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Jimmy Somerville - Very Best Of: Bronski Beat & The Communards (Eng) (CD)

Very Best Of: Bronski Beat & The Communards (Eng)
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Album Details: Very Best Of: Bronski Beat & The Communards (Eng)

Release Date:03/06/2006
Label:Wea Int'l
UPC:9325583016899

Track List: Very Best Of: Bronski Beat & The Communards (Eng)

  1. Smalltown Boy
  2. Don't Leave Me This Way
  3. Ain't Necessarily So
  4. Never Can Say Goodbye
  5. You Are My World
  6. There's More to Love (Than Boy M...
  7. Why?
  8. You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)
  9. Read My Lips (Enough Is Enough)
  1. Hurt So Good
  2. Comment Te Dire Adieu
  3. To Love Somebody
  4. For a Friend
  5. I Feel Love/Johnny Remember Me
  6. So Cold the Night
  7. Tomorrow
  8. Disenchanted

Other Available Formats: Very Best Of: Bronski Beat & The Communards (Eng)

Pro Reviews: Very Best Of: Bronski Beat & The Communards (Eng)

  • All Music Guide

    Scottishborn singer Jimmy Somerville became a surprise success in the mid'80s. Instead of being Duran Durancute, Jimmy Somerville looked like the average boy next door. Instead of belting out his musical repertoire with a selfconscious urgency to prove himself as a singer (like Rick Astley or George Michael), Somerville possessed a dramatic, piercing falsetto that made the Associates' Billy Mackenzie sound like Tom Waits. But what really made Jimmy Somerville distinctive was his openness about his sexuality. The 1980s was the decade of androgyny, with artists like Annie Lennox, Boy George, and Poison emulating the genderbending approach of 1970sera David Bowie. Other performers such as Morrissey and the aforementioned George Michael kept their fans guessing about their sexual orientation. Jimmy Somerville, however, already answered the "is he or isn't he" question before anyone had a chance to ask, and he did so without a trace of mascara. Jimmy Somerville's career began as a member an...d cofounder of the dancepop group Bronski Beat, and the heregoesnothing frankness of the group's debut single, "Smalltown Boy," became an instant sensation, reaching the British Top Ten and becoming an MTV staple in America. The homosexual overtones of Bronski Beat's debut album, The Age of Consent, didn't stop it from becoming a major seller, and the followup single, "Why?," also secured a place in the upper reaches of the British pop chart and became an American danceclub favorite. After this initial success, however, Jimmy Somerville departed the group, forming the Communards in 1985 with keyboardist Richard Coles. The Communards' sound was basically a variation of Bronski Beat's discoinfluenced dancepop, and the duo recorded two albums (1986's Communards and 1987's Red) before disbanding, after which Somerville embarked on a sporadic solo career. His lyrical approach detailing the feelings of homosexual alienation are evident in several tracks, particularly the classic "Smalltown Boy" and the Communards' selfexplanatory "There's More to Love Than Boy Meets Girl." Somerville can be a remarkably intelligent songwriter, but often his talent is wasted with misguided cover tunes. His faux reggae version of the Bee Gees' "To Love Somebody" is a bore, as is his watereddown Sylvester remake, "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)." His rendition of "Comment Te Dire Adieu" is the worst by far, as his campy take on the Serge Gainsbourg classic (previously recorded by Francoise Hardy) can provoke uncontrollable snickering. "Don't Leave Me This Way" and the similarly arranged "Never Can Say Goodbye" (both recorded by the Communards) are the best of the covers, updating the exuberance of the Thelma Houston and Gloria Gaynor disco classics while showcasing Somerville's amazing vocal range. Bronski Beat's pulsating version of Donna Summer's "I Feel Love" (featuring Soft Cell vocalist Mark Almond) is also effective. Despite Jimmy Somerville's popularity as a member of two different groups, his lackluster 1989 solo release, Read My Lips, failed to match the success of the Communards or Bronski Beat.[In 1990 London Records released the Singles Collection,, which featured the same seventeen tracks as the Very Best of Jimmy Somerville: Bronski Beat and the Communards, only in a different order.] - William Cooper, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Jimmy Somerville

Singer Jimmy Somerville lent his soaring falsetto to two of the Eighties' premier dance-pop outfits, Bronski Beat and the Communards, before embarking on a solo career. Born in Glasgow, Scotland on June 22, 1961, he co-founded Bronski Beat in 1984; from the band's debut single "Smalltown Boy" onward, Somerville's songs dealt openly with his own homosexuality, a recurrin... Read more