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The Preacher's Wife Soundtrack Reviews
From: Los Angeles Times
submitted by: Tom C.
Oh, Whitney--for Heaven's Sake
By Elysa Gardner
The
remake of the 1947 film "The Bishop's Wife" obviously offered Houston more
than just another high-profile acting credit. Playing a woman whose
troubled marriage is saved with the help of an angel (Denzel Washington),
Houston gets an opportunity to sing with a gospel choir--the ultimate
credibility test for an R&B singer. "My beginnings are in gospel music,"
she reminds us in the liner notes. "This is where I'm most comfortable."
What this impeccably produced
album makes clear, though, is that Houston's strong suit and her
comfortable suit are two different outfits. She is first and foremost a
pop diva--at that, the best one we have. No other female pop star--not
Mariah Carey, not Celine Dion, not even Barbra Streisand--quite rivals
Houston in her exquisite vocal fluidity and purity of tone, and her
ability to infuse a lyric with mesmerizing melodrama.
There are several songs in the
soundtrack that subscribe to the Houston formula of lush, sweeping
ballads. "I Believe in You and Me" is a cheesy classic in the tradition of
"I Will Always Love You," with an instantly familiar melody and a
poignant, bolero-like arrangement. "You Were Loved" is a typically banal
Diane Warren composition, but Houston sings the dickens out of it.
On
more upbeat tunes such as Babyface's endearing "My Heart Is Calling" and
"Somebody Bigger Than You and I," a delicious slice of gospel-flavored
funk, Houston shows her soulful side with equal panache (even if she has a
tendency to overdo the obligatory vocal gymnastics at times).
But in her six numbers leading the
Georgia Mass Choir, Houston doesn't succeed quite so spectacularly. The
superstar praises the Lord with obvious conviction and embellishes the
choir's gorgeous ensemble singing with grace and generosity. Still, her
soprano is a bit too pristine to be a great gospel instrument. On Kirk
Franklin's "Joy," she seems to float above the choir like some faraway
angel. Her shiny precision isn't quite right for the driving "I Go to the
Rock," either, although here she's at least grounded somewhat by the
song's earthy energy. On "He's All
Over Me," the legendary gospel singer Shirley Caesar duets with Houston,
and Caesar's gritty, feral performance demonstrates why the younger icon
sounds less authoritative than usual in this context. Houston's voice may
be a gift from God, but that doesn't mean that her talents are best used
in his service.
* * *
Albums are rated on a scale of one
star (poor), two stars (fair), three stars (good) and four stars
(excellent).
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