Bette Midler – The Divine Miss M (1972) {Deluxe Edition 2016}
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:08:47 minutes | 1,31 GB | Genre: Pop/Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: AcousticSounds | Front Cover | © Rhino Atlantic
“The Divine Miss M” is the debut studio album by American singer and actress Bette Midler, released in 1972 on the Atlantic Records label. The title of the album refers to Midler’s famous stage persona. This 2016 Deluxe edition includes the remastered album, plus a bonus disc of singles, outtakes and demos. Also includes five unreleased recordings.
Bette Midler was one of the last major artists who emerged from the traditions of nightclub performing, after rock & roll changed the rules of the music business, though she was a singer capable of working both sides of the fence. Midler’s approach bore more than a passing resemblance to the traditions of supper-club performers wearing their hearts on their sleeves for the audience, but she could balance sincerity and a deep respect for songcraft with a large dose of camp and broad humor, coupled with a love of R&B and girl group sounds that put her within a stone’s throw of rock. (And if the nightspot where Midler first found her audience was a gay bathhouse in New York, that was just one more wrinkle that separated her from the major nightclub acts of the ’50s and ’60s.) Midler’s 1972 debut album, The Divine Miss M, gave her an ideal introduction to the listening audience, a set that honored her brassy and introspective sides with equal care and skill. While Midler was and is best known for her outgoing stage persona, numbers like “Am I Blue” and “Do You Want to Dance?” demonstrate how much emotional heat she can bring to a torch song, and her interpretations of “Delta Dawn” and “Hello in There” are powerful, moving stuff, portraying their characters with a palpable compassion and nuance. Midler’s loving renditions of “Chapel of Love” and “Leader of the Pack” show how much she learned from Brill Building pop, and “Friends,” which opened and closed side two, made clear Midler could wrap some very complicated emotions in a catchy (but smart) pop tune. And the production (half by Joel Dorn, half by Geoffrey Haslam, Ahmet Ertegun, and Midler’s then musical director, Barry Manilow) knows when to move in close to catch the sweet grain of her voice and when to step back and take in the whole show. If Midler matured as a performer with time, The Divine Miss M remains her best album, one that captured the many facets of her musical personality beautifully and showed her quirks were a rich part of what made her music so powerful. ~~ AllMusic Review by Mark Deming
Tracklist:
01 – Do You Want To Dance
02 – Chapel Of Love
03 – Superstar
04 – Daytime Hustler
05 – Am I Blue
06 – Friends (Session 1)
07 – Hello In There
08 – Leader Of The Pack
09 – Delta Dawn
10 – Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy
11 – Friends (Session 2)
12 – Chapel Of Love (The Single Mix)
13 – Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy (The Single Version)
14 – Do You Want To Dance (The Single Mix)
15 – Friends (The Single Mix)
16 – Old Cape Cod (Early Version)
17 – Marahuana (Early Version)
18 – Superstar (Alternate Version)
19 – Saturday Night (Demo)
20 – Mr. Freedom And I (Demo)
Download:
mqs.link_BetteMidlerTheDivineMissM1972DeluxeEditin2016AcusticSunds2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_BetteMidlerTheDivineMissM1972DeluxeEditin2016AcusticSunds2496.part2.rar