Solomon Burke - Blue and Soulful (2007)

  • 15 Nov, 13:10
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Artist:
Title: Blue and Soulful
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Rhino Atlantic
Genre: R&B, Soul, Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 2:50:05
Total Size: 970 / 394 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. This Little Ring
02. It's All Right
03. Just Out of Reach (Of My Two Empty Arms)
04. How Many Times
05. Keep the Magic Working
06. Cry to Me
07. I Almost Lost My Mind
08. Down in the Valley
09. Looking for My Baby
10. Baby (I Wanna Be Loved)
11. I'm Hanging up My Heart for You
12. Soul Meeting
13. I Really Don't Want to Know
14. Tonight My Heart She Is Crying
15. Home in Your Heart
16. Hard, Ain't It Hard
17. Stupidity
18. Send Me Some Loving
19. Go on Back to Him
20. Words
21. I Said I Was Sorry
22. Can't Nobody Love You
23. If You Need Me
24. Beautiful Brown Eyes
25. You're Good for Me
26. He'll Have to Go
27. Someone to Love Me
28. Goodbye Baby (Baby Goodbye)
29. Everybody Needs Somebody to Love
30. Yes I Do (Single Version)
31. The Price
32. Got to Get You off My Mind (Edit)
33. Dance Dance Dance
34. Maggie's Farm
35. Tonight's the Night
36. Someone Is Watching
37. Why, Why, Why
38. Baby, Come on Home
39. I Feel a Sin Coming On
40. Presents for Christmas
41. When She Touches Me (Nothing Else Matters)
42. Keep Looking
43. Woman, How Do You Make Me Love You Like I Do
44. Time Is a Thief
45. Keep a Light in the Window
46. I Stayed Away Too Long
47. Take Me Just as I Am
48. It's Just a Matter of Time
49. Detroit City
50. Party People
51. It's Been a Change
52. By the Time I Get to Phoenix
53. I Wish I Knew (How It Would Feel to Be Free)
54. Shame on Me
55. Meet Me in Church
56. Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye
57. Since I Met You Baby
58. Save It
59. Get Out of My Life Woman
60. What'd I Say

While Solomon Burke never made a major impact upon the pop audience -- he never, in fact, had a Top 20 hit -- he was an important early soul pioneer. On his '60s singles for Atlantic, he brought a country influence into R&B, with emotional phrasing and intricately constructed, melodic ballads and midtempo songs. At the same time, he was surrounded with sophisticated "uptown" arrangements and was provided with much of his material by his producers, particularly Bert Berns. The combination of gospel, pop, country, and production polish was basic to the recipe of early soul. While Burke wasn't the only one pursuing this path, not many others did so as successfully. And he, like Otis Redding and Wilson Pickett, was an important influence upon the Rolling Stones, who covered Burke's "Cry to Me" and "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" on their early albums.

Burke came by his gospel roots even more deeply than most soul stars. He was preaching at his family's Philadelphia church and hosting his own gospel radio show even before he'd reached his teens. He began recording gospel and R&B sides for Apollo in the mid- to late '50s. Like several former gospel singers (Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett), he was molded into a more secular direction when he signed with Atlantic in the '60s. Burke had a wealth of high-charting R&B hits in the early half of the '60s, which crossed over to the pop listings in a mild fashion as well. "Just Out of Reach," "Cry to Me," "If You Need Me," "Got to Get You Off My Mind," "Tonight's the Night," and "Goodbye Baby (Baby Goodbye)" were the most successful of these, although, unlike Franklin or Pickett, he wasn't able to expand his R&B base into a huge pop following as well. He left Atlantic in the late '60s and spent the next decade hopping between various labels, getting his biggest hit with a cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Proud Mary" in 1969, and recording an album in the late '70s with cult soulster Swamp Dogg as producer.

Don't Give Up on MeFrom the '80s through the first decade of the new millennium, Burke became one of the most visible living exponents of classic soul music, continuing to tour and record albums in a rootsy, at times gospel-ish style. Although these were critically well-received, their stylistic purity also ensured that their market was primarily confined to roots music enthusiasts, rather than a pop audience. His live and later recorded work, however, is a favorite of those who want to experience a soul legend with his talents and stylistic purity relatively intact. Burke's 2002 release Don't Give Up on Me was hailed as a major comeback for the legendary soul man. Great songwriters like Elvis Costello, Dan Penn, Nick Lowe, and Tom Waits contributed songs, and Joe Henry produced the album, which has been compared to Johnny Cash's landmark American Recordings.

Make Do with What You GotAfter the critical success of Don't Give Up on Me reaffirmed Burke's status as one of the greatest living exponents of classic soul, the singer teamed up with producer Don Was for Make Do with What You Got, an updated variation on his classic style that was released in spring 2005. A year later, Burke released an interesting country and soul hybrid, Nashville, on Shout! Factory. A second album on the label, Like a Fire, followed in 2008. Burke next reunited with producer Willie Mitchell for Nothing’s Impossible, which was released shortly after Mitchell’s death in 2010 by Koch Records’ E1 Music. In October of 2009, Burke teamed up with Dutch Soul band De Dijk for recording sessions that would become his final album: Hold on Tight. Sadly, Burke died on October 10, 2010 upon arrival at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, The Netherlands where the soul legend was scheduled to perform at a sold-out show at the city's Paradiso concert hall with De Dijk. Hold on Tight was eventually released in March 2011. ~ Richie Unterberger


Many thanks for lossless.
Thank you so much!!!!