reason that the Streisand-Gibb team proves to be the most sensational artist-producer duo since Michael Jackson and Quincy Jones created
Off the Wall is that both principals are basically traditional pop sentimentalists who complement each other in convenient ways. Barbra Streisand's steel-belted soprano gives more dramatic authority to Barry Gibb's chromatic miniarias than practically any other voice could. And because Gibb's compositions are bel canto baubles whose lyrics consist mainly of comic blather concerning love, Streisand is spared worrying about what the songs mean. Indeed, Gibb's sweet nothings are so slight that they allow Streisand to
be a love goddess without ever having to think about playing for keeps. Though she was once a great interpretive singer, Barbra Streisand now possesses a larger-than-life image that completely overwhelms her material. These days, whatever she sings becomes an extension of her superstardom: an expression of the triumph of her will rather than a text to be revealed.
Since they're such perfect abstractions of the concept of glamour, Barry Gibb's songs may be the ultimate star vehicles they're pure diaphanous atmosphere. The Rolls Royce-like quality of Gibb's production provides equally ideal transportation, because it shifts straight into fantasy while absolutely ignoring the gears of real life. In Streisand's case, this treatment puts a classy shine on the toughness of her Brooklyn-cum-Malibu chutzpah. As a background vocalist and co-lead singer on two cuts, Gibb is a better partner than either Neil Diamond or Donna Summer, since he never competes with Streisand. Instead, he's like a smart chauffeur, whisking his princess heavenward.
Guilty's sound is an improved, enriched variation of the soul-inflected, Caribbean pop style that Barry Gibb polished on younger brother Andy's After Dark and the Bee Gees' Spirits Having Flown, with little of the latter's funky trim. Here, he's slowed the tempos and thickened the textures to set off yet soften Streisand's wail. But if Guilty is one of the plushest pop albums ever made, it's one of the airiest, too. The arrangements are seldom overbearing, which is quite a feat considering the enormousness of the voice they're surrounding.
More important, Gibb has handed Barbra Streisand some of the prettiest compositions he's written. Song for song, Gu