Dusty Springfield
Dusty in Memphis - Deluxe Edition
Label ©  Rhino
Release Year  1999
Length  1:16:38
Genre  Soul
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  D-0036
Bitrate  192 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Just a Little Lovin'  
       2:19  
      2.  
      So Much Love  
       3:31  
      3.  
      Son of a Preacher Man  
       2:29  
      4.  
      I Don't Want to Hear it Anymore  
       3:11  
      5.  
      Don't Forget About Me  
       2:53  
      6.  
      Breakfast in Bed  
       2:58  
      7.  
      Just One Smile  
       2:43  
      8.  
      The Windmills of Your Mind  
       3:51  
      9.  
      In the Land of Make Believe  
       2:32  
      10.  
      No Easy Way Down  
       3:12  
      11.  
      I Can't Make It Alone  
       3:58  
      12.  
      What Do You Do when Love Dies  
       2:42  
      13.  
      Willie & Laura Mae Jones  
       2:50  
      14.  
      That Old Sweet Roll (Hi-De-Ho)  
       3:00  
      15.  
      Cherished  
       2:38  
      16.  
      Goodbye  
       2:34  
      17.  
      Make it with You  
       3:13  
      18.  
      Love Shine Down  
       2:22  
      19.  
      Live Here with You  
       2:44  
      20.  
      Natchez Trace  
       2:58  
      21.  
      All the King's Horses  
       3:10  
      22.  
      I'll Be Faithful  
       3:01  
      23.  
      Have a Good Life Baby  
       3:09  
      24.  
      You've Got a Friend  
       5:28  
      25.  
      I Found My Way  
       3:12  
    Additional info: | top
      Dusty Springfield never claimed to be a soul singer but Dusty in Memphis effects a unique and deeply moving synthesis of her brand of stylish pop and the Southern R&B of the late 1960s. Her soft tones and hushed, confessional readings make for definitive versions of everything from "Son of a Preacher Man" (a later version by Aretha Franklin is good but less thrillingly sensual than this one) to Randy Newman's ballads "I Don't Want to Hear It Anymore" and "Just One Smile" to a swirling take on "The Windmills of Your Mind". The soul obscurity "Breakfast in Bed" even gives a knowing spin to a line from an earlier Springfield classic: "You don't have to say you love me." --Rickey Wright
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