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It's the material on the first two discs, however, that
we've been waiting for, and the only disappointment on
this anthology is the quality of her early solo recordings.
While her two hit singles with the Springfields (including
"Silver Threads and Golden Needles") are in bright, crisp
mono, the sound of her first dozen solo sides are
distressingly uneven. A few are in stereo, but even
some of those sound muffled. Springfield was intoxicated
with the Phil Spector wall-of-sound style of girl-group
recordings in '63-'64 - and we learn here that she
essentially produced her own records without getting
credit - but unfortunately she shared Spector's
penchant for recording in mono and not worrying too much
about audio quality.
It all sounded great coming out of a car radio, however,
and these songs still sizzle. Disc One is everything you
need to know about British studio pop in the mid-'60s,
as Dusty learned the tricks from Dionne Warwick,
Darlene Love and Diana Ross. Disc Two is even more
remarkable, setting cool eroticism like "The Look of Love"
against smoldering American soul from her "Dusty in
Memphis" period.
Hers is a voice for the ages, sultry and knowing, and her
instincts never failed her: There isn't a genuinely
bad song among the 77 on this collection.
Rick Shefchik
Saint Paul Pioneer Press
14 December, 1997