CD Review
Artist: Shirley Bassey
Album
Title: Get the Party Started
Label: Universal Music Canada
Released: March 18, 2008
3 Stars
Reviewed by:
Darren Paul (Edmonton Correspondent - Canada)
The Welsh Dame
has given over her big hits to several hot contemporary producers. The idea
that there are ways to develop visceral impact beyond string swells seems to be
lost on most of them. This album looks back over Shirley Bassey's career and
modernizes several of her hits with back tracks pulled from many genres, in
addition to dropping in a couple of brand new recordings. The result is a
tension between old and new that is not broadly successful.
Styles heard
on this album include an industrial riff with distorted guitar in Big Spender, a reggae beat colliding
against brass and strings in I (Who Have
Nothing), and a light ditty reminiscent of I Can See Clearly poorly matched against the pining for a lost love
lyrics of What Now My Love. With the
latter as the most disturbing example, there are many places on the album where
songs were orchestrated without a thought to context or storytelling, and even
Bassey's singing falls into the same trap in failing to access the lyrics.
The album
opens with a full orchestra swelling replete with electronic pulses, suddenly
backing off in intensity. From the void commands Shirley Bassey's tense
powerful voice "Get this party started on a Saturday night..." Exploding into a
dance hall beat Get The Party Started may
get you on your feet, but the Dame's warbling voice doesn't suit the style. Her
singing strikes as commanding rather than inviting and suggestive in Big Spender. Several songs in the front
half are meant to grab your attention and do so through a build in the
intensity of voice, but the build is a mechanical growth into yelling
accompanied by generic string swells rather than a real build of emotion and
grates more than grasps you.
Where this
disc finds some more success is with the middle songs. Here the producers have
strayed from the full classical orchestra and engaged jazz instrumentation and
a drunken lounge feel. By trying to accomplish less they really do more in
transporting the listener into the head of the singer, as she engages in a
sexual encounter (Can I Touch You There)
and the schizophrenic mindset of Hello. Still
these are lounge songs and strike me
as great for background listening but a little boring for active participation.
There is a hit
on the album however, and that is The
Living Tree. In the midst of contemporization of classics, there is one
song that has been written originally for this album. Shirley Bassey might be
best known for her singing the title tracks for three Bond movies, and this
song sounds ready to be a fourth. It starts with a lot of motion, the pace of
percussion is like the scenery flying by as you blitz down a highway in a hot
ride. It is unashamed of being epic and
when the strings come together with guitar to push the sound farther rather
than competing in style the result is a flying single. There is even a guitar
solo!
In the end,
Shirley Bassey's singing is of a particular style and does not transfer well
into our modern pop repertoire, but remains effective when she refuses to stray
from her turf. This CD is worth getting a hold of as the experiments undertaken
are interesting to listen to, but may not find their way onto your shuffle
list.
1. Get The
Party Started - 3:59
2. Big Spender
- 3:21
3. I (Who Have
Nothing) - 3:43
4. This Is My
Life - 4:22
5. Slave To
The Rhythm - 6:30
6. Can I Touch
You There - 5:36
7. What Now My
Love - 2:50
8. Kiss Me
Honey Honey Kiss Me - 4:36
9. Hello - 4:56
10. You Only
Live Twice - 4:44
11. The Living
Tree - 4:58
12. Where Is The Love - 5:34
13. I Will Survive - 3:48
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