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Billie Holiday

The Commodore Master Takes

The Commodore Master Takes Tracks
1. Strange Fruit
2. Yesterdays
3. Fine and Mellow
4. I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues
5. How Am I to Know?
6. My Old Flame
7. I'll Get By (As Long as I Have You)
8. I Cover the Waterfront
9. I'll Be Seeing You
10. I'm Yours
11. Embraceable You
12. As Time Goes By
13. He's Funny That Way
14. Lover, Come Back to Me
15. Billie's Blues
16. On the Sunny Side of the Street
Billie Holiday - The Commodore Master Takes
The Commodore Master Takes Review
These historic recordings--made mostly in 1939--represent a crucial period for Billie Holiday, who had already achieved some success as a jazz singer recording for Columbia but had yet to really reach her peak as a performer or icon. The Commodore Master Takes, recorded for Milt Gabler's small independent label, were a step towards Holiday's eventual infamy, thanks notably to the recording of "Strange Fruit," a controversial song about lynching that Columbia Records simply refused. Recording with several small bands that seemed to understand the nuances of her voice perfectly, Holiday is in full command of her faculties here, without a trace of her later deterioration. Instead, we have a singer bearing all the bittersweet conviction of the best blues stylists. Songs like "How Am I to Know?" and "My Old Flame" simply smolder, and the band's support is understated, not overpowering. Holiday is the show here. In its own way, that sets a precedent, considering this was still the big-band era, and a jazz singer with such sparse backing was still an anomaly. Excellent liner notes by Orrin Keepnews--who explains how his own relationship with Billie Holiday was sometimes rocky--complete the picture. --Joe S. Harrington


Users's Reviews
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Valuable record of a great American singer
5
Billie Holiday's beguiling voice reaches out to us across a span of greater than 60 years and still succeeds at enchanting the discerning listener. This is an excellent collection of blues and jazz standards, interpreted by a master. Of particular note is the startling and graphic "Strange Fruit," a mournful lament about lynching that is one of the most chilling pieces I have ever heard; one listen and you'll understand why it was suppressed in its time and also how courageous Billie must have been to record it in the first place. (The first time I heard it, I had just put out the lights and was lying in bed in the dark; talk about getting the shivers!) Other standout tracks include "I Cover the Waterfront" and "I'll Be Seeing You," but there really isn't any fat on this disk at all.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2005-08-22
she's got a right to sing the blues
5
Flawless. Billie's wonderfully melancholy voice can make even the sunny side of the street sound shady. I'm something of a jazz and blues novice, but when I heard the amazing and powerful "Strange Fruit" [a somewhat gruesome song about lynching], I knew I needed to hear more Holiday; I wasn't disappointed.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2000-05-02
vulgar,sweet degrading, tempting
5
billie can sing life into any song or phrase that she pleases. she can turn the most vulgar of songs into the sweetest; the most degrading of them into the most tempting. an impossible to forget from the first time you here it voice is what billie has. shes probably one of the most if not THE most emotional singer youll ever here
Posted by Anonymous, on 2000-06-02