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Billie Davis - Tell Him: The Decca Years [1963-70, 2005 Spectrum Music]⭐

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Billie Davis - Tell Him: The Decca Years [1963-70, 2005 Spectrum Music]⭐

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Category: Music
Total size: 368.60 MB
Added: 3 days ago (2025-08-03 20:47:01)

Share ratio: 21 seeders, 0 leechers
Info Hash: 6EB123ADD4388661B405CB40A92DEF9777E89060
Last updated: 11 minutes ago (2025-08-07 04:38:38)

Description:

Artist: Billie Davis Title: Tell Him: The Decca Years Year Of Release: 1963-70/2005 Label: Spectrum Music/Universal/Decca Genre: Pop, Oldies Quality: Flac (tracks +covers) Total Time: 56:35 Tracklist: 01. I Want You to be My Baby (2:43) 02. Nobody's Home to Go Home To (2:18) 03. Wasn't it You (3:02) 04. I'm in Love With You (2:29) 05. There Must be a Reason (4:17) 06. Living in the Past (3:06) 07. Love to Love (2:48) 08. Darling be Home Soon (3:04) 09. Billy Sunshine (3:23) 10. Make the Feeling Go Away (2:37) 11. Suffer (2:19) 12. I'll Come Home (3:38) 13. Love (3:25) 14. I Can Remember (2:38) 15. Angel of the Morning (3:21) 16. It's Over (2:57) Bonus Tracks - The Early Years: 17. Tell Him (2:15) 18. I'm Thankful (2:16) 19. He's the One (2:00) 20. VIP (2:01) Billie Davis (born Carol Hedges, 22 December 1945, Woking, Surrey, England) is an English female singer who had hits in the 1960s, and is best remembered for the UK hit version of the song, "Tell Him" (1963) and "I Want You to Be My Baby" (1968). This is a superb collection comprised of Billie Davis' singles for England's Decca Records, most of them dating between 1967 and 1970 (with four tracks from her 1963 stint with the label), and augmented with a handful of tracks from her self-titled 1970 album. It's all superb girl group-style pop, with a distinctly American, soulful edge and even an occasional psychedelic intrusion, highlighted by her spirited rendition of "I Want You to Be My Baby" and her impassioned version of "Wasn't It You," among other tracks. There's not a loser in the bunch and, in fact, the songs all show an amazing consistency despite origins as different as Joe Cocker, Carole King, Ian Anderson (yes, she covered "Living in the Past"), and Neil Diamond. Strangely enough, the appending of the four early Decca sides at the end of the CD is sort of jarring, throwing listeners back to an earlier (though still eminently enjoyable) era of British pop/rock. The sound is excellent throughout and the CD comes with an excellent career overview on Davis