The Best of Jerry Butler [Rhino]

RELEASE
1987
LABEL
Rhino
GENRES
Rhythm & Blues, Early R&B, Soul, Northern Soul, Pop-Soul, Uptown Soul, Chicago Soul

Album Review

One of the first and best compilations to range through Jerry Butler's entire career on the pop charts, Rhino's The Best of Jerry Butler offered a lot of tracks -- especially considering its release date, the mid-'80s -- and remains the best place to hear the full scope of Chicago's smoothest soul singer. The 18-tracker begins fittingly with his first hit, the sweet ballad "For Your Precious Love," recorded during the brief time in 1958 when he led the Impressions -- later to find even more pop success on their own than Butler would. During the early '60s, though, Jerry Butler was one of the most popular artists in Chicago soul, paced by his big Vee-Jay singles: "He Will Break Your Heart," "I'm a Telling You," the sublime Burt Bacharach production "Make It Easy on Yourself," and his biggest hit of the era, the Betty Everett duet "Let It Be Me." The compilation then skips ahead to close out with three hits from his years in Philadelphia with Mercury, the Gamble-Huff hits "Never Give You Up," "Hey, Western Union Man," and "Only the Strong Survive." Anyone with more than a passing interest in Chicago soul would do better with separate sets for his Vee-Jay and Mercury years (The Sweetest Soul and Iceman: The Mercury Years, respectively), but The Best of Jerry Butler is a great choice for listeners wanting only the best.
John Bush, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. For Your Precious Love
  2. He Will Break Your Heart
  3. Find Another Girl
  4. I'm a Telling You
  5. Moon River
  6. Make It Easy on Yourself
  7. You Can Run (But You Can't Hide)
  8. I'm the One Who Loves You
  9. Theme from Taras Bulba (The Wishing Star)
  10. Whatever You Want
  11. Need to Belong
  12. Giving up on Love
  13. I Don't Want to Hear It Anymore
  14. I Stand Accused
  15. Let It Be Me
  16. Never Give You Up
  17. Hey, Western Union Man
  18. Only the Strong Survive