| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 61239 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $5.70 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks |
| Release Date: | 1999-10-26 |
| Label: | Motown |
| UPC: | 601215399127 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Motown |
| ASIN: | B00002DDPI |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on The Best of Mary Wells - The Millennium Collection by Motown
- The One Who Really Loves You
- You Beat Me To The Punch
- Two Lovers
- Your Old Standby
- What's Easy For Two Is So Hard For One
- My Guy
- Laughing Boy
- Once Upon A Time
- I Don't Want To Take A Chance
- You Lost The Sweetest Boy
- Bye Bye Baby
Customer Reviews
A solid basic Mary Wells hit collection of soul songs - Reviewed on 2005-03-21
8 customers found this review helpful.
In 1964, the year the Beatles led the British Invasion Mary Wells was Motown's biggest star and had a #1 hit with the classic "My Guy." That would end up changing, not because of the Beatles, but because of Diana Ross and the Supremes, who would have three #1 hits at the end of the year and become the second biggest hit makers on the planet. Then there was Wells' decision to leave Motown for 20th Century Fox, after which her career was nowhere near the same. Given she was only 21 when "My Guy" hit the top of the charts, this "20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection" for Mary Wells cannot help but engender thoughts of what might have been.
Mary Wells became a star when Barry Gordy signed her as a teenager and she had her first Motown hit, "Bye Bye Baby" (#45 on the Billboard Pop charts, although most of her songs always charted better on the R&B charts). This collection includes three other Top 10 hits, all of which were written and produced by Smokey Robinson: "The One Who Really Loves You" (#8), "You Beat Me to the Punch" (#9), and "Two Lovers" (#7). In fact, Robinson wrote the first seven tracks on this album, which includes "Laughing Boy" (#15). "I Don't Want to Take a Chance" (#33), "Once Upon a Time" (#19) and "You Lost the Sweetest Boy" (#22) are also pretty good.
With her soft voice, Mary Wells was a soul singer who could sound both shy and sexy at the same time. However, with only eleven tracks this is a less than satisfying collection, because it is missing some hits, such as "What's the Matter With You Baby" (#17). The 2-disc set "Looking Back 1961-1964," put out by Motown, would be the much better choice for her fans. However, for the casual fan who would like to have more than "My Guy," this "Millennium Collection" certainly fulfills the minimum Mary Wells requirement.
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Book Subjects
- Girl Group
- Motown
- Oldies
- Pop
- Pop-Soul
- R&B
- Soul
- Soul/R&B
- Soul/Reggae/Rhythm & Blues