Inner City Blues: The Music of Marvin Gaye, Release by MusicBoys
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 Posted: 01-12-2003, 15:00 (post 1, #198647)

Новичёк

Group: Members
Posts: 1940
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Артист:Various Artists
Альбом:Inner City Blues: The Music of Marvin Gaye, 1995
Жанр:Blues, R&B, Rock, Soul .
Формат файла:EAC.APE.3.97 313.28 MB
Ссылка:CD 10 clicks
Примечание:Date of Release Oct 17, 1995

1. Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler) performed by Nona Gaye - 5:34
2. Save the Children performed by Bono - 4:27
3. Let's Get It On performed by Boyz II Men - 6:01
4. I Want You performed by Madonna / Massive Attack - 6:11
5. Trouble Man performed by Neneh Cherry - 3:56
6. Just to Keep You Satisfied performed by Lisa Stansfield - 4:40
7. Stubborn Kind of Fellow performed by Stevie Wonder - 3:00
8. God Is Love/Mercy Mercy Me performed by Sounds of Blackness - 5:09
9. Like Marvin Gaye Said (What's Going On) performed by Speech - 3:44
10. Marvin, You're the Man performed by Digable Planets - 9:24





Inner City Blues: The Music of Marvin Gaye stands as a testament to the theory that, no matter how sincere the sentiment or deserving the subject, tribute albums are always severely flawed records. Marvin Gaye is unquestionably one of the most important musicians of the post-war era. In addition to being a terrific vocalist and performer, he wrote a large number of songs that became pop/R&B classics. Several major-league stars (Stevie Wonder, Madonna with Massive Attack, Boyz II Men, Bono, Sounds of Blackness, Digable Planets, among others) reinterpret those songs on Inner City Blues, and the results are wildly uneven. Most of the tracks are simply too bland, relying heavily on the slick textures of '90s soul, not the smooth but palpably gritty styles of the '70s. Consequently most of these tracks simply pale in comparison to Gaye's originals, since they don't offer radically new interpretations or impressive performances. A few tracks stand out from the mire, particularly Madonna and Massive Attack's trip-hop re-interpretation of "I Want You," but most of the album blends together in an undistinguished haze. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine.
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