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Category:    Home > Reviews > Soul > Pop > Vocal > Diana Ross & The Supremes - The #1s (CD)

Diana Ross & The Supremes – The #1s (CD)

 

Sound: B-    Music: B

 

 

Even after the recent commercial successes of Mariah Carey, Brittany Spears, Janet Jackson, and Whitney Houston, Diana Ross’ sales and chart successes endure.  This can be traced back to her vocal group days as part of the five young ladies originally called The Primettes.  Of course, they became more famous after a name change and Diana Ross & The Supremes – The #1s is the latest of many attempts to put together some kind of collection of Ross’ Motown hits from 1962 – 1982.

 

After the mixed boxed set that had its share of text mistakes and glaring track omissions when Motown was under Polygram Records, Universal eventually bought them out and the songs were remastered for the 20th Century Masters Millennium Collection series.  Two Supremes sets (including one without Ross’ work) and one Ross solo CD were issued in all.  Unlike the Polygram copies, which had horrible remastering, the Universal tracks were more like the actual Motown Sound.  It was restoration and the first time they ever sounded right on CD.  The earliest Motown Compact Performance CDs (1986) were some of the weakest CDs ever pressed.

 

With new digital technology, Universal has decided to go back to the master tapes (inspired no doubt by their successful Deluxe Edition double CD set of Diana (1980), reviewed elsewhere on this site) and do yet another set.  The results are not what they should be, as once again, the character and design that gave the early song their sound has been mixed out.  Character has been mistaken for hiss and background noise, resulting in something akin to advanced versions of the Polygram disasters.  Suha Gux has brought vocals so forward that it often puts the music of the legendary Funk Brothers in the background too far back overall for its own good, then only accentuates things like the bass line.  The only exception is where we get alternate versions of the familiar hits, which sort of flies in the face of the title of this set.  The tracks are as follows:

 

1)     Where Did Our Love Go?

2)     Baby Love (alt. ending)

3)     Come See About Me

4)     Stop! In The Name Of Love (version without fadeout)

5)     Back In My Arms Again (version without fadeout)

6)     I Hear A Symphony (alt take with more vocals)

7)     You Can’t Hurry Love

8)     You Keep Me Hangin’ On

9)     Love Is Here & Now You’re Gone

10)  The Happening (Theme from the motion picture, longer cut)

11)  Reflections (alt. version with more vocal snippets, no fadeout)

12)  Love Child (alt. cut with a few more vocal snippets)

13)  I’m Gonna Make You Love Me (duet with The Temptations)

14)  Someday We’ll Be Together

15)  Stone Love (Jean Terrell taking over for Ross)

16)  Ain’t No Mountain High Enough (short version)

17)  Touch Me In The Morning

18)  Mahogany (The Theme From)

19)  Love Hangover (Shorter single version)

20)  The Boss

21)  Upside Down

22)  I’m Coming Out

23)  Endless Love (duet with Lionel Ritchie version)

24)  You Keep Me Hangin’ On – The Almighty Mix

 

If the music is downtraded in the earlier tracks, the later solo Ross tracks sound unusually compressed and not as open or naturalistic as they had in the version that appear on the Deluxe Diana set.  Making vocals closer is not equivalent to clarity either.  The other disturbing thing about the early tracks is how they sidestep the culture of struggle and triumph the music was during The Civil Rights Movement and take far too many liberties in their alternate being as if the it versions never mattered.  The last thing we need is a Forest Gumping of the Motown Sound.

 

On Love Child, the open echo of the urban nightmare Ross’ character suffers in the shadow of the inner city is replaced by a false sense of warmth that minimalizes the poverty and shame her character suffers.  Reflections is here in an alternate take I never liked.  How can anyone reflect on anything with the cornball ending of a vocal finish more suited to the Copa?  The additional vocal points break the psychedelic and surrealistic intent of this groundbreaking use of electronic sounds.  The throbbing organ chord that opens Stop! In The Name Of Love feels stopped up itself.  I hear limits in the beautiful string section on I Hear A Symphony.  The mountain in Ain’t No Mountain High Enough suddenly does not seem so high to climb.  And on Love Hangover, if she does not want a cure for it, it might be because she does not sound as far gone as she should to begin with.  Did Ross even approve of these mixes?

 

As for the remix of You Keep Me Hangin’ On, it is so wacky that Phil Collins might as well have shown up as a fourth Supreme.  It is too oddball and feels like a party gag.  The resulting sound of the PCM CD Stereo overall is a disappointment for what can be done with this sound today.  It looks like it is going to take a DVD-Audio or Super Audio CD to get these songs right, but unless you want the alternate versions discussed, you are better off getting the 20th Century Masters Millennium Collection series CDs while they remain in print.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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