- Some of the Best Music Ever Made by Humanity
5
By AndreM.
This album is an extraordinary compilation of some of the most amazing material ever written, produced, recorded, interpreted and vocalized by an artist. Ms. Aretha Franklin's vocal performances here are untouchable! You can truly see why so many have refused to give the title of best modern singer/vocalist to Whitney Houston or Mariah Carey. Before them, there was Aretha Franklin with her raw voice, power and emotion. Truly, spectacular music.
- All Hail to the QUEEN
5
By BZUNE
Beyond, and that's all I am going to say.
- Aretha Franklin-rare and unreleased recordings
5
By Aretha' Biggest Fan
I love Aretha, and it was exciting to hear some cuts I never heard before, when she was in her prime. However, one track was only 4 seconds long and none of the tracks seemed to be remastered. There was noise and tape hiss and some tunes ended abruptly. This was somewhat of a disappointment for seventeen dollars. Not Aretha's singing, but the quality of some of the recordings.
- Just freakin sick
5
By EJoy
This album is Aretha in her purest form. Just a awesome collection of songs that capture the raw energy of her voice and her incredible delivery. Throw "Pledging My Love" on and your Valentine's Day is set. Highly recommended.
- Jay30lan
5
By Jay30lan
I love Aretha. I have about 5 of her cd's and this release is great.
- The Proof that Aretha is the bonefied queen of soul
5
By tornkait
This is a gem. If I could afford the whole thing I'd buy it...I'm saving to buy the tracks one by one, each month I get paid. My very favorite is "You're All I Need to Get By." It's an improvement on the original, which is still a wonderful song, mind you. I'd also recommend "Are You Leaving Me." I adore Aretha Franklin. And in these songs, her voice isn't over-produced; it's raw, and intesnse. I'm so glad iTunes has made this album available. I wonder what "Border Song (Holy Moses)" (my all time favorite Aretha song) would sound like if it were a raw recording like this....man, I bet it'd blow my mind.
- Must Have
5
By RussT Badillion
If you like "warts-and-all" recordings this is a must have!
- "It Was You; Baby!"
5
By Grimmbo
.."Tell Me; Tell Me You Love Me So!"..Oh; Aretha Franklin; We Love You So! "The Queen Of Soul" is in the House! { To all of those brash; new; young "Neo-Soul Revival" artists; Consider "Rare & Unreleased" to be your "Required Reading!"-And Yes; It will be on the Exam!} "Are You Leaving Me?"; No; Aretha; Not just yet! For if this "Treasure Trove" of 35 true "Soul Survivors" is any Indication; Your Reign will go on Forever! -"My Cup Runneth Over!"-...by Grimmbo.
- LOVE IT
5
By BekBoo
This is a very very excellent album every song is well written, and to listen to the "Queen" herself set "set it free"! This is one of the best with never before release songs. I love it
- Lady Soul Blowin' Your Mind
5
By Donald Gibson
Quite literally a discovered treasure, a collection of vintage Aretha Franklin songs from her tenure at Atlantic Records had hitherto gone unnoticed for decades. Unearthed from the archives, this wealth of phenomenal music now comprises Rare and Unreleased Recordings From the Golden Reign of the Queen of Soul.
While including demos, alternate mixes, and B-sides, this collection primarily consists of outtakes, which, for reasons inexplicable to anyone with the ability to perceive and appreciate sound, were left off their intended albums and not released on subsequent efforts.
A sweltering Muscle Shoals rhythm fuels many of the tracks, with Franklin’s inimitable voice blending secular themes with a gospel resolve. She digs deep on songs like “Talk To Me, Talk To Me” and “You’re Taking Up Another Man’s Place,” her exalted intonations galvanizing the music. She testifies like a smitten church girl on “I Need A Man (The To-To Song),” while a sly bass adds some sacred funk. And on “Heavenly Father,” this reverend’s daughter pleads for spiritual guidance in matters of the heart.
Erupting into a full-blown spiritual revival, Franklin duets with Ray Charles on “Ain’t But The One,” recorded during a 1973 television special in tribute to Duke Ellington. “It’s soul overload,” Franklin once said of her singing with Charles. “But give me more of where that comes from.” Amen.
One aspect of Franklin’s musicality that’s often overlooked yet fortunately highlighted on this collection is how she insulates a groove with the richness of her piano playing. On ballads like “It Was You” and “I Want To Be With You,” she takes her time while crooning over measured chord structures. Yet, on tracks with more thrust, like “The Happy Blues” and “Mr. Big,” she pounds on the piano like a sledgehammer, which suits her commanding vocal delivery. On “Mr. Big,” particularly, Lady Soul assertively moans, “I’ll rent me a room at school/If you’ll teach me all night.” Children, that’s not arithmetic she’s itching to learn.
While in no way detrimental to the overall quality of this collection, a discernible difference in sonic texture occurs on material not played by the accustomed Atlantic Records musicians. Specifically, eight songs originally recorded for Franklin’s album, Hey Now Hey (The Other Side of the Sky), which Quincy Jones produced instead of Atlantic mainstay Jerry Wexler, sound more technically refined than the thicker tones heard on the other tracks. With their blues and jazz overtones, songs such as “Do You Know” and “Tree Of Life” are immediate standouts, illustrating Franklin’s versatility as a vocalist. Again, these songs merely portray a shift in production, not a flaw in performance.
Actually, one would struggle to find genuine fault with just about anything on this collection. Perhaps some of Franklin’s cover versions may not be to one’s liking, but that correlates more to personal preference rather than to the merit of the music. Rare and Unreleased Recordings From the Golden Reign of the Queen of Soul offers an abundance of mind-blowing, soul-stirring songs. In short, it doesn’t get much better than this.