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Band of Gold: Best
 
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Band of Gold: Best [Import]

Freda PayneAudio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (September 2, 2002)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Castle
  • ASIN: B00004Y3DC
  • Also Available in: Audio CD
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #119,048 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Band Of Gold
2. Unhooked Generation
3. The Easiest Way To Fall
4. Deeper And Deeper
5. I Left Some Dreams Back There
6. Rock Me In The Cradle
7. Love On Borrowed Time
8. Through The Memory Of My Mind
9. Now Is The Time To Say Goodbye
10. The World Don't Owe You A Thing
11. Cherish What Is Dear To You (While It's Near To You)
12. I Shall Not Be Moved
13. Bring The Boys Home
14. You Brought The Joy
15. You've Got To Love Somebody (Let It Be Me)
16. The Road We Didn't Take
17. He's In My Life
18. Come Back
19. Just A Woman
20. How Can I Live Without My Life
See all 30 tracks on this disc

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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 (6)
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic seventies soul - more than just Band of gold, July 8, 2002
This review is from: Band of Gold: Best (Audio CD)
Band of gold (which you surely already know) starts this collection. Most people don't remember any other song Freda did, so you might expect a lot of filler to pad out the CD. Not so - there are many excellent songs here including Deeper and Deeper, possibly the second best known song here. There is absolutely no filler whatsoever.

These songs were recorded in the Vietnam era, and Freda caused a stir by recording the song Bring the boys home. Other than that, most of these songs are typical seventies soul, generally upbeat. If you enjoy the song Band of gold, you will enjoy the rest of this album. The songs appear to be all originals. If there are any covers, I don't recognise them. Note that there is an error in the Amazon track listing - tracks 18-23 are repeated as 24-29. Ignore 24-29 and make track 30 track 24.

I don't have as much soul/R+B music as I should. Albums like this remind me that I should buy a lot more. Enjoy it.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Miss Sophistication Can Sing Soul/Jazz/Pop - You Name It, August 11, 2007
By 
AvidOldiesCollector (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Band of Gold: Best (Audio CD)
Born on September 19, 1945 in Detroit, Freda was a student at the Institute of Musical Arts and, before moving to New York in 1963, began her career by warbling commercial jingles on Detroit radio. In NY she would ultimately work with such luminaries as Pearl Bailey, Quincy Jones, Lionel Hampton. Duke Ellington, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Billy Eckstine, so you know this was a lady who learned her craft from the masters.

A record deal with Impulse resulted in an opportunity to indulge in her first love, Jazz, and she cut the album After The Lights Go Down Low And Much More, followed three years later by another such LP for MGM, How Do You Say I Don't Love You Anymore?. While well-received among jazz critics, they were not huge commercial successes, and so in 1969 she accepted an invitation from the Detroit songwriting team of Holland-Dozier-Holland to join their new Invictus label.

Her initial release there, The Unhooked Generation, did not exactly shake up the industry, reaching a lowly # 43 on the R&B charts early in 1969 b/w The Easiest Way To Fall. Then she was offered a tune that spoke of a marriage which failed on the day of the wedding itself, and after first expressing reluctance to sing such a song, she gave in. Band Of Gold went on to become her best single ever, going to # 3 Billboard Pop Hot 100 and # 20 R&B in May 1970.

The flipside was the same song that backed her first release, and for her next single, Deeper And Deeper [# 9 R&B/# 24 Hot 100 in October] the B-side was The Unhooked Generation, which indicates that, perhaps, she hadn't spent a lot of time in the studio, or maybe some of the other cuts available were not to the liking of the studio bosses. That's evident from her first LP release for Invictus, Band Of Gold, which contained some previously unreleased material. Why weren't these the B-sides?

In any event, in 1971 she cut the LP Contact and from that came the hit single Cherish What Is Dear To You (While It's Near To You) which peaked at # 11 R&B/# 44 Hot 100 in March b/w The World Don't Owe You A Thing. Another side from that LP, the Vietnam protest song Bring The Boys Home, went all the way to # 3 R&B and # 12 Hot 100 during the summer b/w I Shall Not Be Moved. She then closed out 1971 and began 1972 with two more tracks from the LP, You Brought The Joy [# 21 R&B/# 52 Hot 100 in November 1971] b/w Suddenly It's Yesterday, and The Road We Didn't Take [# 100 Hot 100 in January 1972] b/w I'm Not Getting Any Better. Neither of the last two flipsides are in this collection.

After that it was tough sledding. The 1972 LP The Best Of Freda Payne contained some new material, and in 1973 she cut the album Reaching Out which received mixed reviews. Never happy with the financial rewards coming her way from Invictus, her last single there was, perhaps appropriately, Two Wrongs Don't Make A Right which struggled to # 75 on the R&B charts in September b/w We've Gotta Find A Way Back To Love.

A move to Dunhill/ABC did not improve her chart performances, with the only single success there being It's Yours To Have which topped out at # 81 R&B in December 1974. Nor did things get any better after switching to Capitol with Love Magnet levelling off at # 85 R&B in late 1977. She did cut several albums in this period, though, and these are much sought after by collectors.

In 1981 she landed a job as hostess of the TV talk-show Today's Black Woman, followed by work on Broadway and in films, and in November 1982 returned to the singles charts for the last time when In Motion went to # 63 R&B for the Sutra label. But she continues to perform, cutting a number of successful albums [the comedy compilation I Hate Barney in 1995, and An Evening With Freda Payne: Live and Christmas With Freda And Friends in 1996, all for Dove Music, and in 2000 Come See About Me for Volt]. She also appeared with Darlene Love at Feinstein's in New York's Regency Hotel early in 2003, followed by a stint at the Cinegrill in the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.

This is, easily, the best Freda Payne compilation of her hits and comes most highly recommended.
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5.0 out of 5 stars "Bring the Boys [and Girls] Home", July 21, 2007
This review is from: Best of (Audio CD)
In the early 70's Freda Payne made us all want to dance with her beautiful "Band of Gold, a song that was a dynamite number in the clubs. Some of us thought we knew what was wrong with the marriage she was singing about that didn't work from day one: "Last night on our honeymoon we slept in separate rooms." That number, "Bring the Boys Home" and "Cherish What Is Dear to You (While It's Near To You)" are my favorites included on this "best of" CD.

While "Band of Gold" is a lot of fun, "Bring the Boys Home" is serious business and--sadly-- its haunting message is as relevant today ("bring them back alive") as the first time Ms. Payne sang it. Allegedly it was banned from military installations because of its anti-war message in the height of the Vietnam War. It is a shame that DJ's don't "bring this song back." I suspect it would have a great resurgence of popularity.

If you can get your hands on this CD, you won't be disappointed. We need a little Freda right now.

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