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Category:    Home > Reviews > Soul > Pop > Vocal > Diana Ross - Diana (Deluxe CD Set)

Diana Ross – Diana   (Deluxe Edition CD Set)

 

Sound: B+     Music: A-     Extras: A-

 

 

It was the turn of the decade, which usually for Diana Ross means a big change in her career.  When the 1960s ended, she left the Supremes for solo glory.  It was sometimes patchy, but she made it.  By the end of the 1970s, she was an Academy Award nominee for Best Actress (1973’s Lady Sings The Blues), made a camp classic film (1976’s Mahogany), logged nine big solo albums, was one of the first beneficiaries of the 12” dance single, topped several charts several times, and become one of music’s few female superstars.

 

In the years since Michael Jackson’s 1980s successes, Ross’ legacy has not been recognized as much as it should be.  Of all her solo albums, none have been more pivotal than Diana, a brilliant 1980 release that that set her on another winning streak both critically and commercially.

 

During the 1970s, there were the amazing chart successes of female vocalists like Barbra Streisand, Helen Reddy, Olivia Newton-John, and Roberta Flack gave her great competition, but the one who offered the most unique competition was Donna Summer.  Unlike the other ladies, no woman had ever challenged her before in both the R&B and Dance genres before like Summer did.  In 1975, Summer stunned the entire music industry with “Love To Love You Baby”, a classic of provocative and daring sexuality like nothing that had ever hit the mainstream before.  The next year, Ross and Motown responded with the even more unexpected (for former Supreme Ross) “Love Hangover”, which has since become every bit a classic as the Summer breakthrough.

 

While Summer returned with a stunning string of Dance classics during the Disco era that DJs and Turntablists STILL hold as some of the most important recordings ever made (and sampled), with “I Feel Love”, “Last Dance”, the return of the repressed oldies-from-hell “MacArthur Park”, “Hot Stuff”, “On The Radio” and “Bad Girls” among others, Ross (with albums like Richard Perry-produced Baby It’s Me (1977) and the remarkable The Boss (1979)) was challenged like never before.  With The Boss, produced and written by Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson in exceptional form, she had a hit and it is now a classic.  However, it did not do anywhere nearly as well as it should have commercially at the time, which had to have concerned Motown and Ross.

 

With Summer in her run with Giorgio Moroder, Newton-John had just hit a new high with the success of 1978’s Grease and the controversial “A Little More Love” from 1979’s Totally Hot, something had to be done to make sure Ross was going to pull off something with the same commercial/critical success.  Barbra Streisand, who had just had an insanely successful duet with Summer in “No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)” was working on a new album with The Bee Gees and their producers (which would turn out to be the spectacular Guilty), so Motown decided to pair Ross with the third team who had the kind of monster success in the Disco era equal to The Bee Gees and Moroder, she would do her next album with Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers of Chic!

 

Chic had also crated some of the most key songs in Disco/Dance ever cut, with songs like “Dance, Dance, Dance”, “Le Freak”, “I Want Your Love”, and “Good Times”, which are every bit as sampled and respected as the Moroder/Summer collaborations.  Eight tracks would be cut, but all was not well at the studio.  At one point, Ross and the Chic Organization (as they were known) had a bad falling out, which delayed the album.  Later, when the cuts were finished, Motown and Ross rejected the entire album based on its mix!

 

The wind-up of the situation would be that they would see their work reworked by veteran Ross mixer Russ Terrana.  Possibly fearing the album might sound too lite or easily dismissed as sounding not unlike the Chic work with Sister Sledge (“He’s The Greatest Dancer”, “We Are Family”), and/or being too much like The Boss in tone, Ross would be a few years ahead of Cher’s and Tina Turner’s comebacks by having these mixes delve into the Rock genre.  At the time, that was unheard of for a popular female vocalist, especially an African American Soul star, but it became one of the greatest successes Ross would ever have.  This new CD set offers both versions of the album on Disc One, with a great set of extras on Disc Two.

 

Besides Francesco Scavullo’s classic gatefold shot of a downbeat Diana, her glamour paired down in a monochrome masterpiece of tight jeans, wet hair and a plain white shirt, there was the first hit.  Upside Down” was an instant classic out of the gate, with listeners discussing the sexual merits and meaning of the lyrics, when they were not simply stunned by the relatively hardcore mix of the song.  To this day, it remains the biggest solo hit she has ever had, and for good reason.  Her sassy phrasing bounces back and forth with her more commending vocals, which actually offset any possibility that her submissions to a lover of great infidelity was not going to be so simple.  The Chic version is more musical, melodic, not as hard, has an even more empathetic vocal performance, which it relies on more, and is simply smoother.  It is a fine alternative to the known cut.

 

I’m Coming Out” has become more thought of as a Gay theme, but that would be totally forgetting the Women’s Rights Movement that helped fuel Ross’ success to begin with.  Of course, this helped her drive towards more positive, upbeat music.  The known cut has an unforgettable drum/percussion mix, but the Chic cut once again relies on Ross’ vocals, which offer even more range and trickier phrasings.

 

My Old Piano” was a single that inexplicably did not become a huge hit.  The 1980 release cut has a great guitar part, but is rivaled by the assertive drums.  The lyrics are great, and Ross is hitting higher-than-usual notes throughout.  The Chic cut is even more vocal-dependent than the previously compared counterparts, also aging better than the 1980 cut.  Despite that, the 1980 version is still great.

 

Other cuts include “Tenderness”, “Friend to Friend”, “Have Fun (Again)”, “Now That You’re Gone”, and “Give Up”, all of which could have been single releases.  In all cases, the Chic versions tend to be more musical, experimental, vocal-dependent, often longer, more naturalistic, offer alternate Ross vocals, and more of their autueristic feel that made Chic the legend they are today.  It is simply awesome to have two great mixes of this classic album, which should give both Chic and Ross a newer artistic recognition they so deserve.

 

Disc Two offers an alternative 12” version of “Love Hangover” that ditches the “ooohhh-vvveeeerrrrrrrrr” vocals as the song makes it transition from a slow song into its fast breakout pace.  This critic is NOT a fan of that, but it still offers its highlights.  Your Love Is So Good To Me” is the 12” Dance single version of the Richard Perry-produced/Ken Peterson-penned track from Baby It’s Me.  It’s interesting and also a different sound for Ross.  Top Of The World” is from the same album, offering more backing vocals, and is more typical of her earlier 1970s output, but is not bad.  Livin’, Lovin’ and Givin’” was from her Ross (Motown version) album, but this was the remix from the Thank God It’s Friday (1978) soundtrack, but played second-fiddle to lead star Donna Summer’s “Last Dance”.  The Summer song is better, but the film was a disaster.

 

What You Gave Me” is her as the 12” single version of the song Ashford & Simpson created for that same Ross album, while “You Were The One” is a regular cut form the same album and the only “normal” single, untouched track here.  It is also rather early 1970s.  The Supremes 12” Medley is a medley that actually manipulates the songs’ speeds and shows its age more sonically than any other track in the 2 CDs.

 

The best 12” on this set is a combination of “No One Gets The Prize” and “The Boss” from The Boss.  These are two of the best tracks form that album and run very well together.  The Boss” is a pure triumph of spirit and one of the most important songs Ross ever made.  I Ain’t Been Licked” is also from that album, getting a 12” single all to itself here, but this one was never released.  It is also in the great spirit of the other songs, which makes one wonder when we’ll get this as a Deluxe Edition.

 

Fire Don’t Burn” is an interesting song that was intended for an aborted Ross album called Revelations.  With Lamont Dozier, brothers Brian and Edward Holland Jr. co-wrote this with singer Mack David in an interesting attempt to update the Supremes sound in 1975, after a failed attempt to cut it as “Don’t Give In” for Thelma “Don’t Leave Me This Way” Houston.  This could have been a hit, and the same team cut “We Can Never Light That Flame Again” for the Motown Ross album, but it never made that album.  This was only previously issued on a cassette tape in 1990!

 

You Build Me Up To Tear Me Down” was yet another Ross album intendee, but Ronald Miller replaced Mack David as a co-writer and has never been issued before.  This has a harder feel to it, with some 70s-era Funk, but Ross’ vocals counter that.  This is the second of two versions, begun in 1975, then finished in 1978.  It offered another alternate direction for Ross and could have been a hit, yet neither version had ever been issued.  Now, we have this one.

 

Sweet Summertime Livin’” is a cut that missed both the Ross and aborted Revelations albums, it was begun in 1977, then that cancelled 1981 release made certain this would not be issued until now.  It is a fair song, but nothing spectacular, though fans might like it.

 

The sonic quality of this set is exceptional for CD and for the material’s age.  The bass is nice and clean, while detail is not bad for 16bit/44.1 kHz playback.  This is good, even with SACD and DVD-Audio out there.  Like the Joe Jackson Night & Day set, Universal has gone out of their way to produce the best possible CD editions so they will never have to reissue and remaster them for the format ever again.  The liner notes in the booklet are brand-new, the details about the music are all great, and the photo reproduction is fine.  The case is a foldout with digi-pak holders keeping the CDs firmly in place, but has a translucent slide out it is contained in.

 

In all, this is a remarkable set, covering a key time in Diana Ross’ career, as well as an exciting time in music.  Chic went underground after this project and eventually broke-up, though both Rodgers and Edwards continued to have huge commercial success with other artists.  Ross went on to have a mega-hit with her Lionel Richie duet “Endless Love”, the theme song for the Brooke Shields film, but she had already signed a then-record contract to move over to RCA Records.  She would have more hits, then watch her career decline commercially.  Nevertheless, Diana is a classic album and this Deluxe Edition brings this triumph back in an unexpectedly spectacular way.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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