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Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul
Otis Redding
Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul
Genres: Pop, R&B
 
  •  Track Listings (23) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (17) - Disc #2

Otis Redding was a singer of such commanding stature that to this day — he embodies the essence of soul music in its purist form. from the — Rock and Roll Hall of Fame s website page on Redding s 1989 induction — Though Otis ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Otis Redding
Title: Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul
Members Wishing: 7
Total Copies: 0
Label: Rhino Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 4/22/2008
Album Type: Collector's Edition, Original recording remastered
Genres: Pop, R&B
Styles: Oldies, Vocal Pop, Soul
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPCs: 081227993894, 0603497982158

Synopsis

Product Description
Otis Redding was a singer of such commanding stature that to this day
he embodies the essence of soul music in its purist form. from the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame s website page on Redding s 1989 induction
Though Otis Redding s career was cut tragically short by a plane crash,
his legacy and recordings are inestimably large. Intense, raw and emotional, his sound defines golden era Southern soul. Redding s third album, OTIS BLUE: OTIS REDDING SINGS SOUL, is considered his first LP masterpiece, and it ranks
#74 on Rolling Stone s list of the 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, noting that it was recorded in a single 24-hour period in 1965, calls it, a virtual soul-music primer. The original album features a trio
of songs by Sam Cooke, Redding s idol, who had passed away shortly before OTIS BLUE was made. It also features his version of Respect a song he wrote, but that s an Aretha signature his great cover of (I Can t Get No) Satisfaction and other classic tracks. In its deluxe COLLECTOR S EDITION, this landmark
work is presented in both mono and stereo versions, along with rare and
previously unreleased bonus gems.
2-CD deluxe, expanded COLLECTOR S EDITION of Redding s 1966 masterpiece.Original album highlights include three classic Sam Cooke covers Shake, A Change Is Gonna Come, and Wonderful
World Redding s dramatic take on the Stones (I Can t Get No) Satisfaction, and his beautiful rendition of the Smokey Robinson classic My Girl. Plus, the Cooke-penned originals Ole Man Trouble and Respect. Disc One presents the original mono album. Bonus material includes six alternates and singles including previously
unreleased mono mixes of stereo album versions of I ve Been
Loving You For Too Long, Ole Man Trouble, and Respect. Also features six classic songs recorded Live at The Whisky A Go Go in Los Angeles in April1966including Satisfaction
and Respect. Disc Two presents the original stereo album. An alternate 1967 version of Respect is featured as a bonus track. Deluxe DigiPak features a special collector s edition O-card plus a 16-page book with rare photos and new liner notes.

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CD Reviews

Otis Redding's 3rd Album Gets The 2CD "Collector's Edition"
Mark Barry at Reckless Records, Lon | UK | 04/29/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"HISTORY:

With the groundwork of his first two albums behind him, "Pain In My Heart" in 1964 and "The Great Otis Redding Sings Soul Ballads" in early 1965, Otis Redding stepped into the Stax recording studio on McLemore Avenue in Memphis on the 9th of July 1965 to quickly slap down his 3rd album. And quick was the optional word. In one long adrenalin fuelled session (broken up by night gigs the band had to attend - only to reconvene in the early hours of the morning), its 11 songs took less than 24 hours to produce. In fact, Otis flew out of Memphis the very next day to do another gig! It is of course now recongnised as a bona-fide 60ts soul classic and this "Collector's Edition" is here to celebrate that.



TOM DOWD was the Engineer, ISAAC HAYES, JIM STEWART and DAVID PORTER were the Producers and the Stax House Band were the session players:

WAYNE JACKSON and GENE "BOWLEGS" MILLER on Trumpets

ANDREW LOVE on Tenor Sax

FLOYD NEWMAN on Baritone Sax

ISAAC HAYES and BOOKER T. JONES on Keyboards

STEVE CROPPER on Guitar

DONALD "DUCK" DUNN on Bass

AL JACKSON, JR. on Drums

EARL SIMS on Backing Vocals

(Jones, Cropper, Dunn and Jackson, Jr make up the nucleus of Booker T. & The MG's)



"Otis Blue/Otis Redding Sings Soul" was released in the USA on the 15th of September 1965 on Volt 412. It charted on the Pop Albums chart at a lowly number 75, but hit the big number 1 spot on the R'n'B LP chart of that month. It was released in the UK in February 1966 on Atlantic ATL 5041, originally in Stereo only - but later re-issued in 1967, again on Atlantic, but this time in both Mono and Stereo (587 036 for Mono and 588 036 for Stereo). Any sixties variant of the vinyl album has always been hard to find in playable condition here in the UK - and pricey too - so this 2CD Rhino "Collector's Edition" released on Monday 28 April 2008 in a welcome addition for soul fans everywhere.



PACKAGING:

It has the same specialist gatefold digipak packaging that Universal's 2CD "Deluxe Edition" series and EMI's 2CD "Collector's Edition" sets have - all wrapped up in an outer titled slipcase. There's a 16-page booklet with detailed liner notes by ROB BOWMAN who has conducted interviews with the album's engineer, the late TOM DOWD, Bass Player DONALD "DUCK" DUNN and Trumpeter WAYNE JACKSON among others. It pictures US Volt 7" singles and UK Atlantic 7" singles from private collectors, has a few black and white shots of Otis himself and detailed session notes. The release has been prepared by PATRICK MILLIGAN and CHERYL PAWELSKI for Rhino with Otis' wife, Zelma Redding, adding her take on the re-issue in her own dedication - a very nice touch that.



CDs:

The master tapes have been REMASTERED by Rhino's long-standing collaborating engineers DAN HERSCH and BILL INGLOT at Digiprep studios (no date supplied) and the 40-tracks of the 2CDs are laid out as follows:



Disc 1 (72:30 minutes):

Tracks 1 to 11 is the original MONO MIX of the album, Volt 412

Tracks 12, 14 and 15 are mono mixes of the stereo album versions and are previously unreleased

Track 13 is the non-album B-side to "I've Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)" issued April 1965 on the US 7" single Volt 126

Track 16 is the non-album B-side to "Satisfaction" issued in February 1966 on the US 7" single Volt 132

Track 17 is a stereo mix of the mono single version - it was first issued on the 1993 "Otis! The Definitive Otis Redding" 4CD Rhino Box Set

Tracks 18 and 20 were recorded live at The Whisky A Go Go sessions in April 1966 and were first released on the 1982 Atlantic LP "Recorded Live: Previously Unreleased Performances"

Tracks 19, 21, 22 and 23 are from the October 1968 Atco LP "Otis Redding In Person At The Whisky A Go Go"



Disc 2 (51:03 minutes):

Tracks 1 to 11 are the original STEREO MIX of the album (Volt 412)

Track 12 is the 1967 version of "Respect" which first appeared on the "Remember Me" album compilation from 1992 on Stax

Tracks 13 to 17 are from the "Live In Europe" album from October 1967 on Volt 416 and feature the Stax House band



As you will have noticed from the above breakdown, for the die-hard collector who already has all of Redding's issued material to date, this 2CD set only really has 3 previously unreleased tracks, and they're slightly alternate mono mixes of stereo album versions - so it's hardly the great haul of soul joy the lovely outside packaging promises. The mono mix of the album is new to CD of course, but again, some may feel, it's simply more of the same.



SOUND:

The mono mix of the album on Disc 1 is surprisingly clean - there is hiss on it given the less-than-sophisticated recording equipment and rushed nature of the recordings, but it is punchy and vibrant - and in many ways far more direct than the crude two-channel separation of the Stereo version. It's better than I thought it would be and a nice addition.



Both discs contain live material - and a few seconds into any of the tunes - it's easy to know why. Otis Redding `live' must have been an awesome wonder to behold - you can only imagine what it must have been like to be in that audience - to see this force of nature literally slay an audience - and you get a sense of it 30 seconds into "Shake". It explodes out of the speakers in that Sixties joyful way. The silver suit, the huge charisma, the guttural vocals, the band complimenting him - brass section choppy and tight - guitar, bass and drums funky as f**k - what a wow! In some respects, the live versions are far better than the studio ones `because' they're so `alive'. The live tracks are ballsy and far better recorded than you would imagine - they also give you a more rounded picture of the man and his talents - and to some degree - what all the fuss about Redding is all about.



The Stereo mix on Disc 2, however, is disappointingly drenched in hiss - and on the slower ballads like "Ole Man Trouble", the Sam Cooke cover of "Change Gonna Come", the William Bell song "You Don't Miss Your Water", the Smokey Robinson & The Miracles cover "My Girl" and particularly "I've Been Loving You Too Long" - it detracts way too much from the magic of the songs. Personally I find them very difficult to enjoy with a wall of hiss blasting out `over' the instruments. The hip shakers like Solomon Burke's "Down In The Valley", Sam Cooke's "Shake" and the Rolling Stones "Satisfaction" fare far better - they sound great - really alive and kicking - with the wonderful low-down groove of B.B. King's "Rock Me Baby" being a particular highlight (has a wicked Steve Cropper guitar solo). Basically the effect on the stereo mix is that brass and piano are in the left speaker with the vocals and guitar entirely in the right with some imaging in between. It works brilliantly on the mid-tempo Sam Cooke cover "Wonderful World" too. And when I A/B the 1992 remaster by Rhino with this 2008 version, the differences are there - much LOUDER and CLEARER. It's just such a shame about the hiss levels on some of the tracks.



SUMMARY:

A classic album in a lovely package and one that fans will have to own. For those not wanting to fork out the near £15 price tag the hard copy commands, ITunes is offering the entire 40-track double set for £8.99 as a download (no booklet unfortunately)."
An indispensable soul album that never sounded better
Luigi Facotti | Chicago Il | 04/22/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Forty three years after its first vinyl release on Volt and after two CD releases (mono on Atco; stereo on a rare Japanese reissue) - this album sounds as great as it always did. The major revelation is the stereo version newly remastered by the guys at DigiPrep - Bill Inglot and Dan Hersch - it is INCREDIBLE - having listened to this album for the full 43 years in stereo-I now hear things in the stereo version that I never knew were there! A must have version of perhaps the greatest soul album of all time."
A MUST-OWN ALL-TIME CLASSIC
Thomas D. Ryan | New York | 04/27/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"During his lifetime, Otis Redding set the benchmark for soul music. He virtually defined the genre, and to this day, his music remains as fresh and vital as it was in the mid-sixties. "Otis Blue" was Redding's third album release, and the first to provide an unfettered view of his seemingly limitless ability. There is not an ounce of filler on this release, which is why "Otis Blue" so deserves the attention and privilege of a special "collector's edition' release. Here is a track-by-track synopsis of why you need to own "Otis Blue"

1) "Ole Man Trouble" is a Redding original that stands among the best recordings he has ever made. Steve Cropper's guitar provides the bricks and mortar for this intense slow burner with blues and country overtones.

2) What remains to be said about "Respect"? Yes, Aretha's interpretation put a powerful spin on the Otis Redding composition, but this version reminds us that the song was originally written from a man's perspective.

3) Sam Cooke wrote "A Change Is Gonna Come," and his version remains definitive, but Otis' interpretation is easily the most expressive recording of this intensely personal song about equality and civil rights.

4) Besides writing his own compositions, Redding had excellent taste when it came to covering other people's material. "Down in the Valley" is a Solomon Burke tune that Redding interprets with a deep-fried Memphis intensity.

5) "I've Been Loving You Too Long" is the ultimate example of a soulful pleader. Written with Jerry Butler, Redding bends notes and makes the hairs on your arm stand up from his painful vulnerability, only to build up to a level that captures all the pain of a man on the verge of breaking down.

6) Otis Redding was obviously a Sam Cooke fan, and easily his best interpreter. With "Shake," he surpasses Cooke's own version by allowing the band to groove with a rocking intensity that suits the song's topic.

7) Nobody will ever beat the slick city-groove cool of the Temptations original, but Otis takes "My Girl" to the country, adding a grits-and-soul type honesty.

8) "Wonderful World" is yet another Sam Cooke interpretation that gets the same organic treatment as "My Girl."

9) Virtually every quality that is attributable to the "Stax-Volt' sound is on full display on "Rock Me Baby," from the unique interpretation of the song's rhythm to the grooving guitar supporting the hot horn charts, not to mention Otis Redding's down-to-earth vocals.

10) With "Satisfaction," Otis Redding single-handedly turned the tables on the British invasion's penchant for interpreting American blues and soul classics. Keith Richards himself says that Redding's performance of his song is the way he intended it to sound in the first place.

11) "You Don't Miss Your Water" is another sterling example of Otis Redding's taste in cover material. William Bell wrote this song about love and hindsight, and Otis brings an intensity similar to that he displayed on "I've Been Loving You Too Long."

That covers the album in its original glory. The beauty of the Collector's Edition is that is also includes some stellar bonus material, including a generous sampling of Redding's live recordings in California (at the Whiskey a Go-Go) and excerpts from the classic "Live in Europe" album. Most welcome are the original non-LP B-sides from Redding's 45-RPM singles, including "I'm Depending on You" and "Any Ole Way." If you love soul, then you need to own "Otis Blue." If you don't love soul, then you never heard "Otis Blue." A+ Tom Ryan"