmo" gave and was returned shows all too well here. RCA's "Greatest Hits" is recommended, but also check out similar packages on Verve ("Essential," "Best of Ella & Louis") and the Columbia greatest hits collection spotlighting the early years.