Gold follows a handful of major
Barry White compilations released since the '70s, including
Casablanca's two-volume
Greatest Hits (released in 1975 and 1981, then on CD), the three-disc 1992 box set
Just for You, 1995's
All-Time Greatest Hits, and 2002's two-disc
The Ultimate Collection. Many of the sets in
Hip-O/
Universal's Gold series amount to reissues of two-disc anthologies released during the early 2000s through labels distributed by
Universal, and this one is not an exception -- it's exactly like
The Ultimate Collection, albeit with different visual presentation. As any
Barry White fan would be quick to tell you,
White was so much more than a large, oversexed, deep-voiced novelty. He was a tremendously prolific and gifted songwriter, arranger, and producer. Even without all the albums released under his own name, he'd have quite a legacy with
Love Unlimited and
the Love Unlimited Orchestra, not to mention his stint in A&R and behind the scenes work with
Gene Page,
Gloria Scott,
Danny Pearson, and
Webster Lewis.
Gold includes five
Love Unlimited Orchestra tracks -- the big guns, like the number one
pop single
"Love's Theme" and the number one club single
"My Suite Summer Suite," as well as the pleasant surprise of
"Midnight and You" -- but otherwise concentrates on
Barry White's solo-in-name releases, ranging from 1973's
"I'm Gonna Love You, Just a Little More Baby" (number one
R&B, number three
pop) to 1979's
"It Ain't Love, Babe (Until You Give It)" before picking back up with 1987's
"Sho' You Right." (
White released albums during the intervening years that are not represented, and
Universal would've had to license roughly ten charting singles from them to be thorough). The extensive back catalog of his other ventures could use a whole lot of love, but
Gold offers about as much lush and exquisitely arranged
soul music as one could hope to get in two and a half hours. ~ Andy Kellman