I say Mr. Walter Jackson.
I say Mr. Walter Jackson.
Gladys Knight and the Pips
Dionne Warwick
Gladys Knight and the Pips are way overdue of the honor. I wonder if haphazard licensing deals from various labels have prolonged the curation of a career-spanning. multi-disc retrospective from ever coming to fruition.
Roberta Flack
Chaka Khan
Rufus & Chaka Khan [[Rhino had an two-disc anthology on them that was in the works, but it never materialized. I forgot the story about what derailed it.)
Zapp & Roger. Roger Troutman was a stone genius who made the talkbox a lead instrument. His influence is still prevalent today.
Can't think of any besides the ones mentioned. :/
Whitney is the only one I can think of for biased reasons because she goes as far back as 1978 with her recordings [["Life is a Party" with Michael Zager was her first real lead) so that would be great to get EVERYTHING from Whitney in that 34-year period [[1978-2012).
I would agree that Dionne Warwick could use a comprehensive box, especially if it contained previously unreleased material. But with her, my goodness, where would you start????
The rest of my answer would be primarily Motown-related, so on that front, I can think of the following that deserve the Anthology treatment: Edwin Starr, Tata Vega, High Inergy, and I don't think there has been a comprehensive Isley Brothers Motown collection has there? If I missed it, forgive me.
Oh and someday I would love to see Hodges, James and Smith's four albums appear on CD, along with whatever else might be out there that was never released.
I don't know about Tata and High Inergy but I wonder about Edwin Starr. I don't think the Isleys recorded much at Motown for one. Most of their stuff were from self-released material so that was the majority that made it to their box sets and there were also leftovers from their pre-Motown days.
Cameo. They may be a little late for some of you, but Larry Blackmon's band stayed hot for almost two decades, even after the studio forced him to cut down the ensemble from 11 artists to three.
I'd love for The O' Jays to get the 'box set' treatment.
Bobby Womack. He'd deserve more than one box !
Thank You Bran, I have this anthology already and I like it. However, I feel Roger deserves a collector's box that combines all 9 Zapp & Roger albums with the works. We've only got one outtake since his untimely death, "Superman". There must be a plethora of unreleased tunes between the Troutman family and Warner Bros. Roger was a lot like his great friend Prince in that they were supremely creative and had their own studios to utilize freely. I've been trying to convince somebody to do it,even Rhino who's less than enthusiastic about a project like that. There also seems to be some issues with his estate that his children are working to straighten out. Hopefully it'll happen though,not unlike what Sony/Legacy did in honor of Sly & The Family Stone in 2007.
Hodges, James and Smith
Last edited by lakeside; 08-05-2018 at 03:56 PM.
Dionne Warwick for sure!
I'd love to know why there hasn't been a comprehensive collection for Rufus & Chaka Khan. They did all their albums & hit singles for ABC/MCA Records [[except for the Stompin' At The Savoy-Live LP and the single "Ain't Nobody" for WB) so UMe should be able to put together a 2CD set on the spot.
The singin chipmonks?
There are some great suggestions here, and i have to agree that Gladys, Dionne, Rufus and Chaka,Bobby Womack and the O'Jays are particular deserving cases. It is quite astounding that these magnificent artists have not been given the box sets that they deserve.Might i also add Al Green and the Dells to this list please?
I submit a career-spanning box for Esther Phillips.
Al Green received the 'box set' treatment with Anthology [[The Right Stuff/Capitol-1997). With 61 tracks over 4CDs covering the period from his first hit [[1967's "Back Up Train" with The Soul Mates) to the final recordings for Hi Records [["Belle", "Wait Here" & "Chariots Of Fire"). And I agree with you that The Dells deserve to a career-spanning box set.
Ray Charles.
But seriously, just wondering, why there is not really all that many deeply comprehensive reissues on his ABC catalog?
There was the Singular Genius-The ABC Singles [[Concord-2011) 5 CD collection. It was a limited edition set so it came and went. Before that, there was the two volume His Greatest Hits [[DCC-1987) collections which dealt with the 1961-1972 period at ABC. These came out early in the CD era and were far from comprehensive [[for me, they were a godsend at the time).
The New Birth....the most underrated of all soul bands.
The Sweet Inspirations
Shirley Brown.
I think of Shirley often. Wonder if she is still performing and/or might record again someday?
I feel that WAR deserves a comprehensive box set of their peak years in the '70s. They've have 2CD sets in the past but they don't really do justice to their work [[especially since they had long album tracks that were edited for their singles and various compilations).
Cmon, JUNIOR WALKER!
The O'Jays recorded for so many labels that it would be very hard to get everything licensed. I think their Bell, Neptune and Philadelphia International is with Sony/BMG and their Imperial, Capitol/EMI, and MCA are with Universal Music. Maybe a UK reissue label could get it done. They would surely do a nice job on the packaging too. Most of The Dells recordings are affiliated with Universal Music, so a box set would be more possible there. Maybe Universal UK can tackle it. I would be psyched to have at least a three disc set of Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes [[a CD of their 60s recordings for various labels like "My Hero" and "Get Out and Let Me Cry", a CD plus of their Teddy-led Philadelphia International recordings, a CD of their best David Ebo-led ABC/MCA recordings, and a couple of tracks from their mid-80s Philly World album). If anyone needs detailed liner notes with a group member timeline, it is the Blue Notes/Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes! As with the O'Jays, you have several labels involved, with many key recordings owned both of the two mega conglomerates Sony/BMG and Universal Music. Hard to imagine it happening, but I can dream.
This is a great thread. I love everyone's suggestions. For Gladys Knight & the Pips, I make do with a Motown singles set, Gold which covers highlights throughout their career, and this one that has all of the singles from their Buddah and Columbia years: https://www.amazon.com/Midnight-Trai...ys+knight+pips .
I think that a comprehensive box set for The O'Jays could easily be done. There's only two large record conglomerates to cross-license the songs from [[and remember Sony's 4CD set, Love Train: The Sound Of Philadelphia, many songs on it were licensed from other labels).
Sylvester, The Pointer Sisters, Anita Baker
Bookmarks