Few artists have had a more simpatico relationship with a songwriting team than
Dionne Warwick enjoyed with
Burt Bacharach and
Hal David;
Bacharach and
David wrote the majority of
Warwick's biggest and best-loved hits of the 1960s and ‘70s, and hardly anyone has interpreted their songs with as much grace and intelligence as she brought to her work. Given that
Warwick's early run of chart successes established her as one of the finest pop vocalists of her generation, it's not surprising that she would be eager to cut a new album of
Bacharach and
David material, but
Now, released to mark
Warwick's 50th anniversary as a recording artist, bends this idea in an unfortunate way.
Now is dominated by new performances of
B&D compositions
Warwick recorded in the past (including some of her biggest hits as well as some relative obscurities), along with four newer songs
Bacharach and
David each wrote with other collaborators. The album is lushly produced by Phil Ramone, with arrangements that suggest smooth jazz rather than the adult but AM-friendly pop of
Warwick's heyday, and the accompaniment, expert as it may be, tends to buff down the emotional edges that made these songs so satisfying, and blunting their melodic ingenuity. The new songs are serviceable, but they don't match the high standard of the classics featured elsewhere on the album; however,
Warwick is at her best on the fresher material, where she shows she's still a song stylist of considerable talent and keen instincts. It's the remakes that call her current abilities into question: on "(There's) Always Something There to Remind Me," "Don't Make Me Over," and "Make It Easy on Yourself,"
Warwick sings the songs in a lower key that she did in the original versions, and the comparison reveals her upper register has been worn by time and her instrument isn't as supple as it once was.
Warwick is still a fine, thoughtful vocalist by any standard, but these new interpretations force the 72-year-old singer to compete with her twenty-something self, and though her wealth of experience certainly shows, the physical limitations of her voice, coupled with the overly slick production, make these new recordings noticeably inferior to the originals. If
Dionne Warwick had chosen to record a set of classic standards (or
Bacharach &
David tunes that had eluded her in the past),
Now could have been a real late-career winner; as it is, it simply reveals she still sounds great, but not as great as she once did, and you'll probably be more likely to reach for your copy of The Dionne Warwick Collection: Her All-Time Greatest Hits than to spin this again. ~ Mark Deming