DPAS
REVIEW
Whitesnake
The Silver Anniversary Collection
In
one word, yes!
After
griping about the shoddily packaged, yet TV advertised "Best Of", and
the exemplary packaged yet hair metalled US Collection, here's the third
compilation to cross my path in as many weeks. And this is the one.
36 tracks across 2 CDs, culled from every area of Sir David's post Purple
patch.
Nearly.
There's nowt from his first 2 solo albums, and whilst "Whitesnake" was
patchy at best, "Northwinds" remains an all time classic. However, let's
concentrate on what's here. If, as the sleeve says, Mr C personally
selected these tracks, then it's nice to see I'm not the only one fond
of the mellower, jazzier early numbers such as "The Time Is Right
For Love" and "Love To Keep You Warm". In fact the run of
"Blindman", "Love To..", "Love Is Blind" and "Ain't
Gonna Cry No More" on CD2 is the closest thing to to aural sex imaginable.
Simply awesome. There's even room for a couple of "Live At Hammersmith"
numbers, but sadly it's the studio "Ain't No Love" that's included.
However, we do get a couple of live tracks from the 1997 Starkers show
to tease us in the shape of "Sailing Ships" and "Soldier Of
Fortune". Nice.
Apparently,
the material has been digitally remastered, but frankly I couldn't tell
the difference. Strangely enough, despite the space available on 2CDs,
Lord C manages to exclude the two opening numbers from the current set
list. And if this collection is his favourites, why we would he do such
a thing? The hair tracks which are here actually sound better in the
broader context of 25 years of Whitesnake, and don't jar even when in
the vicinity of out and out classics such as "Till The Day I Die",
which I am so glad to see here.
The
Jimmy Page tracks still sound a bit forced 10 years on, and I'm glad
that Mr C saved up the intended 2nd album tracks for "Into The Light"
which dammit, you have to own. How many times will I tell people that
it's the crowning glory of a long career. Well, there's 4 tracks here
to try and persuade you. Minor gripes. No musician credits. Again. Come
on Covvy, let bygones be bygones. No rare material. Which is annoying.
A couple of tracks from the projected 87 live album wouldn't have gone
amiss, and there must be soundboard recordings of the UK band laying
around. Hell, I could have provided some.
There'
s a nine page potted history, nothing new, but at least Mick Wall manages
to restrain himself from his normal writing style and presents the facts
as is. Even His Majesty finally concedes that the early line up had
it's moments. Talking about "Fool For Your Loving" he concedes
that "I feel the original has significantly more integrity than the
alter version", hence the inclusion of the original here. Maybe it's
time to bury the hatchet. This release is a rarity, a collection that
actually lives up to its billing. Everyone will find faults. I would
have happily junked "Judgement Day", "Is This Love" and
"Guilty Of Love", bunged in a track of "Northwinds", possibly
another off the under represented "Lovehunter" and then squeezed in
the live version of "Ain't No Love..". But this puts a lot of collections
to shame. If only I'd hadn't got that infernal "Best Of"!
Review: Stuart
Hamilton,
c/o
Zeitgeist
Magazine
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