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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Collection But Pales to Previous Sets, February 2, 2001
By 
Peter (East of Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Complete Dinah Washington On Mercury vol. 6 (1958-1960) (Audio CD)
Dinah Washington's 7 box sets on Mercury are lovingly restored and compiled, producing a vast and memorable collection of blues, jazz and pop singing of the highest order. Interesting aspect of these box sets is that they're all so different from another as Dinah's style and choice of songs changed over the years. This set captures Dinah nearing the end of her spectacular run at Mercury. The collection of songs on this set is very good, most of it due to the soulful delivery of Ms. Washington. It's only taken into context when set alongside the previous 5 box sets that it starts to pale in comparison.

The problem lies in the choice of arrangements; it's too uniform and lacks the diversity of her previous box sets. The one instrument that keeps coming to mind after listening to this extensive set is violins, violins, and more violins. Some tracks are so overly-saturated with violins that you feel the songs were stuck in syrupy goo. The jazz combo/trio backup to some of Dinah's most memorable earlier hits are missing. With 73 tracks listed, you get the feeling not even at the half way mark, the attack of the violins starts to hit you. Dinah's singing itself remains soulful, urgent and mesmerizing as ever, but unfortunately, the arrangements do her in. Still, there are several hits and outstanding tracks that are not to be denied---her most recognizable recording, "What A Difference A Day Makes", is here along with her other R&B hits, "This Bitter Earth", "Unforgettable" (yes, that Nat King Cole song, but done Dinah's way). One of my favorites is the song later made famous by Nancy Wilson, "Don't Go to Strangers". You can feel the pain and heartache in each of the words phrased wonderfully by Dinah. For some who like their songs piled high with violins/strings, then you would definitely enjoy this box set.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Great Voices of the 20th Century & Her Best Jazz Ballads ..., September 15, 2006
This review is from: The Complete Dinah Washington On Mercury vol. 6 (1958-1960) (Audio CD)
One of the great singers of the 20th century. This series is definitely COMPLETE with excellent sound quality considering many of these tracks are over 40-60 years old.

It's a bit over-whelming with casual fans as each disc in the series has up to 70 tracks ... but she never phones any performance and offers her unique interpretation on each track, you'll find something to like in everything but they are slightly different.

VOLUME 4: Offers Dinah Washington more bluesy and jazz swing vocals.

VOLUME 5: More mainstream swing, some brilliant torch tracks and the beginning her ballads period.

VOLUME 6: Her ballads period including her standards-setting interpretation of MANHATTEN and WHAT A DIFFERENCE A DAY MAKES (of course, I could list another 20 :-)

VOLUME 7: A new phase in her career where they seem to add a lot of strings and backup singers but not necessarily making her recordings better. Of the recordings on these discs, some are remade with more strings and backup singers - softening them and making them a little more pop and a little less jazz. Whether you consider that an improvement or not is your call.

Personally, I believe Dinah Washington;'s strength are doing sparse ballads - her voice range, timber and her performances somewhere between Billie Holliday and Ella Fitzgerald ... she's not quite as haunted as Billie Holliday but without the range of Ella.

My personal favorite is Volume 6 with its mostly ballads and her standard setting vocals.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW!!!!!!!!!!The Queen Lives On!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, September 13, 2005
This review is from: The Complete Dinah Washington On Mercury vol. 6 (1958-1960) (Audio CD)
Dinah Washington is indeed the undispuited QUEEN OF THE BLUES!!!!!!!!!!! such emotion she is the Real thing!!!!!!!!!!!! OTHERS MIGHT BE ABLE TO FAKE IT GOOD BUT DINAH SHE IS THE BLUES !!!!!ALL HAIL THE QUEEN. on the song Habour Lights in dis3 WOW!!!!!!! my heart literaly missed a beat what she delivers is just beyond words .special note listen on dis 1 to I Understand now this is some heavy stuff i can feel i mean FEELLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL!!!!!!!!! THE emotional pain IN IT . WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Some great moments from the peak of her stardom, March 16, 2000
By 
This review is from: The Complete Dinah Washington On Mercury vol. 6 (1958-1960) (Audio CD)
This is the next-to-last of the 7 triple-CD sets, and unlike the earlier volumes, which were mastered from original 78's (or possibly metal parts), this set was remastered directly from the original master tapes. The sound quality is quite nice, full bass, sharp brush sounds, and more well-rounded vocals. Most (if not all) of this is in stereo.

Valuewise, this is a bonanza. Three discs, 73 tracks, and over 200 minutes of music. As with the other volumes, the insert booklet provides the usual track information (title, time, composer, players, recording dates), all researched and compiled by Kiyoshi "Boxman" Koyama. Plenty of previously unissued tracks, as well as a few things previously only issued as singles.

At this point in her career, after having waxed hundreds of sides for Mercury (all of them chronicled on the first 5 volumes of this series), Washington finally became a real recording star. These tracks show Washington off much more as a balladeer, something her expressive vocals are really well-suited for, rather than the Queen of the Blues. Included herein is one of her most stunning achievements (and the 1959 Grammy winner for best R&B performance), "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes." Also included is her million-selling duet with Brook Benton, "Baby (You've Got What it Takes)."

A lot of this material is carried solely by the strength of Washington's ability to sing past Belford Hendricks' hackneyed arrangements. Were these violinists and choral background singers relatives, or what? Too bad Dinah didn't hook up with Nelson Riddle or Billy May. On a few of the tracks Hendricks manages to use the orchestra and backing singers sparingly, framing Washington's vocals nicely. But an annoying number of the cuts have the same zipping violin lines and useless wonderbread background vocals. Even worse, they often start out promisingly with some understated backing, maybe bass, guitar and bongos, and grow into full-blown string and chorus monsterpieces.

Tracks like "Come On Home" start out with a nice bluesy feel, both in the vocals and the accompanying guitar, only to be undermined by the sappy string arrangement. Otherwise nice version's of Mercer and Van Heusen's "I Thought About You", Gordon's "Unforgettable" and Young and Heyman's "When I Fall in Love" are spoiled by the weepy violins and background choruses.

Washington's take of "Cry Me a River" is preceded by an interesting clip of in-studio dialog. Washington asks the producer if he'd like her to sound like Julie London (who'd had a hit with the title), and he says he wants her to sound like Dinah Washington. She asks about another name, and eventually says "I could sound like... anyone." I'm not sure whether she was just playing with the producer, or was maybe unhappy about recording this song. In the end she does sound like Dinah Washington, interplaying sung and spoken passages, giving the song a sound very unlike Julie London's.

Other favorite tracks include "It Could Happen To You", "I Remember You" (no yodeling though), "Bad Luck", "Crazy Love", "Daybreak" (with a really cool guitar break that has elements of country, rockabilly, jazz and r'n'b all mixed together), and "Misery".

Overall I'd say I like the vocals and song-selection on this volume, but the arrangements make it difficult to track through. Good for radio play, making tapes, or mixing it up in your CD changer.

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The Complete Dinah Washington On Mercury vol. 6 (1958-1960)
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