In these voyeuristic days, putting heartache on display involves creating a reality show named “Crumbling Relationships” and letting loose the TormentCamTM. A much lower-tech method was used back in the day: Hand a deep-soul singer a ballad of romantic misery and say, “Make it hurt.” Lee Moses, his voice possessing the natural rawness, cracks, and soars needed to both wound and sound wounded, could make it hurt. He didn’t get the opportunity to do it often enough; this 23-song set collects all his known solo recordings. (Moses, who died in 1997, was also a busy guitarist who shared sessions with a pre-fame Jimi Hendrix.) At the center is his only LP, 1971’s Time And Place. It’s a testament to Moses’ versatility that the record’s title track (presented at more of a gallop than most slipping-around songs) sits alongside the catchy, name-checking funk of “Got That Will” and takes on “California Dreaming” and “Hey Joe” that wouldn’t have been out-of-place on the Isley Brothers’ soul-rock gem Givin’ It Back from that same year. But Moses’ best moment was recorded three years earlier. His “If Loving You Is A Crime (I’ll Always Be Guilty)” is, risking blasphemy charges, equal to Luther Ingram’s “(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don’t Want To Be Right” when it comes to “If Loving You” songs.