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Bettye Lavette

Bettye Lavette

  • Avg user rating: 4 stars Out of 52 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, Anna King, Tina Turner

Playlist

Down To Zero (3:10) Date added: 02/26/06 | Total listens: 74,221
The High Road (4:30) Date added: 02/26/06 | Total listens: 9,586

User reviews for Bettye Lavette

Average rating4 starsOut of 52 votes

Editor's review

This Detroit songstress's new all-covers LP includes Joan Armatrading's "Down To Zero," Aimee Mann's "How Am I Different," and eight other pitch-perfect picks. Pitch-perfect also describes Lavette, whose scuffed-up vocals suggest Janis if she'd puffed a thousand more packs of Camel unfiltereds.

Biography

After four decades toiling in the record business with little more than a fervent cult following to show for it, Bettye LaVette can seem like soul music's equivalent of Roy Hobbs, protagonist of the bittersweet baseball fable "The Natural". Whether this riveting collection of ten covers by an eclectic range of contemporary female singer/songwriters will change the husky-throated Detroit native's fortunes seems irrelevant: Its spare, dusky groove and intensely emotional, in-the-moment performances seem utterly disconnected from concerns as trivial as fame and fashion. A forceful, timely reminder that soul thrives on the singer and not the song, LaVette doesn't so much cover these songs as reinvent them from the inside out, be it the chilling, a capella read of Sinead O'Connor's "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got" that opens the album, a gritty take of Lucinda Williams' "Joy" where the singer burns with a fire that might make Tina Turner envious or her recasting Dolly Parton's "Little Sparrow" as bluesy omen and "How Am I Different" by Aimee Mann as inviting, r&b shuffle. In a musical era where soulful authenticity and emotional resonance are too often virtual, this album is a delicious dose of the Real Deal. -- Jerry McCulley

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