The Best of OdettaOdetta
Release Date: 11/07/2006
Original Release:
1967
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 950283_CD
UPC # 090431085820
Label: Collectables Records
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping |
|
Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Odetta
Distributor: Select-O-Hits Notes: Personnel: Odetta (vocals, guitar). The title The Best of Odetta sets a standard that the contents of this disc are unable to meet, even though the material is valuable. It would be difficult to assemble a true Odetta best-of, because the folksinger's recordings are extensive and have covered the labels Fantasy (1954-1955), Tradition (1956-1957), Vanguard (1959-1962 with releases continuing into 1963), Riverside (1962), RCA Victor (1962-1965), and Verve Folkways (1966-1967). But the concern here is solely the Tradition material, which consists of a total of 31 tracks that originated on two albums, Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues (1956) and Odetta at the Gate of Horn (1957). The Best of Odetta is a truncated repackaging of this material, an 18-track disc excerpting nine selections from Odetta at the Gate of Horn followed by nine from Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues. On it, an Odetta in her mid-twenties gives mesmerizing performances of traditional folk and blues standards in her trademark contralto, accompanying herself on acoustic guitar or singing a cappella. (Bill Lee plays bass on the tracks from Odetta at the Gate of Horn.) These are good performances, and any folk fan should have some version of the Tradition recordings. But the album's title makes a promise the music itself does not keep. (The Best of Odetta has been reissued under the title The Best of Odetta: Ballads & Blues.) ~ William Ruhlmann
Taking inspiration from classic blues singers and folk troubadours of the 1930s and '40s and predating the folk boom of the '60s, Odetta remains one of the most important yet often overlooked artists of the American musical tradition. Her unique, politically charged fusion of blues, traditional Negro spirituals, and American folk songs was a profound influence on a generation of artists from Bob Dylan and Joan Baez to Tracy Chapman. Odetta continued to perform well after her heyday, remaining both fiercely political and artistically engaging.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Armatrading, Joan Arrested Development Baez, Joan Chapman, Tracy Collins, Judy Cotten, Elizabeth Dalton, Karen Dane, Barbara DiFranco, Ani Dylan, Bob Elliott, Ramblin' Jack Farina, Mimi Farina, Richard Havens, Richie Houston, Cisco Joplin, Janis Kingston Trio Leadbelly Makeba, Miriam Ochs, Phil Ritchie, Jean Seeger, Peggy Seeger, Pete Simone, Nina The New Lost City Ramblers Van Ronk, Dave Weavers (The) White, Josh
Influences:
Carter Family Fisk University Jubilee Singers Guthrie, Woody Jackson, Mahalia Johnson, Robert Leadbelly Robeson, Paul Seeger, Pete Smith, Bessie Tharpe, Sister Rosetta White, Josh
Similar Genres:
Country Blues |