Shelly West: The Very Best Of

ShellyWest_TheVeryBestOfSolo sides from mid-80s country hit maker

Shelly West, the daughter of country legend Dottie West, had a run of hits from the early to mid-80s, most notably in duet with David Frizzell, but also as a solo act. Her pairings with Frizzell are anthologized on the separate collection The Very Best of David Frizzell & Shelly West, leaving this set to present her solo sides. Included are nine singles running from 1983’s “Jose Cuervo” through 1985’s “Now There’s You.” Also included is the B-side “Sexy Side” and four album tracks; missing are her last two singles from 1986, “What Would You Do” and “Love Don’t Come Any Better Than This.” These are all original recordings from the Warner/Viva label, just as listeners will remember have heard them on radio in the 1980s.

West’s voice is powerful, but producer Snuff Garrett (who’d made his name with pop acts like Gary Lewis, Bobby Vee and Cher) vacillated between styled arrangements of steel guitar, fiddle and bent-note piano, and pop productions filled with studio-tuned drums and crystalline guitars. These sounds fit easily into early ‘80s country radio playlists that featured Barbara Mandrell, Ronnie Milsap, Anne Murray and others, but in retrospect they sound overly processed and polished. West bowed out of the music industry in 1986 just as the neo-traditionalists were stripping away much of Nashville’s crossover gloss, so we’ll never really know how her huskily powerful voice would have sounded without the studio-contrived production.

There are twangy tunes in “Jose Cuervo,” “Somebody Buy This Cowgirl a Beer,” “I’ll Dance the Two Step” and “Now There’s You,” but many of the collection’s country lyrics are undermined by heavy-handed crossover arrangements whose country instrumentation is little more than ornamentation. “Flight 309 to Tennessee” is marred by flecks of power guitar chords, tuned drums and by-the-numbers strings. West is more of a crooner than a roots singer, and combined with Garrett’s production, these singles are often more adult contemporary than country. Taken on the premise that these records didn’t intend to draw heavily on country music’s roots, fans of early ‘80s country will be happy to have these original sides available on CD. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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