|
This Anthology offers you the best of her three albums: an unbeatable way of introducing you to the amazing music of Betty! "If Betty were singing today she be something like Madonna, something like Prince, only as a woman. She was the beginning of all that when she was singing as Betty Davis." Miles Davis, from "Miles: The Autobiography". The former wife of Miles, Betty Mabry Davis is perhaps the only woman in the world who could rightfully have the following legend tattooed across her rear: THIS ASS INVENTED FUSION. While their marriage only lasted a year (1968-1969), Betty pointed the way to Miles, introducing him to the musical and material gods of revolutionary style: Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone, which would have an enormous impact on his electrified musical Frankenfussion masterpiece known as "Bitches Brew". Betty ruled as the mentor-muse for the original man and his music. She was a woman with the strength of a Black Panther, a "nasty" woman in total control, but unfortunately for Betty, America was not yet ready to embrace a woman with such an explicitly sexual persona. She had a much rougher edge to her music than other female funk and soul artists of the '70s. Betty Davis' is one of the most extreme sounding debut records of the decade, which just like "Bitches Brew" takes equal parts inspiration from Hendrix and Sly. One critic aptly described their sound as something like a cross between Tina Turner, Funkadelic, and Sly & The Family Stone. Add the futurist fashion sense of David Bowie, and the flair of Miles Davis, and you have quite a cocktail. She was a powerhouse, pushing her vocal cords to the limit on every performance. Betty's brand of black music is not pleasantly soulful, it’s ecstatically hard. Davis was a singer for the feminist era, a take-no-prisoners sexual predator who screamed, yelled, grunted, purred, and cooed her way through extroverted material like "Shoo-B-Doop and Cop Him", and "He Was a Big Freak" Though she would've made an excellent disco diva, Betty Davis largely disappeared from the music scene afterward. Way ahead of her time, Betty was a musical extremist who demanded too much from her audience. NOW, find here on "THIS IS IT", the best of Betty Davis' three much-sought albums!
|
|