I Do Not Want What I Haven?t Got (Sinead O?Connor)
Joy (Lucinda Williams)
Down To Zero (Joan Armatrading)
The High Road (Sharon Robinson)
On The Surface (Rosanne Cash)
Just Say So (Cathy Majeski/John Scott Sherrill)
Little Sparrow (Dolly Parton)
How Am I Different (Aimee Mann)
Only Time Will Tell Me (Toni Brown)
Sleep To Dream (Fiona Apple)
With one eye on the intimate concept albums Sinatra invented at mid-'50s Capitol, and the other on the gritty yet sophisticated soul records produced at Atlantic in the '60s, this release offers ten songs that tell the sto... more »ry of Bettye LaVette. Recording stints at Motown, Atlantic, Epic, and a host of smaller labels left her with dreams to burn, and she pours every moment of hope and heartbreak from her 44 years in music into her tough-minded new collection. Choosing only songs written by female artists, she spins the tale of a woman in a world where men make the choices. For every moment of fear and loss, there's an answering moment of triumph and defiance. The songs are from such artists as Sinead O'Connor, Lucinda Williams, Joan Armatrading, Rosanne Cash, Dolly Parton, Aimee Mann, and more.« less
With one eye on the intimate concept albums Sinatra invented at mid-'50s Capitol, and the other on the gritty yet sophisticated soul records produced at Atlantic in the '60s, this release offers ten songs that tell the story of Bettye LaVette. Recording stints at Motown, Atlantic, Epic, and a host of smaller labels left her with dreams to burn, and she pours every moment of hope and heartbreak from her 44 years in music into her tough-minded new collection. Choosing only songs written by female artists, she spins the tale of a woman in a world where men make the choices. For every moment of fear and loss, there's an answering moment of triumph and defiance. The songs are from such artists as Sinead O'Connor, Lucinda Williams, Joan Armatrading, Rosanne Cash, Dolly Parton, Aimee Mann, and more.
"Bettye LaVette can't sing. Lavette can "sang." Time and sour taste has weathered her voice and bent a weird saddened state to her phrasing but it works here. She sounds like the last great gospel singer. She has the kind of voice that Aretha should have if she fell on hard times.
The entire production is showstopping but the care she gives to Dolly Parton's work is masterful. It's an utter shame that this work might be ignored when awards are handed out but that's not the point. The point is that her work has gravity to it in a time when music is all about prodcution above everything else.
Only Mavis Staples and the still great Etta James can come close to evoking such an a lived in performance to another's material."
This is amazing stuff, folks
Robert English | Independence, OR USA | 09/28/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I'd never heard of this performer until a report on "CBS News Sunday Morning" by Bill Flannagan of VH1 ("Up Next and Recaps" on September 25) included a brief description about this meaty slice of music. I'm not normally grateful to a newscast, but in this case I certainly am - I might have missed out on this incredible singer.
Comparisons to Ann Peebles or Tina Turner come to mind, but that misses the mark since there's a smouldering presence in Bettye's voice that isn't matched elsewhere. The late Janis Joplin would have had this voice in her head as an ambitious ideal to approach, but could never hope to attain.
The musicians in the back give Bettye some wonderful support, enabling her to simply deliver without having to carry lesser talent along with her. The recording quality is supurb, and whatever ambience the studio brought to the table only helps to create the magic surrounding these knockout performances.
If you thought that there was no genuine soulful entertainers left anymore, give this a listen before you walk away. If you miss this, you've missed the world."
Incredible!
A Fan | Two Steps From The Blues, USA | 09/27/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is no comeback album. Bettye LaVette is right where she's always been, doing what she's always done; reaching into a song, finding its heart and staking a claim to it as her own. This is our chance for the world to catch up with her, and it couldn't be a finer opportunity.
"I've Got My Own Hell To Raise" is ten songs from ten female writers who, at first blush, might be surprised they've written soul songs. In each case, opening with the cappella Sinead O'Connor's "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got" and closing with Fiona Apple's "Sleep To Dream," LaVette not only taps the emotional essence of each song, she's able to transmit that emotion with no wasted effort or dramatic puffery.
Even better, the brilliance of her performance is matched by the vitality of the attitude portrayed in each song. There's not a whimper to be heard from beginning to end. There's vulnerability, but no weakness. The show of strength is exhilarating.
For those current day melisma-addicted "neo-soul" singers who think it's necessary to stretch every word over a dozen notes and add senseless swoops and trills as a sign of sincerity, "I've Got My Own Hell To Raise" will be a master class on what it means to sing with real soul. The great delight is that we get to sit in on the lesson any time we like.
LaVette sings on the razor's edge of emotion. Every note, every tone, every pregnant pause has a meaning. It is naked, it is pure, it is powerful. LaVette knows what she wants to say, and even better, she has all the tools to tell us. This is a real voice. When she wants to hammer, she hits hard. When she needs to cut deep, she's a laser.
The production of the CD provides the perfect setting for her performance. It's spare, and stripped down, making sure LaVette is always the centerpiece. Those who think horns are necessary for soul music might be disappointed, but they shouldn't be, because with this CD, horns would just get in the way. This is soul music, distilled to its essence, the way it should sound all the time.
The CD is a flat out gem. You need this CD.
"
The New High Priestess of Soul
Rick Cornell | Reno, Nv USA | 10/28/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I was completely unfamiliar with Bettye LaVette, until "Down Beat" recently reviewed this album and one of its critics gave it 4 and 1/2 stars. Any singer's album that gets rated that high by that magazine immediately gets my attention.
Now I know why.
This album reminds me of a cross between Janis Joplin and Tina Turner. Ms. LaVette shouts like these two. Everything she does has that stamp of personal heartache and pain; but like Tina and unlike Janis, Bettye sounds like a survivor. She has drunk from the chalice of whiskey and vinegar, and lived to tell the tale without self-inflicting cirrhosis of the liver.
This album has songs from such artists as Sinead O'Connor, Rosanne Cash, Dolly Parton, Fiona Apple, and Joan Armatrading. (My favorite, though, is the title track, which is self-penned and is a tremendous anthem of self-affirmation.) But recall Janis with Kristofferson's "Me and Bobby McGee", or Tina with Fogarty's "Proud Mary." It really doesn't matter much what she does; everything that comes out of her mouth comes from the depth of her soul, and sounds like a product of The New High Priestess of Soul. For that reason, highly recommended. RC"