Betty Harris' solid 1960s work with New Orleans songwriter and producer
Allen Toussaint certainly deserved more audience and attention than it got at the time, and this fine compilation is the proof of that. Songs like "I Don't Want to Hear It," "Sometime," "Nearer to You" (which was a Top 40 R&B hit), and the stone-driving, funky "There's a Break in the Road" all show a solid soul singer working with top-notch material and the production by
Toussaint is appropriately spooky, atmospheric, and dripping with New Orleans soulfulness. Also included here is
Harris' pre-
Toussaint cover of
Solomon Burke's "Cry to Me," which she recorded in 1963 for Jubilee Records, and her version is definitive, no easy accomplishment when you're up against a singer as good as
Burke. WestSide's 1998 anthology, Soul Perfection Plus, has everything here plus a few more additional tracks, but
Lost Soul Queen has the essential stuff, and either collection will get you there.