- Audio CD (18 Jan 1999)
- Number of Discs: 1
- Format: Single, Maxi
- Label: Creation
- ASIN: B00000I5T1
- Other Editions: Audio CD | MP3 Download
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 66,133 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
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The juxtaposition is amazing - the greatest hits are the songs of a teenage girl, looking forward to the joys of first love and marriage, and Ronnie Spector's voice perfectly conveys that optimism. The voice is still optimism personified, but with a dark tinge, that shows that great voices, like great wines, age beautifully.
The first song, "She talks to rainbows" starts with the words "She's a little lost girl in her own little world, she looks so happy, but seems so sad" sets the tone for the album. The sound is early-80s new wave, and evokes Ronnie Spector talking about her earlier self.
The second song, a reworking of the Beach Boys' "Don't worry Baby" works only because Spector's voice gives the vapid words a depth that they don't really possess. This version is much better than the original. What sounded wimpy in the mouths of the Wilson brothers sounds wistful in Spector's.
"You can't put your arms around a memory" is the best song on the album, in my mind. The essential exuberance in her voice, tempered with experience, gives the song power that no one else could give it.
"Bye Bye Baby", a duet with Joey Ramone, is breezy enough to have been sung by the Ronnettes. Only they never sang about a couple breaking up because they drive each other crazy. Thirty years on, Ronnie has done that, so can sing about it, but has kept her youthful tones, which extract all the bitterness.
"I wish I never saw the sunshine" again has a hard edge to it that is in stark contrast to the sunniness of her earlier work. This is live, showing that she doesn't need a studio to bring out that voice.
If you like music for mature people, like Bob Dylan's "Time out of Mind" or "Infidels", or Neil Young's "Harvest Moon" you will like this. A unique talent giving us all a lesson in how to accept time and experience.
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