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Love Is All I Had: A Tribute to the Queen of Jamaican Soul

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Download links and information about Love Is All I Had: A Tribute to the Queen of Jamaican Soul by Phyllis Dillon. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Reggae, World Music genres. It contains 29 tracks with total duration of 01:17:49 minutes.

Artist: Phyllis Dillon
Release date: 2004
Genre: Reggae, World Music
Tracks: 29
Duration: 01:17:49
Buy on iTunes $12.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Don't Stay Away 2:33
2. (This Is) A Lovely Way to Spend an Evening (Never Gonna Fall in Love Again) 2:50
3. Tulips and Heather 3:09
4. A Thing of the Past 2:42
5. Make Me Yours 2:20
6. Leave It In the Hands of Love 2:55
7. Perfidia 2:46
8. It's Rocking Time (Rocksteady) 2:49
9. Nice Time 2:26
10. I Wear His Ring 2:10
11. Don't Touch Me Tomato 2:58
12. Why Did You Leave Me to Cry (featuring Alton Ellis) 2:38
13. Love Letters (featuring Alton Ellis) 2:37
14. Love Is All I Had 2:46
15. Boys and Girls Reggae (aka Doing the Reggae) 2:15
16. Take My Heart (featuring Hopeton Lewis) 2:20
17. The Right Track (featuring Hopeton Lewis) 2:28
18. Walk Through the World With Me (featuring Hopeton Lewis) 2:15
19. Remember That Sunday (featuring Alton Ellis) 2:37
20. You Are Like Heaven to Me 2:05
21. Livin' In Love (aka One Life to Live One Life to Give) 2:32
22. Midnight Confessions 2:32
23. Woman of the Ghetto 3:22
24. I Can't Foget About You Baby 3:04
25. Picture On the Wall 2:43
26. Eddie Oh Baby 2:43
27. The Love That a Woman Should Give a Man 3:27
28. We Belong Together 2:54
29. Love the One You're With 2:53

Details

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A reluctant pop star if ever there was one, Phyllis Dillon balanced a recording career in Jamaica with a job in the U.S. working in a bank. Love Is All I Had is the most comprehensive collection of her work to date, packed to the brim with a staggering 29 cuts of vintage rocksteady and early reggae, all cut with Duke Reid for his Treasure Isle imprint. The earliest songs from Love Is All I Had date from 1967 (with the exception of Dillon's 1966 self-penned debut, "Don't Stay Away"), and exude an innocence common in the best sides from the Shirelles, Lesley Gore, and exponents of the girl group sound. Dillon's cover of Bettye Swann's "Make Me Yours" is such a song, while her original "It's Rocking Time" would help to define the rocksteady era itself. Although she will always be associated with rocksteady, Dillon recorded some great reggae as well. While her take on the Grass Roots' "Midnight Confessions" and role-reversing cover of Eric Donaldson's "Cherry Oh Baby" as "Eddie Oh Baby" haven't aged too well, her pulsing cover of Marlena Shaw's "Woman of the Ghetto" remains a dancefloor classic. No matter what she's singing, though, it's hard not to fall in love with her voice, making even touristy cuts like the randy "Don't Touch Me Tomato" worth hearing.