Shopping > Music > Dusty Springfield > Simply Dusty

Dusty Springfield - Simply Dusty (CD)

Simply Dusty
$128.51
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Simply Dusty

Release Date:10/23/2006
Label:Umvd Import
UPC:632427674627

Track List: Simply Dusty

Disk 1

  1. Island of Dreams
  2. Say I Won't Be There
  3. No Sad Songs for Me
  4. I Only Want to Be With You
  5. Once upon a Time
  6. Wishin' and Hopin'
  7. Summer Is Over
  1. Your Hurtin' Kinda Love
  2. Baby Don't You Know
  3. Some of Your Lovin'
  4. Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody N...
  5. Doodlin'
  6. I've Been Wrong Before

Disk 2

  1. Goin' Back
  2. Poor Wayfaring Stranger
  3. All I See Is You
  4. What's It Gonna Be? [Remix]
  5. Chained to a Memory
  6. Welcome Home
  7. Where Am I Going?
  8. It's Over
  1. Magic Garden [Remix]
  2. I Close My Eyes And Count To Ten
  3. I Will Come To You [Remix]
  4. Sweet Lover No More
  5. Another Night [Remix]
  6. I Think It's Going to Rain Today
  7. No Easy Way Down
  8. Am I the Same Girl

Disk 3

  1. Let Me Get In Your Way
  2. Someone Who Cares
  3. Live Here With You
  4. Make It With You
  5. You've Got A Friend
  6. Morning Please Don't Come
  7. How Can I Be Sure
  1. Mixed up Girl
  2. See All Her Faces
  3. Easy Evil
  4. Sea and Sky
  5. In the Winter
  6. Turn Me Around
  7. Hollywood Movie Girls

Disk 4

  1. That's the Kind of Love I've Got...
  2. I Just Fall in Love Again
  3. (But It's A) Nice Dream
  4. Losing You
  1. Nothing Has Been Proved
  2. Go Easy on Me
  3. Wherever Would I Be?
  4. Someone to Watch over Me

User Reviews: Simply Dusty

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Best Ever?

    By The  Jul 8, 2003

    it is hard to imagine a singer who doesn't owe dusty springfield. she lauched a style so soulful and so achingly beautiful that any song she touched became hers, even if it'd already been made a hit by others.there are some suprises that mer...it special listen, especially the haunting and beautiful, "see all her faces," a tune which perhaps best exemplifies how many different things she was to so many people -- fans and friends alike. i don't often purchase commorative editions, but this one is a must. if you loved dusty -- and who didn't -- or if you've just always wondered what the clamor over her was about all about, here is the magnificence of one of the greatest voices ever, locked up in a single volume you will cherish listening for years to come. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Simply Dusty

  • All Music Guide

    For anyone who wasn't satisfied with the three-CD Dusty Springfield set from the late '90s, this four-CD, 98-song collection is a chance for deeper immersion in the late singer's music and career -- indeed, a more appropriate title thematically might have been "Totally Dusty," despite the fact that it opens with a cut that she doesn't appear on except in name. In contrast to past compilations, this set ranges so far within her career that the hits are almost incidental, and anyone wanting just the highlights of her work from a given era in her career would be better advised to get one of the smaller compilations. In an unexpected flash of daring, the opening cut on this set isn't even by her, but is so perfect an expression of her impact as of 1970 that it's difficult to quibble with its placement -- that year, Blossom Dearie co-wrote and recorded "Dusty Springfield," an airy and eccentric tribute to the singer; it might be a distraction to some listeners, but one hesitates to criticiz...e a daring or inventive impulse by reissue producers who don't work for Rhino. The second track, a reel-to-reel demo of a teenaged Springfield and her brother Tom doing a medley of standards, including "I Love a Piano" and "Pretty Baby," shows her off as a surprisingly big-voiced girl even then, though she was a long way from the style that would make her famous. Springfield's stint with the Lana Sisters, an English pop trio, is represented by the novelty tune "(Seven Little Girls) Sitting on the Back Seat," on which she's one of four singers (counting lead vocalist Al Saxon). The folk-pop trio the Springfields, through which she first attracted notice, is represented by four songs, of which "Far Away Places" is an unexpected treat, a subtle, soft, lyrical number that somehow got buried on the B-side of a single. "Island of Dreams" is familiar territory, but "Say I Won't Be There" features electric instruments and a loud rhythm section, plus a string section not too far removed from the sound that Springfield's solo recordings would emphasize. No two songs in her output can be more different than the moody, brooding "No Sad Songs," the Springfields' final recording, and "I Only Want to Be With You," which, with its boldly exuberant sound, heralded her arrival as a solo act. Springfield's career across the 1960s, from pop diva to white soul queen and from the London pop scene to the legendary Memphis sessions; most of the cuts are remixes from various points in history, but otherwise are familiar to longtime fans. The one exception is "Poor Wayfaring Stranger" from the second disc, which comes from a 1966 BBC concert special. Disc three begins with material from the usually (unfairly) neglected A Brand New Me and proceeds on through her various aborted and unfinished projects of the early '70s; the sad part about this material is that it was all good, solid pop-soul music that, for reasons having more to do with record company politics and other non-artistic matters, was seldom put before the public except in the most nominal fashion. Being associated in America for a time with ABC Records, a label that was expanding too fast and hemorrhaging cash, didn't help. It's a curious phenomenon listening to this -- one feels sufficient caring and concern for the singer that it's hard to immerse oneself in her '70s sides without feeling the gaping hole arising from the knowledge that she saw so little reward, or even response, for this part of her work. Disc four covers the last phase of Springfield's career, from the very end of the 1970s through her final recordings in the mid-'90s. Those had to have been frustrating years, at least early on: As her '60s material was suddenly back in vogue and heavily sought after, Springfield was suddenly in demand for interviews about her personal life -- even as she couldn't seem to find sales to match her reviews and the accolades heaped on her '60s sides. Her return to vogue in conjunction with the Pet Shop Boys on "What Have I Done to Deserve This" is the high point of this part of the set. The price for this set is high, close to 80, as it is a British-only release (Springfield's '60s and early-'70s U.K. label Polygram has never been able to work out a licensing agreement with Atlantic Records, which holds the U.S. rights to the material off of Dusty in Memphis etc., over the use of that material on any American compilations of her work), but it is the most comprehensive overview of her work and career. Even so, it doesn't contain every important song, even of her mid-'60s U.K. period ("You Don't Own Me" is missing). The notes are very thorough, however, and each of the 98 songs gets a little individual history. - Bruce Eder, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Simply Dusty

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Amazon.com Marketplace

48 Ratings

(29 Reviews)

Write a review

$128.51Total Price N/A New Item fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Simply Dusty

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Simply Dusty

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Dusty Springfield

Britain's greatest pop diva, Dusty Springfield was also the finest white soul singer of her era, a performer of remarkable emotional resonance whose body of work spans the decades and their attendant musical transformations with a consistency and purity unmatched by any of her contemporaries; though a camp icon of glamorous excess in her towering beehive hairdo and pand... Read more