Various Artists
Red Hot + Blue

Chrysalis    CCD 1799  (1990)

Rock/Pop
CD, 20   Tracks, 77:46  Length
01 I've Got U Under My Skin Cole Porter Neneh Cherry 04:30
02 In The Still Of The Night Cole Porter The Neville Brothers 05:21
03 You Do Something To Me Cole Porter Sinead O'Connor 02:36
04 Begin The Beguine Cole Porter Salif Keita 03:25
05 Love For Sale Cole Porter Fine Young Cannibals 02:50
06 Well Did You Evah! Cole Porter Debbie Harry,  vocals; Iggy Pop 03:30
07 Miss Otis Regrets/Just One Of Those Things Cole Porter Kirsty MacColl; The Pogues 04:44
08 Don't Fence Me In Cole Porter David Byrne,  vocals 03:12
09 It's All Right With Me Cole Porter Tom Waits 04:43
10 Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye Cole Porter Annie Lennox,  vocals 03:56
11 Night and Day Cole Porter U2 05:22
12 I Love Paris Cole Porter Les Négresses Vertes 03:16
13 So In Love Cole Porter k.d. lang 04:40
14 Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? Cole Porter The Thompson Twins 03:21
15 Too Darn Hot Cole Porter Erasure 03:40
16 I Get a Kick Out Of You Cole Porter The Jungle Brothers 02:55
17 Down In The Depths Cole Porter Lisa Stansfield 04:31
18 From This Moment On Cole Porter Jimmy Somerville 03:21
19 After You Who Cole Porter Jody Watley 03:13
20 Do I Love You Cole Porter Aztec Camera 04:40
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Producer Steve Lillywhite
Mixed By Steve Lillywhite
Personal Details
Index # 3676
Owner Dave
Tags Synth Pop, Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Cole Porter did not die of AIDS, but he is generally acknowledged to have been at least bisexual, which seems to be the justification for assembling an AIDS charity album in which contemporary artists perform songs he wrote in the 1920s, '30s, '40s, and '50s. Producer/creators Leigh Blake and John Carlin (along with Steve Lillywhite, credited as supervising musical producer, who produced several of the individual tracks) appear to have suggested to the artists that they simply take Porter's lead sheets and come up with arrangements and recordings in their own individual styles. Leading off the album, Neneh Cherry demonstrates how far that can be from traditional approaches to Porter's music. Her "I've Got U Under My Skin" begins with a rap about AIDS over a hip-hop arrangement, and it never uses much more of Porter's original music and lyrics than the title phrase. No wonder the album booklet makes a point of printing Porter's words to the songs as written, since in some cases that's the only place they can be found. Cherry's effort and the Jungle Brothers' similar take on "I Get a Kick Out of You" (here called "I Get a Kick") prove to be the most radical reinterpretations. And there are tracks in which the artists have taken the opposite tack, going for re-creations of styles from decades past. Sinéad O'Connor is accompanied by the Malcolm Griffiths Orchestra in a swinging performance of "You Do Something to Me" that Porter would have found familiar, and Lisa Stansfield also takes a retro approach in a horn-filled arrangement of "Down in the Depths," while Jody Watley's "After You, Who?" sounds like something a '50s nightclub singer might do, complete with strings. But most of the time, the artists just sound like themselves. Tom Waits' falsetto treatment of "It's All Right with Me" wouldn't sound out of place on his Swordfishtrombones album, for example, and David Byrne's "Don't Fence Me In," with its Latin percussion, could be on his Rei Momo. Sometimes, the artists' familiar styles play into emotional statements of the Porter lyrics, such as with Annie Lennox's torchy "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye" and k.d. lang's moody "So in Love." Other times, especially in the cases of some of the dance-pop artists, the song-as-written is largely subsumed to the arrangement; Jimmy Somerville's "From This Moment On" at one point forgets it's based on a Porter song and borrows from Donna Summer's "I Feel Love." And then there are a few artists who clearly just wanted to have some fun, in particular the teaming of Debbie Harry and Iggy Pop on "Well, Did You Evah?," a song that previously provided comic opportunities to Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. Like most various-artists albums and most tribute albums, this one is wildly uneven; like most charity albums, it's in the service of a good cause. -- William Ruhlmann (allmusic.com)