Between 1962 and 1971, Dionne Warwick put New York's Scepter Records on the map with over fifteen original albums and forty chart hits, more than twenty of which reached the top 40. Seven hit the top ten. Dionne earned her first two Grammy Awards during this period for "Do You Know the Way to San Jose" and "I'll Never Fall in Love Again" - just two of the timeless songs of Burt Bacharach and Hal David which she brought to stunning life. In 1971, though, Warwick made the move to Burbank, California-based Warner Bros. Records. As she remembered in her 2010 memoir My Life, As I See It, "[Scepter founder Florence Greenberg] would soon be closing [the label's] doors, and I felt like I was being forced to leave my mother and sent to live with an uncle I did not know." Nonetheless, she felt supported by WB Chairman Mo Ostin and President Joe Smith: "I was promised the world: the same care that was given me at Scepter. They said I would be well-promoted, produced at the same high level, and given the full support of concerts." She remained at Warner Bros. through 1977, recording five very different albums, not to mention a host of non-LP singles and over two dozen unreleased masters. On February 17, 2023, SoulMusic Records and Cherry Red will bring together every one of those richly varied recordings on a new 6-CD, 85-track box set, Sure Thing: The Warner Bros. Recordings (1972-1977).
This was a period of creative exploration for the superstar singer in which she brought her trademark elegant sound into the realms of Detroit and Philadelphia soul, gleaming SoCal pop, and deep soul. (She also briefly added an "e" to her surname during this time.) Amid all this activity, her duet with Warner Bros. sister label Atlantic's top vocal group, The (Detroit) Spinners, yielded her very first No. 1 hit on the Hot 100, the irresistible Thom Bell-produced "Then Came You." Though frequently overlooked, Dionne's Warner period bridges the storied Scepter period and her return to chart glory at Clive Davis' Arista label. (That period was chronicled in 2020 on SoulMusic Records' 12-CD box set Déjà Vu: The Arista Recordings (1979-1994).)
Sure Thing: The Warner Bros. Recordings (1972-1977) includes the following albums:
- Dionne (1972, produced by Burt Bacharach and Hal David);
- Just Being Myself (1973, produced by Holland-Dozier-Holland) plus 6 bonus tracks;
- You Are a Song: The 1973-1974 Sessions (2023, 16-song compilation);
- Then Came You (1975, produced by Jerry Ragovoy and Thom Bell) plus 2 bonus tracks;
- Track of the Cat (1975, produced by Thom Bell) plus 7 bonus tracks; and
- Love at First Sight (1977, produced by Steve Barri and Michael Omartian) plus 9 bonus tracks.
This adds up to the most comprehensive chronicle of Warwick's Warner Bros. period ever, with 40 additional recordings supplementing the five original albums. You Are a Song: The 1973-1974 Sessions presents the artist's collaborations with Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson (including the previously unreleased, full-length version of "We Need to Go Back" which clocks in at over seven minutes), Randy Edelman, and Tony Camillo (whose seven productions for Dionne, previously released by the late producer on various European CDs, are making their official debut here as licensed from Warner Music Group) as well as the 1974 reunion session with composer-conductor-producer Burt Bacharach which yielded three extraordinary and musically expansive songs with lyrics by Neil Simon and Bobby Russell.
All of the album outtakes which premiered on Real Gone Music's remarkable 2013 compilation We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters have been appended to their proper LPs, including stellar material helmed by Holland-Dozier-Holland, Jerry Ragovoy, Thom Bell, and the team of Steve Barri and Michael Omartian. All seven productions recorded by Dionne with Joe Porter in 1976, only two of which were released at the time, are also included on the Love at First Sight disc and compiled together for the first time. Finally, numerous unique single edits/mixes (including the extended version of "Track of the Cat") and "Just As Long as We Have Love," the B-side of the chart-topping "Then Came You," are part of this deluxe package.
Sure Thing has been co-produced by SoulMusic Records founder David Nathan and The Second Disc's Joe Marchese. Its six discs are housed in a clamshell case alongside a thick 40-page, full-color booklet with rare color photos and a new, near-10,000-word essay by Joe Marchese drawing on previously unpublished quotes from Dionne Warwick, Burt Bacharach, Thom Bell, and Brian Holland. A full Warner-era sessionography by David Nathan is also included. John Sellards has contributed the artwork in the SoulMusic style and Nick Robbins has newly remastered the audio from digital sources provided by Warner Music Group.
Sure Thing: The Warner Bros. Recordings (1972-1977) promises to be the definitive chronicle of Dionne Warwick's years at the label, placing her five albums and 40 bonus tracks in full, illuminating context for the first time. It's due on February 17 from Cherry Red and SoulMusic Records and is currently available for pre-order!
Dionne Warwick, Sure Thing: The Warner Bros. Recordings (1972-1977) (Cherry Red/SoulMusic QSMCR5207BX, 2023) (Cherry Red / Amazon U.S. / Amazon U.K. / Amazon Canada)
CD 1: Dionne (Warner Bros. LP BS 2585, 1972)
- I Just Have To Breathe
- The Balance Of Nature
- If You Never Say Goodbye
- Close To You
- My First Night Alone Without You
- Be Aware
- Love Song
- One Less Bell To Answer
- If We Only Have Love
- Hasbrook Heights
CD 2: Just Being Myself: Expanded Edition (Warner Bros. LP BS 2658, 1973)
- You're Gonna Need Me
- I Think You Need Love
- You Are The Heart Of Me
- I Always Get Caught In The Rain
- Don't Let My Teardrops Bother You
- (I'm) Just Being Myself
- Come Back
- Don't Burn The Bridge (That Took You Across)
Bonus Tracks
- Too Far Out Of Reach (first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
- It Hurts Me So (first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
- I Think You Need Love (Single Edit) (Warner Bros. single WB 7669-A, 1973)
- Don't Let My Teardrops Bother You (Single Edit) (Warner Bros. single WB 7669-B, 1973)
- (I'm) Just Being Myself (Single Edit) (Warner Bros. single 7693-A, 1973)
- You're Gonna Need Me (Single Edit) (Warner Bros. single 7693-B, 1973)
CD 3: You Are a Song: The 1973-1974 Sessions
- We Need To Go Back (Extended Version)
- Someone Else Gets The Prize
- We Need To Go Back
- You Are The Sunlight, I Am The Moon
- The Laughter And The Tears
- Give A Little Laughter
- Seeing You Again
- Loving You Is Just An Old Habit
- Best Thing That Ever Happened
- You Are A Song
- The Need To Be
- In Between The Heartaches
- Don't Say I Didn't Tell You So
- And Then You Know What He Did
- And Then He Walked Right Through The Door
- Plastic City
Track 1 previously unreleased
Tracks 2-6, 14-16 first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013
Tracks 7-13 previously unreleased officially; first issued on Divas of Soul, Venture Music Group 50163392, 1999
CD 4: Then Came You: Expanded Edition (Warner Bros. LP BS 2846, 1975)
- Take It From Me
- We'll Burn Our Bridges Behind Us
- Sure Thing
- Then Came You (Dionne Warwick & The Spinners)
- How Can I Tell Him
- Move Me No Mountain
- I Can't Wait To See My Baby's Face
- It's Magic
- Who Knows
- Getting In My Way
Bonus Tracks
- Meant To Be (first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
- Just As Long As We Have Love (Dionne Warwick & The Spinners) (Atlantic single 45-3202, 1974)
CD 5: Track of the Cat: Expanded Edition (Warner Bros. LP BS 2893, 1975)
- Track Of The Cat
- His House And Me
- Ronnie Lee
- World Of My Dreams
- Jealousy
- This Is Love
- Love Me One More Time
- Once You Hit The Road
Bonus Tracks
- One Last Memory (first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
- I Found Someone Else (first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
- Once You Hit The Road (12" Special Disco Mix) (Warner Bros. promotional single PRO 614, 1976)
- World Of My Dreams (Edit) (Warner Bros. single WBS 8154-B, 1975)
- Once You Hit The Road (Edit) (Warner Bros. single WBS 8154-A, 1975)
- His House And Me (Edit) (Warner Bros. single WBS 8183-A, 1976)
- I Didn't Mean To Love You (Stereo Version Edit) (Warner Bros. promotional single WBS 8280, 1976)
CD 6: The 1976 Sessions / Love at First Sight: Expanded Edition (Warner Bros. LP BS 3119, 1977)
The 1976 Sessions (Tracks 3-7 first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
- He's Not For You (Warner Bros. single WBS 8280-B, 1976)
- I Didn't Mean To Love You (Warner Bros. single WBS 8280-A, 1976)
- I'll Never Make It Easy
- Am I Too Late
- Rest Your Love On Me
- Make A Little Love To Me
- Keep Me Warm
Love at First Sight
- Keepin' My Head Above Water
- Love In The Afternoon
- A Long Way To Go
- Do I Have To Cry
- Don't Ever Take Your Love Away
- One Thing On My Mind
- Early Morning Strangers
- Livin' It Up Is Starting To Get Me Down
- Since You Stayed Here
- Do You Believe In Love At First Sight
Bonus Tracks
- Don't Ever Take Your Love Away (Edit) (Warner Bros. single WBS 8530, 1978)
- Room Enough (first released on We Need to Go Back: The Unissued Warner Bros. Masters, Real Gone Music CD RGM-0170, 2013)
Robert Lett says
This looks fantastic, pre ordered it!
Joe Marchese says
Thanks, Rob!
Larry Davis says
Woah, I have the 2CD Real Gone set of Warner recordings...time to sell or trade it cuz this looks way better and complete...I will get the Arista box too...there isn't one for her Scepter years, is there?? I do have the CD of Scepter outtakes with many foreign language tracks from Real Gone...
Joe Marchese says
There isn't a similar Scepter box, but we sure hope one is possible in the future to complement the WB and Arista sets. 🙂 Hope you enjoy this one, Larry!
Kenny says
The closest there's been to a box set is Edsel's double disc sets of all of Dionne's Scepter albums. Came out around 2014 but seem hard to find these days.
Larry Davis says
Thanks, but being there are many of those twofers, prob pricey too, I will get an inexpensive comp of Scepter hits & hold out for a big Scepter box (I got the wink wink from the emoji, signaling to me that one is def in the works)...I'll start with the Warner box which I just pre-ordered, then will go with the Aristaset, then look out for the Scepter one...
Eric Henwood-Greer says
We are getting a set of all the Scepter singles in April. For myself? I have the first two Edsel four disc sets and then I have the rest of the Scepter albums through the Rhino Handmaid limited editions that came out 15 (?) years back, which didn't cover those first 8 albums, so I'm happy just keeping those which sound as good as possible to me.
One thing--it seems the version of I Didn't Mean to Love You on this box set is a 4 minute edit of the 6 minute original which is full on the Real Gone set. Which is too bad, as it's one of favourite non-Bacharach Dionne recordings, if not my absolute favourite. So I'll hang on to my original 😉
Joe Marchese says
Hi Eric, the full-length 6:06 version of "I Didn't Mean to Love You" is on Disc 6 of the new box set. The single edit (4:10) is on Disc 5. It had to be shifted to the TRACK OF THE CAT disc for timing reasons.
Eric Henwood-Greer says
HA! Well I completely missed that (my boxset is somewhere in the mail 😉 ) Good to hear!!
zubb says
I am in on this set. Worth it for the Thom Bell tracks alone, the rest is icing on the cake! Nice price too!
zally says
warner bros did NOTHING to keep the career of dionne in the publics eye. mo ostin and joe smith were fans but the warners team seemed not to care. too bad there some really good songs on these cds, it took clive davis to get her back on the charts, just look at another artist like carlos santana. columbia DID nothing but release lp after lp , it took again clive davis to bring him back again.
Larry Davis says
Regarding Santana, he/they did not go straight from Columbia to Arista, you forgot the 90s Island albums in-between...don't think those sold much either...
Raymond Frenchmore says
Excellent set--ordered!
Any chance of THE LOVE MACHINE soundtrack getting a CD release?
Eric Henwood-Greer says
You're probably aware but Dionne's two vocal tracks from Love Machine, He's Moving On (theme) and Amanda (both arranged, but not by, Bacharach) are on her Odds and Ends Scepter Records Rarities CD. They also appear to be both on the forthcoming Scepter Singles box set.
Howard Blount says
I have virtually everything Dionne, and will definitely be getting this one, even though it overlaps other CDs in my collection. I have all of the double-disc Scepter releases, but a similar treatment like the WB and Arista boxed sets would be amazing. NOW, I have another proposal . . . . What would be the chances of getting a set of Dionne's live performances from her tenure as host on Solid Gold? Anyone?
Rhubarb says
There are so many gems from Solid Gold. Her professionalism was incredible, offering often two or three performances a week, partly with entirely new material for her, like the current hit from another performer. Her short version of Aretha's "Who's Zoomin' Who" absolutely kills. What a brave thing to try and get into /that/ competition.
Rhubarb says
I don't mind some overlap, it's Dionne! Hearing the outtakes in proper context will provide an interesting new listening experience. And I'm sure the booklet will be worth the price alone, as it was in the Arista set.
Roy Sanders says
I hope to get them soon
Eric Henwood-Greer says
I have a question about the mastering on the Arista box set, and this seemed the only place some people might see this post.
On disc 7, Finder of Lost Loves, track four, which is Finder of Lost Loves (duet with Glenn Jones version) I only noticed recently when I had digitized the disc and listened to it through headphones on my iPod that there seems to be a very brief drop out in the right track right between 2:12-2:14 minutes in. Have others noticed this? (yes I can be OCD) I listened to a previous release I had of the album before the box set remastering and it seems like maybe it was present then too but the remaster makes it more obvious? Am I crazy? *don't answer that*