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Cadillac Soundtrack Doesn't Stack up Against Original Artists

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Jeffrey Wright does Muddy Waters justice, but Beyonc and Mos Def fall short.

Just as Joaquin Phoenix did a marvelous job capturing the music and spirit of Johnny Cash in the film Walk the Line, Jeffrey Wright delivers a knockout portrayal of bluesman Muddy Waters in the recently released period drama Cadillac Records.

The actor's vocal dynamics are so striking on songs “I'm a Man" and “(I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man" that he alone is almost enough to make a winner out of the film's soundtrack, but he doesn't get enough help from his supporting cast.

Beyoncs attempts at the sultry stylings of Etta James and rapper-actor Mos Def's efforts to match the lilt of Chuck Berry fall so short that there's no reason to settle for anything less than the real thing.

Fortunately, some fast-thinking execs at Universal Music Enterprises have put together a rival collection to the soundtrack: The Best of Chess is a 16-track CD that contains the original versions of songs used in the film.

The set not only better salutes the legacy of Chess Records, but it also provides a more engaging look at some of the innocence and passion of rock's first decade.

In fact, the retrospective is so inviting that listeners will be tempted to dig deeper into the back catalog of Chess Records, the celebrated Chicago record company that, along with Atlantic and Sun, was one of the most important labels in the birth of rock 'n' roll.

The music: The retrospective includes the original versions of nine songs that are found on the 13-track single disc edition of the Cadillac Records soundtrack and seven songs featured only on the 26-track, two-disc deluxe edition -- so it's not possible to put Best of Chess against either of the soundtrack packages on a song-by-song basis. But it is possible to rate the versions on Best of Chess against the versions from the film.

Jeffrey Wright's “I'm a Man" versus Bo Diddley's “I'm a Man." In the movie, the song is called “I'm a Man," but Wright performs it more in the aggressive, rock-blues nature of the revised version that Waters titled “Mannish Boy" and recorded in Hard Again, the 1977 album he made after leaving Chess Records. On the Chess compilation, the song is represented by the original Bo Diddley recording of “I'm a Man." In that battle, Wright deserves at least a tie with Diddley because his treatment has more of the power and lust of Waters' rendition. Tie goes to the soundtrack.

Beyonc vs Etta James

Beyonc's “At Last" and “I'd Rather Go Blind" versus Etta James' recordings of the same tunes. Beyonc is a gifted singer, but she's not a great stylist. She can hit all the notes, but she rarely makes us feel the extreme edges of emotion. That's a big limitation for someone who wants to operate in the shadow of James, a master when it comes to conveying what it's like to live through hardship. The difference between the versions of these songs goes a long way toward explaining why Beyonc is known as a pop singer and James a blues singer. Score one for the retrospective.

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