Using her regular touring band and employing
Don Was, an expert on helping pop veterans reclaim the sounds that made them successful,
Bette Midler makes an excellent album to tie in with the premiere of her network television show. Was seems to conceive of
Midler as a kind of pre-rock, neo-Brill Building performer, frequently putting her into mid-tempo pop arrangements of old R&B ballads, here including
Baby Washington's 1960 hit "That's How Heartaches Are Made,"
the Temptations' 1971 hit "Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)" (which here sounds even more like an old Drifters hit than it does usually), and a pair of 1980 titles,
Teddy Pendergrass' "Love TKO" and
the Manhattans' "Shining Star." The album's tour de force, a six-and-a-half-minute version of
Burt Bacharach and
Elvis Costello's "God Give Me Strength," also recalls the Brill Building, as does the bouncy pop tune "Nobody Else but You," co-written by
Midler and
Marc Shaiman to be the theme for the TV show. Was and
Midler also satisfy the need for up-tempo material with a trio of genre exercises, Latin pop in "In These Shoes," mbaqanga in "Moses," and dance in "Bless You Child."
Bette is a tasteful album that showcases
Midler's expressive singing but avoids her excesses. "In These Shoes" is an amusing novelty that does not play too heavily to the singer's broad comic style, while ballads like "Color of Roses" and "When Your Life Was Low" are striking for their restraint, not going for the maudlin extremes
Midler has been guilty of indulging in the past. That means fans of the bawdy
Bette and the bathetic
Bette may be disappointed, but the rest of her followers will enjoy the balance and consistency of this collection. ~ William Ruhlmann