There are early recordings that would probably never have seen the light of day had the artist lived. The compilers have clearly had to pull every trick in the posthumous album book in order to cobble together 45 minutes of music. On the evidence of Lioness: Hidden Treasures, it doesn't sound as if they've got much choice. "This isn't a Tupac situation," offered one of its compilers, producer Salaam Remi, by which he presumably means this is the first and last time Winehouse's stash of unreleased material is going to be raided, in contrast to the mind-boggling 25 albums released in the 15 years since the rapper rattled his clack. It says something about the lowly reputation of the posthumous album that Amy Winehouse's Lioness: Hidden Treasures comes accompanied by an apologetic-sounding assurance.
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