Barry White | - The Ultimate Collection -2000- -f...

No single-disc collection can contain Barry White’s full genius, and The Ultimate Collection makes a few head-scratching omissions. Where is "Playing Your Game, Baby"? Where is the epic, 10-minute slow-burn of "Love’s Theme" (the instrumental that launched a thousand make-out sessions)? By 2000, Barry had also experienced a massive late-career resurgence thanks to Ally McBeal and The Simpsons , yet the compilation curiously ignores his 90s work—no "Practice What You Preach" or "Put Me in Your Mix." For a set titled The Ultimate , ignoring his second act feels like a slight.

However, one minor critique: the 2000 mastering, while clean, sands off a tiny bit of the analog grit that made the original 70s pressings feel so tactile. It sounds beautiful , but perhaps a little too polite compared to the raw, sweating vinyl of a 1974 nightclub. Barry White - The Ultimate Collection -2000- -F...

What strikes you most when listening to this 2000 remastering is the space . Modern R&B often suffocates under compression, but Barry’s producer brain—he arranged and conducted the Love Unlimited Orchestra himself—understood dynamic range. The bass on "Honey Please, Can’t Ya See" doesn’t just thump; it breathes. The strings on "It’s Ecstasy When You Lay Down Next to Me" aren’t just background; they are a second vocalist, swooning and sighing in response to Barry’s baritone. No single-disc collection can contain Barry White’s full

(Minus half a star for the missing "Love’s Theme" and the sterile 2000 mastering—but plus a full star for reminding us that real romance never goes out of style.) By 2000, Barry had also experienced a massive

Red wine, dim lights, and someone you want to pull a little closer.