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Our Turn To Cry: 26 Breathtaking Atlantic Ballads
Various Artists
Our Turn To Cry: 26 Breathtaking Atlantic Ballads
Genres: Pop, R&B
 
  •  Track Listings (26) - Disc #1

Is it Deep, is it Southern or is it soul? Our new collection of Atlantic ballads poses all these questions at different times throughout the seventy plus minutes of exquisite music that is Our Turn To Cry, which gives some...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Various Artists
Title: Our Turn To Cry: 26 Breathtaking Atlantic Ballads
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Kent Records UK
Release Date: 3/27/2001
Album Type: Import
Genres: Pop, R&B
Style: Soul
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 029667219525

Synopsis

Product Description
Is it Deep, is it Southern or is it soul? Our new collection of Atlantic ballads poses all these questions at different times throughout the seventy plus minutes of exquisite music that is Our Turn To Cry, which gives some brilliant examples of most of the styles of soul balladry.The opener is a fine example of the complexity of styles. Soul Brother Six hailed from Philadelphia and recorded there and in New York, yet to me they came out with one of the finest examples of church-inspired Southern Soul singing in What Can You Do When You Ain't Got Nobody.From the same northern US city comes white guy Billy Harner, best known for blue eyed soul dancers, but he gives a virtuoso vocal performance on the beautiful ballad Message To My Baby.The traditional southern approach is represented, among others, by the utterly obscure Elvis And The Roadrunners May God Bless Our Love, the aforementioned James Carr singing Tommy Tate's wonderful Hold On and the intriguing concept of How Can You Baby Sit A Man by Ned Towns.One of soul music's best friends as well as best exponents, Doris Troy, is positively melancholic on He Don't Belong To Me, Is it deep or just sad? Either way it wasn't going to languish in Atlantic's vaults if Kent had anything to do with it.The Isley Brothers get intense and then some on their self penned beauty The Last Girl. Like Please Stay by Lou Johnson it's a Brill Building type of song, they do theirs in Big Apple Technicolor, while Lou applies some subtle Southern shades. The results are equally pleasing in different contexts.Bobby Harris gives us a tribute to the man who inspired him and so many 60s soul singers, Sam Cooke, a singer full of Big City sophistication in his voice, yet more Sleepy Time Down South in his presentation. Bobby Marchan's version of Donnie Elbert's tear-inducing ballad What Can I Do was always the one old Jamaican Ska DJs favoured and you knew those guys experienced the music like it should be felt.Country music has had a huge influence on Southern Soul - here we have a Merle Haggard and Bonnie Owens' classic, Today I Started Loving You Again performed by Bettye Swann. It's a full on production, dripping with strings that chugs along at a nice mid tempo which conveys emotions of the deepest kind.More gut-wrenchingly despairing is Betty Lavette's version of Your Turn To Cry, one that will stay in your mind forever if you ever get a chance to see her perform it live.Since seeing a Japanese copy of Dee Dee Sharpe's great ballad mis-spelt as Help Me Find My Glove, I've had some personal problems with taking the song seriously. Putting it on a CD has proved to be cathartic and I can now appreciate the song in all its splendour again.Sometimes we may get so involved in championing our own causes and defending them against others that we miss the bigger picture. My own personal Road To Damascus was finding myself dancing to The Joe 90 Theme. I pray to Elvis And The Roadrunners that you don't have to suffer a similar Deep Soul indignity and can enjoy all the great tracks on this CD regardless of colour, creed, location or tempo.Harboro Horace, from the Ace Records website