|
|
Disco de Ice-T - Say It Loud! A Celebration of Black Music in America
|
| Información del disco : |
|
Valoración media:
(10 valoraciones)
|
|
Fecha de Publicación:2001-10-09
|
|
Tipo:Audio CD
|
|
Género:Acoustic Blues, Ballads, Black Gospel, Blaxploitation, Bop, Box Sets (Audio Only), Classic Jazz, Country Blues, Deep Soul, Delta Blues, Disco, Doo Wop, Early Pop/Rock, Early R&B, Electric Blues, Funk, Golden Age, Hip-Hop, Jazz, Motown
|
|
Sello Discográfico:Rhino / Wea
|
|
UPC:081227666026
|
|
Precio aprox.:$89.98
(USD)
|
|
| Contenido : |
| 1 -
1 |
. |
Maple Leaf Rag - Scott Joplin |
| 1 -
2 |
. |
Sound Bite: Booker T. Washington on The Negro Population in the South |
| 1 -
3 |
. |
The St. Louis Blues - Bessie Smith |
| 1 -
4 |
. |
Black Bottom Stomp - Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers |
| 1 -
5 |
. |
Heebie Jeebies - Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five |
| 1 -
6 |
. |
Ol' Man River - Paul Robeson |
| 1 -
7 |
. |
Ain't Misbehavin' - Fats Waller |
| 1 -
8 |
. |
Pony Blues - Charlie Patton |
| 1 -
9 |
. |
My Black Mama (Part I) - Son House |
| 1 -
10 |
. |
Tiger Rag - Mills Brothers |
| 1 -
11 |
. |
Minnie The Moocher - Cab Calloway & His Orchestra |
| 1 -
12 |
. |
It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - Duke Ellington & His Famous Orchestra |
| 1 -
13 |
. |
Sound Bite: Jesse Owens on the 1936 Olympics |
| 1 -
14 |
. |
Cross Road Blues - Robert Johnson |
| 1 -
15 |
. |
Rock My Soul - Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet |
| 1 -
16 |
. |
If I Didn't Care - Ink Spots |
| 1 -
17 |
. |
Jumpin' At The Woodside - Count Basie & His Orchestra |
| 1 -
18 |
. |
Strange Fruit - Billie Holiday |
| 1 -
19 |
. |
Stormy Weather - Lena Horne |
| 1 -
20 |
. |
Tiger Rag - Art Tatum |
| 2 -
1 |
. |
Straighten Up And Fly Right - The King Cole Trio |
| 2 -
2 |
. |
Ko Ko - Charlie Parker's Ri Bop Boys |
| 2 -
3 |
. |
If You Could See Me Now - Sarah Vaughan |
| 2 -
4 |
. |
Sound Bite: Joe Louis Returns from the Army |
| 2 -
5 |
. |
The Midnight Special - Leadbelly |
| 2 -
6 |
. |
Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just As Bad) - T-Bone Walker |
| 2 -
7 |
. |
'Round About Midnight - The Thelonious Monk Quartet |
| 2 -
8 |
. |
Sound Bite: Frank Stanley on Negro Newspaper Week |
| 2 -
9 |
. |
How High The Moon - Ella Fitzgerald |
| 2 -
10 |
. |
It's Too Soon To Know - The Orioles |
| 2 -
11 |
. |
I Feel Like Going Home - Muddy Waters |
| 2 -
12 |
. |
Boogie Chillen' - John Lee Hooker |
| 2 -
13 |
. |
Sound Bite: President Harry S. Truman's Civil Rights Legislation |
| 2 -
14 |
. |
In The Evening When The Sun Goes Down - Charles Brown Trio |
| 2 -
15 |
. |
Baby, Get Lost - Dinah Washington |
| 2 -
16 |
. |
Sound Bite: Civil Rights Bill Narrowly Defeated in Senate |
| 2 -
17 |
. |
Saturday Night Fish Fry (Parts I & II) - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five |
| 2 -
18 |
. |
Mardi Gras In New Orleans - Professor Longhair |
| 2 -
19 |
. |
Sound Bite: Jackie Robinson on the Eve of the 1949 World Series |
| 2 -
20 |
. |
Rocket "88" - Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats |
| 2 -
21 |
. |
(Mama) He Treats Your Daughter Mean - Ruth Brown |
| 2 -
22 |
. |
Money Honey - The Drifters |
| 2 -
23 |
. |
Shake, Rattle And Roll - Joe Turner & His Blues Kings |
| 3 -
1 |
. |
I've Got A Woman - Ray Charles |
| 3 -
2 |
. |
Ain't It A Shame - Fats Domino |
| 3 -
3 |
. |
Bo Diddley - Bo Diddley |
| 3 -
4 |
. |
Sound Bite: Sammy Davis, Jr. on Prejudice |
| 3 -
5 |
. |
That Old Black Magic - Sammy Davis, Jr. |
| 3 -
6 |
. |
Four - Miles Davis Quintet |
| 3 -
7 |
. |
The Great Pretender - The Platters |
| 3 -
8 |
. |
Sound Bite: W.E.B. Du Bois on the Place of the Black Man in Society - W.E.B. Du Bois |
| 3 -
9 |
. |
Long Tall Sally - Little Richard |
| 3 -
10 |
. |
Brown Eyed Handsome Man - Chuck Berry & His Combo |
| 3 -
11 |
. |
Banana Boat (Day-O) - Harry Belafonte |
| 3 -
12 |
. |
Touch The Hem Of His Garment - The Soul Stirrers featuring Sam Cooke |
| 3 -
13 |
. |
Sometime I Feel Like A Motherless Child - Marian Anderson |
| 3 -
14 |
. |
Misty - Johnny Mathis |
| 3 -
15 |
. |
Sound Bite: President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Address to the Nation on Segregation |
| 3 -
16 |
. |
The Twist - Hank Ballard & The Midnighters |
| 3 -
17 |
. |
I Ain't Superstitious - Howlin' Wolf |
| 3 -
18 |
. |
I Pity The Fool - Bobby Bland |
| 3 -
19 |
. |
At Last - Etta James |
| 3 -
20 |
. |
Sound Bite: Interview with a Dade County Janitor |
| 3 -
21 |
. |
Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting - Charles Mingus |
| 3 -
22 |
. |
Giant Steps - John Coltrane |
| 3 -
23 |
. |
Maiden Voyage - Herbie Hancock |
| 4 -
1 |
. |
You've Really Got A Hold On Me - The Miracles |
| 4 -
2 |
. |
Take My Hand Precious Lord - Mahalia Jackson |
| 4 -
3 |
. |
Sound Bite: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" Speech |
| 4 -
4 |
. |
Cotton Fields - Odetta |
| 4 -
5 |
. |
How Blue Can You Get? - B.B. King |
| 4 -
6 |
. |
No Pity (In The Naked City) - Jackie Wilson |
| 4 -
7 |
. |
Sound Bite: President John F. Kennedy's Address To The Nation |
| 4 -
8 |
. |
Change Gonna Come - Otis Redding |
| 4 -
9 |
. |
Walk On By - Dionne Warwick |
| 4 -
10 |
. |
Reach Out I'll Be There - Four Tops |
| 4 -
11 |
. |
Sound Bite: Malcolm X on "Our Common Enemy" |
| 4 -
12 |
. |
Land Of 1000 Dances - Wilson Pickett |
| 4 -
13 |
. |
Respect - Aretha Franklin |
| 4 -
14 |
. |
Hey Joe - The Jimi Hendrix Experience |
| 4 -
15 |
. |
The Klan - Richie Havens |
| 4 -
16 |
. |
Love Child - Diana Ross & The Supremes |
| 4 -
17 |
. |
Sound Bite: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "Mountain Top" Speech & the Report on His Assassination - Martin Luther King, Jr. |
| 4 -
18 |
. |
Say It LouI'm Black And I'm Proud - James Brown |
| 4 -
19 |
. |
Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey - Sly & The Family Stone |
| 4 -
20 |
. |
Choice Of Colors - The Impressions |
| 4 -
21 |
. |
To Be Young, Gifted And Black - Nina Simone |
| 4 -
22 |
. |
Is Anybody Goin' To San Antone - Charley Pride |
| 5 -
1 |
. |
I Want You Back - Jackson 5 |
| 5 -
2 |
. |
I Want To Take You Higher - Ike & Tina Turner & The Ikettes |
| 5 -
3 |
. |
Sound Bite: Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall on Segregation |
| 5 -
4 |
. |
Ball Of Confusion (That's What The World Is Today) - The Temptations |
| 5 -
5 |
. |
What's Going On - Marvin Gaye |
| 5 -
6 |
. |
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised - Gil Scott-Heron |
| 5 -
7 |
. |
My Tribute - AndraH Crouch |
| 5 -
8 |
. |
Respect Yourself - The Staple Singers |
| 5 -
9 |
. |
Tired Of Being Alone - Al Green |
| 5 -
10 |
. |
Sound Bite: Gordon Parks & Melvin Van Peebles on Shaft |
| 5 -
11 |
. |
Theme From Shaft - Isaac Hayes |
| 5 -
12 |
. |
Be Real Black For Me - Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway |
| 5 -
13 |
. |
Sanford & Son Theme (The Street Beater) - Quincy Jones |
| 5 -
14 |
. |
Love Train - The O'Jays |
| 5 -
15 |
. |
Ghetto Child - The Spinners |
| 5 -
16 |
. |
Midnight Train To Georgia - Gladys Knight & The Pips |
| 5 -
17 |
. |
Jungle Boogie - Kool & The Gang |
| 5 -
18 |
. |
You're The First, The Last, My Everything - Barry White |
| 5 -
19 |
. |
Shining Star - Earth, Wind & Fire |
| 5 -
20 |
. |
Chocolate City - Parliament |
| 5 -
21 |
. |
Wake Up Everybody (Part 1) - Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes |
| 6 -
1 |
. |
We Are Family - Sister Sledge |
| 6 -
2 |
. |
I Will Survive - Gloria Gaynor |
| 6 -
3 |
. |
Fight The Power Part 1 - The Isley Brothers |
| 6 -
4 |
. |
Rapper's Delight - Sugarhill Gang |
| 6 -
5 |
. |
The Breaks (Part 1) - Kurtis Blow |
| 6 -
6 |
. |
The Message - Grand Master Flash & The Furious Five |
| 6 -
7 |
. |
A House Is Not A Home - Luther Vandross |
| 6 -
8 |
. |
If You Only Knew - Patti Labelle |
| 6 -
9 |
. |
Sound Bite: Jesse Jackson at the 1984 Democratic National Convention |
| 6 -
10 |
. |
Proud To Be Black - Run-D.M.C. |
| 6 -
11 |
. |
Colors - Ice-T |
| 6 -
12 |
. |
Sister Rosa - The Neville Brothers |
| 6 -
13 |
. |
Express Yourself - N.W.A. |
| 6 -
14 |
. |
Sound Bite: Louis Farrakhan on the Million Man March |
| 6 -
15 |
. |
Me Myself And I - De La Soul |
| 6 -
16 |
. |
Ladies First - Queen Latifah |
| 6 -
17 |
. |
Elvis Is Dead - Living Colour |
| 6 -
18 |
. |
Sound Bite: Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley on the Rodney King Verdict |
| 6 -
19 |
. |
Fantastic Voyage - Coolio |
Análisis (en inglés) - <i>Amazon.com's Best of 2001</i> :
As with 1999's Respect box, which chronicled women recording artists, Rhino again attempts to capture and condense a mighty field with the six-CD Say It Loud! And again, it largely succeeds. A companion to the VH1 series of the same name, Say It Loud! tells one story and many. It covers the development of many related genres, the business of locking many outsize talents and personalities into the grooves of records, and the music as it mirrored a rustling, ever-changing society--that last underscored by the inclusion of spoken sound bites (everyone from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to Sammy Davis Jr.). But within these larger themes move many smaller but no less compelling tales. The roughly chronological programming allows for accidental, startling juxtapositions--disc one places Paul Robeson's pained, dignified reading of "Ol' Man River" just a few tracks away from bluesman Son House's insistence in "My Black Mama (Part 1)" that "there ain't no burnin' Hell." From there, pop ballads, big bands, bop, gospel, doo-wop, rock & roll, soul from Motown! Memphis! and Philly!, gorgeous civil-rights-era jazz, funk, and rap cohere and speak to one another in a selection about as good as can be expected given its length and various legal restrictions. (The most glaring omission is Stevie Wonder.) Any taint of "this stuff is good for you" is lost in the parade of great gifts, personalities, statements, dance crazes, poetry, and word games. If the above track listing contains lots of names you don't recognize, Say It Loud! will offer you a topnotch one-stop survey course. --Rickey WrightAnálisis de usuario (en inglés) - 2001-11-22
- A phenomonal collection, however...This is truly a terrific set. I'd buy each of these CD's separately if they weren't available together. But stop and think about this for a minute. Can you imagine a box set called "A Celebration of White Music in America"? Would anyone put together a collection that included tracks from, say, Rudy Vallee, Backstreet Boys, The Beach Boys, Garth Brooks, Glen Miller, Elvis Presley, Meat Loaf, Patti Page, Sons of the Pioneers, The Captain & Tennille, Vaughn Monroe, Limp Bizkit, Carole King, Itzhak Perlman, Green Day, Pat Boone, Pat Benatar and about a hundred other artists? Of course not. Why? Because these acts have nothing in common! Now the tough follow-up question: Why should being black give the artists on this set anything more in common? Let's call this what it truly is: A Celebration of GREAT Music In America, and hope the day arrives soon when no other label need apply
Análisis de usuario (en inglés) - 2001-10-13
- "Say It Loud"-A celebration of Black music in America"Say It Loud" is a six-CD testament to the vibrant, fascinating history of black music in America. The box set features music featured in the five-part "Say It Loud" miniseries on VH1 divided into songs of politics, protest, and spreading the message, progress in the music business, gospel and blues, black sexuality in music, and the reflection (and creation) of popular culture in (and through) black music. This is the definitive box set of black music and culture. It features 128 tracks chronicling ragtime, jazz, blues, spirituals, gospel, R&B, rock 'n' roll, pop, soul, jump blues, Motown, funk, country, and hip-hop, sound bytes from influential moments (Jesse Owens on the 1936 Olympics, Civil Rights legislation, prejudice, Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Mountain Top" speech and the report on his assassination, Blaxploitation films, the Rodney King verdict and more). The 100-page book features a foreword by Quincy Jones and extensive essays by David Ritz, Earnest Hardy, Ingrid Monson, and Grammy®-nominated journalist Gerald Early. "Say It Loud" is a cultural legacy as well as an excellently packaged box set. For maximum effect watch the "Say It Loud" miniseries as well...there are numerous interviews with many of the recording artists and producers and the stories behind the music and the times as well as rare early (black-and-white) TV footage of concerts by Motown artists. Much of today's popular music owes a large debt to black music and to black artists that paved the way for later generations. In the words of legendary producer Quincy Jones, "The history of black music in America is the history of America itself." So buy "Say It Loud" as a sonic history lesson, whether to brush up on your knowledge of black music or to learn from the beginning. This is one of the best box sets I've seen on the market, period. Made with love, with track after track of great cuts and informative liner notes. The only box set you'll need to buy.
Análisis de usuario (en inglés) - 2001-10-19
- Important History LessonSay It Loud! A Celebration of Black Music in America is a important musical collection for people of all races, creeds and colors to own. It is a musical history lesson and celebration of music and sounds that have helped shape American culture. The set spans the entire 20th century including such turn of the century icons like Scott Joplin, Fats Waller and Paul Robeson. Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit" is one of the most stirring vocal performances in history. Many people acknowledge the Ink Spots as the first group to employ the rock 'n' roll sound and their "If I Didn't Care" is offered as evidence. Jazz is well represented with tracks by Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and others like the superb "'Round Midnight" by The Thelonious Monk Quartet. As the set moves into the 60's and beyond, the songs become more Afro-centric. The Impressions' "Choice Of Colors" is one of the most thought-provoking songs of the civil rights movement. James Brown sums up the spirit of the box set with "Say It Loud! I'm Black, I'm Proud". The grooves in Parliament's vision of black leaders in politics "Chocolate City" led to songs like De La Soul's "Me, Myself & I". Interspersed throughout the disks are news cuts from Jackie Robinson, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and news stories like breaking the segregation lines make this set more powerful and relevant.
Análisis de usuario (en inglés) - 2001-11-14
- Very Strongway too Many times folks don't get the facts right on the History of Music.thank goodness Quincy Jones helped put this Compilation together&it showcases a History that hasn't gotten it's full do.Great Writers,Arrangers,Producers,Performers&Creative Minds that have Created Timeless Music.A Big Salute to Quincy Jones&all the Great Minds Featured here I say Thank You&Right ON!
Análisis de usuario (en inglés) - 2002-08-04
- an absolute must have!!To any black person who wants educate their child musically, this is a must have, yes there are some omissions, but the depth and breadth of the artists represented is astonishing. I will listen this with my child very often, as a history lesson.
|