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Rita Coolidge 'whiskey whiskey'

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Uploaded by on Oct 31, 2010

It its usual elegant manner, Australia†s Raven Records presents three of Rita Coolidge's early recordings in a deluxe package with beautifully remastered sound. The three albums -- The Lady´s Not for Sale, Fall into Spring, and It†s Only Love (on two discs) -- were originally released in 1972, 1974, and 1975, respectively. None of them charted as high as her 1977 breakthrough album Anytime...Anywhere or 1978†s Love Me Again (issued by Raven in a previous two-fer in 2008). They are, arguably, better records artistically. They offer portraits of Coolidge displaying all of her many interpretive gifts as a singer and, more importantly, as a stylist. The Lady†s Not for Sale reached the Top 50 on the Billboard chart, and three singles were chosen: her amazingly brazen interpretation of the standard "†Fever†" and "Whiskey Whiskey" both made the pop chart, and "†My Crew†" hit the country Top 50. While "†Fever†" is the clear standout, there are two other tracks that deserve mention, her stellar, soulful reading of Leonard Cohen's "†Bird on a Wire,†" which evokes her gospel roots in a sleight-of-hand way, and Bob Dylan's "†I†ll Be Your Baby, Tonight,†" whose meaning is changed because of her deeper soul phrasing and delivery. The title track written by Kris Kristofferson is a defiant, emotive anthem. Fall into Spring contains amazing readings of "†Love Has No Pride" (that†s less immediate but equally as powerful as Bonnie Raitt's version), Bobby Charles "†Cowboys and Indians,†" a burning reading of Guy Clark's "†Desperados Waiting for the Train,†" and a little-known but amazing version of Charlie Rich's "†I Feel Like Goin† Home,†" that fearlessly brings out the full gospel expression in the tune, long before Rich recorded it himself. The final album in the set is the biggest surprise with the use of Rhodes pianos, and walks a perfect line between soft rock and country throughout. It was the least successful of these albums but nonetheless, like them, is utterly consistent and contains stellar tracks such as Robert E† Morrison's "†Born to Love Me,†" "†It†s Only Love, †" the funky blues of Kristofferson's "†Late Again,†" and the jazz standard "Mean to Me." The historical liner essay by Ian McFarlane is, as usual, authoritative and engagingly informative.

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  • Love you Rita!!

  • @daisydooker You must be from the country side.

  • It's so perfect for what was happening then. Love her voice. Love you, Rita <3

  • This is my all time favorite song from back in the 70's. I play it over and over and over again. I can't get enough of it.

  • love this song but i prefer kris kristofferson version on his own better, no offence to rita.

  • I love this song..have looked for it for years...glad to find it here...

  • Thank you so much for making this. I have been trying to find it for SO long, grew up with this, been singing it from memory for 25 years...this is great, reminds me of my dad jamming to all kinds of stuff at night...

  • This has got to be one of all time favorite songs. I remember listening to it in the "70's". She has such a beautiful voice. Gives me shivers.

  • me too. love this song

  • thank you so much for uploading this song, it is by far one of my favorites!!!!

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