Ragtime Selection: I Love a Piano/Pretty Baby/When the Midnight Choo Ch -
(Seven Little Girls) Sitting on the Back Seat
Far Away Places - The Springfields
Island of Dreams - The Springfields
Say I Won't Be There [Remix] - The Springfields
No Sad Songs for Me - The Springfields
I Only Want to Be with You
Once Upon a Time [Remix]
Stay Awhile
Will You Love Me Tomorrow?
Wishin & Hopin
I Just Don't Know What to Do with Myself
All Cried Out
Losing You
Summer Is Over
I Will Always Want You [Di Fronte All'Amore]
Your Hurtin' Kinda Love
I Wanna Make You Happy
In the Middle of Nowhere [Remix]
Baby Don't You Know
Some of Your Lovin'
Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)?
Doodlin'
I've Been Wrong Before
Little by Little
If It Hadn't Been for You [Remix]
You Don't Have to Say You Love Me
Every Ounce of Strength [Remix]
Track Listings (25) - Disc #2
Goin' Back
Poor Wayfaring Stranger
All I See Is You
Go Ahead On [Remix]
I'll Try Anything [Remix]
Give Me Time
Look of Love
What's It Gonna Be? [Remix]
Chained to a Memory
Welcome Home
Broken Blossoms
If You Go Away
Where Am I Going?
It's Over
Magic Garden [Remix]
I Close My Eyes and Count to Ten
I Will Come to You [Remix]
Sweet Lover No More
Another Night [Remix]
I Can't Give Back the Love I Feel for You [Remix]
I Think It's Going to Rain Today
Son of a Preacher Man
Windmills of Your Mind
No Easy Way Down
Am I the Same Girl?
Track Listings (25) - Disc #3
Let Me Get in Your Way
Brand New Me
Star of My Show
Someone Who Cares
Live Here with You
Make It with You
You've Got a Friend
Morning Please Don't Come
How Can I Be Sure
What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
Mixed Up Girl
Crumbs off the Table
Yesterday When I Was Young
See All Her Faces
Easy Evil
Of All the Things
Learn to Say Goodbye
Sea and Sky
In the Winter
Home to Myself
Exclusively for Me
I'd Rather Leave While I'm in Love
Turn Me Around
Love Me by Name
Hollywood Movie Girls
Track Listings (19) - Disc #4
That's the Kind of Love I Got for You [Us DJ Disco Extended Mix]
Closet Man
I Just Fall in Love Again
I Wish That Love Would Last
(But It's A) Nice Dream [From Kiss Me Goodbye]
I Don't Think We Could Ever Be Friends
Blind Sheep
Losing You (Just a Memory)
You'll Be Loving Me
What Have I Done to Deserve This? - Pet Shop Boys, Dusty Springfield
Nothing Has Been Proved
In Private
Daydreaming
Something in Your Eyes
Go Easy on Me
I Can't Help the Way I Don't Feel
Wherever Would I Be?
Quiet Please There's a Lady on Stage [Live]
Someone to Watch Over Me
Lavish 11 inch x 11 inch CD box set housed in a hard-back book from classic Universal artists featuring around 100 pages of essays, beautiful photographs and memorabilia. This repackaged box set features 98 tracks across ... more »four CDs by Britain's finest female Pop vocalist. Includes tracks from her first band, The Springfields, as well as rare recordings, hits, album tracks and so much more. Universal.« less
Lavish 11 inch x 11 inch CD box set housed in a hard-back book from classic Universal artists featuring around 100 pages of essays, beautiful photographs and memorabilia. This repackaged box set features 98 tracks across four CDs by Britain's finest female Pop vocalist. Includes tracks from her first band, The Springfields, as well as rare recordings, hits, album tracks and so much more. Universal.
James Fenos | Columbus, OH United States | 11/02/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This set went out of print shortly after it's release for a redesign of the package; the result is amazing. I've never seen a boxed set design quite like this one, it's called an "ear book." It's "11 x 11" and fits on a bookshelf, the pages filled with photos, essays and extensive liner notes describing each song. The cd's are filled to capacity and while I wish the extended mix of "In Private" was here, there isn't enough room for the extra three minutes and the bulk of the material makes up for any shortcomings. The songs mentioned in the liner notes but missing such as the duets with Cilla Black, Spencer Davis, BJ Thomas, and the extended version of the Donna Summer co-penned "Sometimes Like Butterflies" can be found on the release "Heart & Soul" on the Varese Sarabande label. This boxed set should serve as a prototype for any collection attempting to be comprehensive as it contains all the hits and every album, including the abandoned projects, is represented. The closing track and Dusty's final recording "Someone To Watch Over Me" is stark and beautiful, it's the way any standard should be sung. Overall, for lack of a better term, I'd say this set is a masterpiece."
Dusty Springfield
M. Barry | New York, New York United States | 05/12/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is an incredible book and the CD's are awesome! Dusty chronology as far as songs, when, where & why is noted page by page, as well as photographs throughout her career. It has early songs almost impossible to find as well as hits. 95 in all. A tribute to a great great singer and an interesting catalogue of the music and the times. Thoughts by other artists about Dusty's contribution throughout. Worth the price tag."
Wonderful
OceanBlueLA | Los Angeles | 02/08/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"A wonderful collection for any Dusty fan or for someone looking to be introduced in a more sophisticatd way than to just buy her 'best of' albums. She is here in all her glory. A must for the Dusty devotee."
Amazing
J. Mostoller | Ohio | 12/21/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have plenty of boxed sets, but none of them compare to this. The packaging is remarkable as well as the photos and the music. Dusty could make choking noises sound beautiful."
The White Diamond in a Superior CD and Book Package
Gary F. Taylor | Biloxi, MS USA | 02/04/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"She was born Mary O'Brien in 1939, the daughter of a tax accountant and a housewife, in London. In the 1950s, like many other English teens, she became enamored of American music--and in 1958 became a member of a girl group known as "The Lana Sisters." In 1960 she left the group to form "The Springfields" with brother Dion and Tim Field, who was later replaced by Mike Hurst. The trio met with significant chart success in both England and America, but by 1963 "The Springfields" had run their course. By this time Mary was known as Dusty Springfield, and she embarked on a solo career that would launch her to international fame as both a singer and a personality.
Although Mary O'Brien had been an ordinary-looking young woman, Dusty Springfield was an astonishing vision, sporting a blonde bouffant, light make-up, and heavy eye-liner--a look that became known as "Panda Eyes." Her gowns sparkled; her gestures were broadly melodramatic; her life as it unfolded was a riot of scandal that included alcohol, drugs, and whispers of lesbianism. She rode the rocket of fame throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, self-destructed more than once in the 1970s and 1980s, and made a stunning return to the public eye in the 1987. She died of breast cancer in 1999.
Now that swinging London, panda eyes, and all the trappings of her heyday in the spotlight have passed into myth, it has become possible to more clearly assess Springfield's gifts. And by any standard her work was and is exceptional. Springfield was clearly influenced by the folk and soul movements of the 1960s as well as various jazz artists, most particularly Peggy Lee--and in light of this many critics have attempted to define her by genre. But as Burt Bacharach so famously said, "you could hear just three notes and you knew it was Dusty." Her vocal stylings often reflect her influences, but she was never less than herself, unique, specific.
Likewise, Springfield's choice of material tends to defy genre. She did indeed do a host of recordings that most people would describe as "soul," but at the same time she did everything from lounge-style to Broadway to blues-inflected. It is extremely difficult to think of another singer with such broad tastes: from "the wall of sound" effect of "Stay Awhile" to the smoky, nightclub-ish "The Look of Love" to the super-clean style of "Goin' Back," she encompassed virtually every 20th Century pop idiom.
SIMPLY DUSTY suffers from the usual complaint one always has about collections: what to keep in and what to leave out. I am personally frustrated by the failure to include "Silver Threads and Golden Needles" recorded with The Springfields and the Bacharach "24 Hours From Tulsa." But such quibbles aside, this is a remarkably effective collection of ninety seven cuts (the opening cut, "Dusty Springfield," is a tribute by Blossom Dearie)--including bits from The Lana Sisters and The Springfields and continuing right up until the last recordings she made before her death. The recordings are crisp and clean and have tremendous clarity.
The accompanying book is also quite nice, offering a brief but accurate biography, overview of her career, a history of each song included in the set, and lavish photography. I am sure there are more comprehensive collections, but even so, this may be the best available. Worth the price and strongly recommended.