| 1. Words |
| 2. Let This Party Never End |
| 3. You |
| 4. Stuck On You |
| 5. Get Here |
| 6. Fly Away |
| 7. Partytime On Planet Earth |
| 8. I Promise My Love To You |
| 9. Mystic Symphony |
| 10. Partytrain |
| 11. Around The World |
| 12. Words (Lichtenfels Remix) |
| 13. Words (Club Version) |
| 14. Stuck On You (Club Version) |
| 15. Stuck On You (Dj Cosmo Remix) |
| 16. Let This Party Never End (Rocco Remix) |
| 17. Let This Party Never End (Club Version) |
Editorial Reviews
Asian pressing of the Euro-dance act's 2004 album includes one bonus track, 'Let This Party Never End', & a bonus disc with six tracks, 'Words' (Lichtenfels Remix, Club Version), 'Stuck On You' (Club Version, DJ Cosmo Remix), & 'Let This Party Never End' (Rocco Remix & Club Version). EQ Music.
More Than Words,Mark Oh,Eq Music,Dance
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Tick, Tick... Boom! (2001 Original Off-Broadway Cast)
Jonathan Larson , Amy Spanger , and Raul Esparza Manufacturer: RCA Victor Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005NQK5 Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- 30/90
- Green Green Dress
- Johnny Can't Decide
- Sunday
- No More
- Therapy
- Real Life
- Sugar
- See Her Smile
- Come To Your Senses
- Why
- Louder Than Words
- Boho Days
- 30/90 Playout
Amazon.com
Rent is usually treated as Jonathan Larson's one and only show, but the truth is that he had a career--albeit a hitless one--before that blockbuster. There was a musical titled JP Morgan Saves the Nation with lyrics by Jeffrey M. Jones and music by Larson. And there was Tick, Tick... Boom!, an autobiographical piece that Larson workshopped for a while before setting it aside and finishing Rent.In 2001, Tick, Tick is getting a full off-Broadway production, and it's a rather endearing one. Lyrics have never been Larson's strong point, but he was a hell of a melodic composer--and the score here is even poppier than that of Rent (think Top 40 rather than Sondheim). It's hard to pick favorite songs: "Green Green Dress" is built on a rollicking piano boogie, for instance, and "Real Life" and "See Her Smile" are the kind of elegiac ballad that Larson would later perfect with "Seasons of Love." Luckily, this show has a lot more to offer than mere youthful musings. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
Customer Reviews:
A Vocally Dazzling Esparza Rides High on an Exuberant Pre-"Rent" Larson Score.......2007-06-16
However, it is the familiar Larson sound of Rent that is heard most in this score - driving, rock-out rhythms with unavoidable pop hooks and yearning, piano-driven ballads. Even the opener, "30/90", is a virtual sound-alike of the bigger show's title tune. If the songs are not quite as polished or even memorable as those in Rent, they feel more personal because the autobiographical story is far more intimate in scale. Set in 1990 in the same SoHo neighborhood as Rent, it's a simple three-character piece about Jon, an aspiring composer who considers giving up his dreams on the verge of his 30th birthday. With charismatic fire, Esparza is equally adept using his beautifully expressive voice in a rock milieu as in a Sondheim character study. He brings energetic brio to finger-snapping rockers like the Twinkie-induced "Sugar" and especially shines on the ballads, "See Her Smile" and the revelatory "Why".
With a slightly pinched voice that reminds me a bit of the Bangles' Susanna Hoffs, Amy Spanger as girlfriend Susan duets nicely with Esparza on the touching "Johnny Can't Decide", the rocking "Green Green Dress", and the comical self-help wordplay of "Therapy". Her shining solo moment comes with the knockout ballad, "Come to Your Senses". As Jon's embattled pal Michael, Jerry Dixon provides powerful vocals, bringing particular warmth to "Real Life" and grit to the fed-up rave "No More". The trio closes the show powerfully with the anthem-like "Louder Than Words". The overall score is a bit derivative and a tad too earnest, but the youthful zest of the cast and Larson's pop craftsmanship more than compensate. Two bonus tracks are offered at the end - an instrumental replay of the opener, "30/90 Playout" and a rare recording of Larson singing "Boho Days" a capella with propulsive hand claps.
Great tunes - great lyrics - great harmonies.......2006-11-04
I hope you like it... The theme is "Actions Speak Louder Than Words" rings true today as the day he wrote it.
John we miss you.
Love the Music.......2006-08-22
Larson Lives.......2006-05-06
Fantastic Music, but i wouldnt want to see it live.......2006-04-30
30/90
Green Green Dress
No More
Sugar
Come To Your Senses (originally from Superbia)
Louder Than Words
and i also enjoy the rest of the songs as well.
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More Than Words: The Best of Kevin Kern
Kevin Kern Manufacturer: Real Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006HIBD Release Date: 2002-09-03 |
Tracks:
- Above the Clouds
- Sundial Dreams
- Out of the Darkness
- In My Life
- Through the Arbor
- From This Day Forward
- Threads of Light
- Pastel Reflections
- We All Fall in Love Sometimes
Album Description
From five highly successful and internationally acclaimed albums comes a wondrous collection of favorite Kevin Kern's classics. Fourteen songs, including new compositions for this collection, to heal, uplift or simply bring a smile of tranquility to the listener.Customer Reviews:
More Than Anything.......2007-02-03
Kern's music does not deviate from his New Age roots - there is still the fair amount of humming and the genteel of the tunes are much different from what is on other piano CDs out there.
It is wonderfully crafted, from a true master, and it brings a smile to anyone's face. This music is a reprieve from busy business worlds and brings to life a whole other world of magic and enchanting song.
Describing "More Than Words".......2006-11-13
Words Not Needed.......2002-10-06
If I'd Only Known!.......2002-09-19
the very best of Kevin Kern....just beautiful........2002-09-12
If you are a writer like I am and you are looking for something to inspire you to write that romantic poem or two, then this is the CD that will do it for you.
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Mendelssohn: The Masterworks [Box Set]
Manufacturer: Brilliant Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00062FLJ2 Release Date: 2004-11-30 |
Customer Reviews:
Uneven quality but great value.......2007-04-30
Despite these shortcomings, this set is still good value (at least at Amazon France's current price of 31 Euros). And it's a fine way to become acquainted with Mendelssohn's music.
A superb collection of Mendelssohn.......2007-03-24
The symphonies are well-performed. 'Reformation' is an inspired live recording. The 12 string symphonies, written in Mendelssohn's youth, are also included. The concertos are exceptional - the violin concerto is as good as you'll find anywhere. The oratorios Elijah and Paulus are included, as well as the complete chamber works and a diverse assortment of choral works. The last few discs include the Lied ohne worte, the epic organ sonatas, and excellent renditions of A Midsummer Night's Dream and Fingal's Cave. While there are a few sketchy performances in the choral and chamber works, the performances and recordings are generally very solid, and the body of work couldn't be better.
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The Copland Collection: Orchestral & Ballet Works, 1936-1948
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000027BJ Release Date: 1991-01-18 |
Tracks:
- El Salon Mexico
- An Outdoor Overture
- Billy The Kid: Introduction: The Open Prairie
- Billy The Kid: Street In A Frontier Town
- Billy The Kid: Prairie Night (Card Game At Night)
- Billy The Kid: Gun Battle
- Billy The Kid: Celebration (After Billy's Capture)
- Billy The Kid: Billy's Death
- Billy The Kid: The Open Prairie Again
- Quiet City
- John Henry
- Our Town
- Las Agachadas
- Fanfare For The Common Man
Tracks:
- Rodeo (Four Dance Episodes): I. Buckaroo Holiday
- Rodeo (Four Dance Episodes): II. Corral Nocturne
- Rodeo (Four Dance Episodes): III. Saturday Night Waltz
- Rodeo (Four Dance Episodes): IV. Hoedown
- The City: New England Countryside
- Of Mice And Men: Barley Wagons
- The City: Sunday Traffic
- Our Town: Grovers Corners
- Of Mice And Men: Threshing Machines
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Very Slow
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Fast
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Moderato
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Fast
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Still Faster
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): As At First (Slowly)
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Calm And flowing
- Appalachian Spring (Suite From The Ballet): Moderato; Coda
- Letter From Home
- Danzon Cubano
Tracks:
- Lincoln Portrait: Lento
- Lincoln Portrait: Subito Allegro
- Lincoln Portrait: 'Fellow Citizens, We Cannot Escape History...'
- Symphony No. 3: I. Molto Moderato-With Simple Expression
- Symphony No. 3: II. Allegro Molto
- Symphony No. 3: III. Andantino Quasi Allegretto
- Symphony No. 3: IV. Molto Deliberato
- Concerto For Clarinet, Strings, Harp, & Piano
Amazon.com
Aaron Copland made numerous recordings of his own music, including an extensive series for CBS during the 1960s and '70s, mostly with London orchestras. He was not an especially proficient conductor--consequently, the performances he conducted often lacked pace and rhythmic punch. His last recordings of his most popular scores have been reissued by Sony on an exceptionally well-remastered 3-CD set. These accounts do a good job of conveying the overall shape of the pieces, and they deliver telling characterizations of many episodes. Details emerge that are lost in some other accounts, and there is an appealing gentleness and sweetness to the approach. But the readings do not have as much grip as those of Bernstein and Slatkin, among others, and in spite of the authority they automatically possess, they are not necessarily preferable. --Ted LibbeyCustomer Reviews:
Bought this for Concerto for Clarinet.......2007-07-14
An added plus is the many other popular pieces that you know you heard but did not realize it was Copland especially the music from movies.
You may have to play the set a few times before being able to recognize the different tracks by name. The down side is many of Copland's works are outside of the date range of this collection.
Aaron Copland: Populist and Conductor.......2005-03-29
What amazing riches flowed from Copland's pen during the period covered by these three discs! Billy the Kid (1939), Quiet City (1940), Our Town (1940), Fanfare for the Common Man (1942), Rodeo (1942), Lincoln Portrait (1942), Appalachian Spring (1944), and the Third Symphony (1946)--all are here. Some of this music is so familiar, so deeply ingrained in America's cultural consciousness, that we might be tempted to take it for granted. But imagine how much poorer the American concert repertoire would be without it. It's almost impossible, at this point, to conceive of a time when this wonderful music--which is to America roughly what Mussorgsky's music is to Russia, Grieg's to Norway, and Falla's to Spain--didn't exist. It was during the dozen years covered by this collection that Copland pulled away from the pack of his talented contemporaries (Hanson, Thomson, Harris, etc.) and, in a way, but with greater technical sophistication, filled the void left by the tragically early death of Gershwin, whose heyday, 1924-1935, immediately preceded the composition of the works on this collection.
The ballet music is all presented here in the familiar orchestral suites Copland arranged. Most of the selections are played by the London Symphony Orchestra, although the New Philharmonia and the just-plain Philharmonia get cracks at a few key works. The last-named orchestra, for instance, takes on the biggest piece on the program, Copland's Third, the closest thing American music has to a Beethoven's Ninth (although the work's sublime rhetoric has never completely convinced me--it's neither my personal favorite by Copland nor my favorite American symphony . . . but it sure has its moments). In addition to the fine orchestral playing, another treat is that Henry Fonda narrates the Lincoln Portrait--an almost inevitable pick, given the virtually mythic way his acting style embodied the American spirit and the fact that he had portrayed the sixteenth president in John Ford's classic film Young Mr. Lincoln (1939).
The set concludes with what, over the years, has become my favorite work by Copland, the Concerto for Clarinet, Strings, Harp, & Piano, written for and performed here by surely the last century's greatest clarinetist, Benny Goodman. This work effects a concise synthesis between Copland's mature style and his earlier jazz stylings from the 1920s; in addition, the searing eloquence of the opening slow movement seems to me the most profound lyrical writing Copland ever achieved. Stoltzman's recording, ironically enough, swings harder than the king of swing's, but this collaboration between the composer and the man who commissioned it is for the ages.
The only major "populist" scores written after the period this collection covers are the film scores to The Red Pony (1948) and The Heiress (1949). Both can be acquired on an essential Leonard Slatkin CD for RCA. And since this collection doesn't include chamber music, the great Violin Sonata (1943), a kind of more intimate counterpart to Appalachian Spring, will have to be sought elsewhere. (One good option is Gil Shaham/Andre Previn on DG.) A serious Copland collector will also want to grab the other two volumes of the Copland Collection itself. The early set features important works such as the Organ Symphony (1924), Music for the Theater (1925), and the Short Symphony (1932)--but both of the other collections also include long, thorny pieces like the early Symphonic Ode and the late Connotations that can be rather difficult for the average enthusiast to enjoy.
Most of the essential, universal Copland is to be found on this second installment of the Copland Collection, and I would definitely recommend it as the place to start exploring Copland's magnificent contribution to American music. It has been a wonderful and treasured companion of mine for many years, and it also serves to conjure up a timely and inspiring vision of open prairies, nocturnal cityscapes, and the populist, humane values that America should, ideally, epitomize.
Tribute to Lincoln.......2001-10-28
A great way to get your dose of Copland...........2000-06-30
Well balanced retrospective, -or- Listen to this!.......1999-08-11
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Windham Hill: Romantics - Romantic Music of the 19th Century
Manufacturer: Windham Hill Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000NKX Release Date: 1995-08-15 |
Tracks:
- Vocalise, Op. 34, No. 14: Vocalise - Eugene Friesen
- Carmen: Intermezzo - Tracy Silverman
- Nocturne in E Minor, Op. 72, No. 1: Nocturne in E Minor - Steve Erquiaga
- Songs Without Words, Op. 19, No. 2: Songs Without Words - Paul McCandless
- Prelude in E Minor, Op. 28, No. 4: Prelude in E Minor - Philip Aaberg
- Nocturne From String Quartet No. 2 - Turtle Island String Quartet
- Mazurka No. 4, Op. 17, No.4: Mazurka No. 4 - Liz Story
- Madchenlied, Op. 85. No. 3: Madchenlied - Wayne Horvitz
- Gott Im Fruhling - Nightnoise
- Prelude in C Minor, Op. 28, No. 20: Prelude in C Minor - Richard Schonherz
- Songs Without Words: Duet - Philip Aaberg
- Intermezzo in A, Op. 118, No. 2: Intermezzo in A - Modern Mandolin Quartet
- Peer Gynt Suite: The Death of Ase - Tim Story
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More Than Words Can Say
Stevie Holland , and Stevie Holland Manufacturer: 150 Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FDEDIM Release Date: 2006-05-23 |
Tracks:
- Only You
- Yesterdays
- If Ever I Would Leave You
- This Is It
- Lovingly
- By Myself
- Firefly
- Day By Day
- "Murder", He Says
- Evening Song
- Desafinado
- More Than Words Can Say
Product Description
MORE THAN WORDS CAN SAY is Stevie Hollands most soulful, swinging and bold CD to date. Arranged and orchestrated by award winning composer Gary William Friedman, MORE THAN WORDS CAN SAY explores classic jazz standards, songs from the 50s and 70s and some original songs with exciting, innovative and haunting approaches. Stevie is backed by a string orchestra on several selections and by some of todays hottest jazz musicians led by pianists Martin Bejerano and Kris Davis.Customer Reviews:
5 Stars for the Singer.......2007-07-07
What can I say, but thank you, compadre!
Stevie Holland is a terrific singer. She reminds me a lot of Ann Hampton Callaway and Jackie Ryan, both for the richness of her singing voice and for her range of styles. Whether a growling, shouting blues ("Only You"), standards jazz ("Day By Day" and "Desafinado"), cabaret ("If Ever I Would Leave You") or some killer originals ("Firefly" and "Evening Song"--both my favorites on this disc), Ms. Holland shines impressively.
The backup musicians are equally great. I'm not familiar with any of them, but everything sounds appropriate and accomplished. And Danny Lawrence and Sarah Register have done terrific jobs in recording, mixing, engineering and mastering this c.d. This is one that sounds great on a killer sound system!
When a c.d. sounds this good, though, the producer usually deserves the most kudos, and this disc is no exception. The producers here are Gary William Friedman and Tim Peierls, and Mr. Friedman did quintuple duty as arranger, orchestrator, conductor and on "Lovingly", "Evening Song" and the title track, songwriter. In many ways, this c.d. belongs as much to him as to Ms. Holland.
Nonetheless, there's a reason for the title of this review: it is Ms. Holland's voice, first and foremost, that distinguishes this album. My only critique of this c.d. is that it's another "here's 12 songs that I like" disc. I.e., what's it really all about? I've downgraded other discs for this reason. Not this time, though. Stevie Holland is too good, and this disc sounds too good, to downgrade for that reason.
I suspect that Stevie Holland--even though she's been around for awhile--has only scratched the surface. And this is a surface worth exploring. Highly recommended. RC
More Than Words Can Say.......2006-11-17
"Now The Song Is Different And The Words Don't Even Rhyme. . . Cause You Forgot The Melody Our Hearts Would Always Croon" .......2006-10-16
"Love is like a never ending melody
Poets have compared it to a symphony
A symphony conducted by the lighting of the moon
But our song of love is slightly out of tune
Once your kisses raised me to a fever pitch
Now the orchestration doesn't seem so rich
It seems to me you've changed the tune we used to sing
Like the Bossa Nova, love should swing
We used to harmonize two souls in perfect time
Now the song is different and the words don't even rhyme
Cause you forgot the melody our hearts would always croon
So what good's a heart that's slightly out of tune?
Tune your heart to mine the way it used to be
Join with me in harmony and sing a song of loving
We're bound to get in tune again before too long
There'll be no Desafinado
When your heart belongs to me completely
Then you won't be slightly out of tune
You'll sing along with me."
Yes, it's Desafinado (Slightly Out of Tune) - music by Antonio Carlos Jobim and English lyrics by Jon Hendricks & Jessie Cavanaugh. I just love this song. Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald recorded it and now a new enchanting version is here in this CD.
Not knowing what to expect how she delivers since this is my very first Stevie Holland CD, I was so eager to listen to this collection, which offers an impressive combination of classic standards, Bossa Nova, some songs from the fifties and seventies and some of her original songs. For an opener, Ms. Holland takes us back in time when "Only You" was the number one hit and she gives this song a whole new charm with that notable sax solo by Ole Mathisen. After listening to it and a swingy yet samba-ish version of Jerome Kern/Otto Harbach's chestnut "Yesterdays," I was hooked and couldn't wait to savor the rest of the tracks. Lerner & Loewe's "If Ever I Would Leave You" simply blew me away from the very first bar to the last! It's so breathtakingly beautiful. Her voice glows all throughout the song. Its arrangement is flawless and Martin Bejerano shines on the piano solo.
My ears perked up listening to her dazzling take on "Day By Day," the jazziest track with mambo-ish cadence. She's so at-ease interpreting songs with Latin-flavored-arrangements like my number one choice, "Desafinado." She gave this charming Bossa Nova gem the retire-the-trophy treatment and made it her own. Sean Harkness' stellar guitar solo reminds me of guitar virtuoso Wes Montgomery.
Adding to the sheer beauty of these recordings are the talents and efforts of a bevy of fine musicians: award winning and a brilliant composer/arranger/conductor Gary William Friedman, Martin Bejerano and Kris Davis (piano), Hans Glawischnig and Rob Jost (bass), Einar Scheving and Jeff Davis (drums), Sean Harkness (guitar), Ole Mathisen (saxophone) and Lauren Riley (cello) and the Strings Orchestra.
I can say that Ms. Holland's musicality is deeply rooted, which is an important factor in attaining stardom in the music world. And she doesn't only have that exquisite voice but also an incredible talent in songwriting. Some of her original songs are highlighted in this CD, "Firefly" and a sweet song with intelligent lyrics that she co-wrote with Gary William Friedman, "Evening Song."
"Warm summers in the garden
Music would fill the air
There was a time of beauty and rhyme
When magic was ours to share
Life moves along too quickly
When will we ever learn
Soon comes goodbye, with no reason why
And yesterdays can't return."
The title track and also one that she co-wrote with Mr. Friedman, "More Than Words Can Say," is a song with a strong melody that caught my ears and I've been singing it in my heart and one of my favorites now. Her rich tonal quality and unflawed phrasing can't go unnoticed.
"You know just where my heart is
You carry it from day to day
You know what I feel is
More than words can say . . .
I'll tell you every morning
Tell you every evening
Tell you that I love you more than words can say
I love you more than words can ever say
I love you more than words can say."
To sum it up, this CD is a keeper and I've enjoyed every minute of my listening session. Who wouldn't be enthralled by her voice? She sings with finesse and a style that caresses the melodies and gives the lyrics justice with her perfect phrasing and colorful renditions. Hers is the kind of voice that has the power to move the listeners to mixed emotions - that of pure joy or certain sadness.
I'll certainly check her other CDs out - "Restless Willow," "Almost Like Being In Love" and "Do You Ever Dream?"
With my heartfelt recommendation for your listening pleasure forever and a day.
Smoothjazz.com Review.......2006-06-16
A Whole Lot More Stevie Holland This Time!.......2006-05-24
For those fortunate enough to own her other fine CDs this new release will not come as a shock: we have all been well prepared for Stevie's intuitive approach to songs both new and old and have a firm hold on her 'style'...or do we? On this collection of both known and not so well known selections she is again abetted by the fine work of Gary William Friedman who has arranged, orchestrated (yes, folks, full orchestra this time around!) and conducted the ensemble. Not that all of the tracks are luxuriously big orchestra: she still respects her jazz musicians who back her - no, collaborate with her - with polished élan.
Everyone will have particular favorites (if you can actually separate them into an order...), but for this listener it's hard to better her rendition of Antonio Carlos Jobim's 'Desafinado', sung in English with a flair that will make you forget the original. But then there is also Jerome Kern's haunting 'Yesterdays', and a really fine take on Lerner and Lowe's 'If ever I would leave you', a song written for a man, but Stevie now owns it.
This is a first class CD with a terrific body of music sung by one sophisticated lady! The title of the album really tells the truth about what awaits you inside. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, May 06
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More Than Words
Extreme Manufacturer: A&M ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000006OAG Release Date: 1998-05-12 |
Tracks:
- More Than Words
- Hole Hearted
Customer Reviews:
perfect for me.......2007-03-24
I wish I had the words.......2006-02-17
If I could term a song as being perfect - this would be the one. How does one describe it...haunting, sublime, and breathtaking?
Even so I do not have the words or vocabulary to describe it in a way that would do it justice. The song has to be felt and then it makes a connection to the soul.
The simplicity of just one accompanying guitar leaves the song uncluttered and so the listener is able to focus on the lyrics and the voices.
When I listened to it on the radio, I had thought that the music consisted of the guitar accompanied by hand drums. Having recently watched the video - and again quite by accident - I realise that the only instrument was a guitar. The style is an unusual - the guitarist taps on the guitar with perfect timing almost as if it is a drum and does this whilst strumming on the guitar.
It could have something to do with his Portuguese heritage or possibly because he is a drummer that he uses this style. Nevertheless, it is faultless and fits the lyrics and the singing to perfection.
The voices are beautifully harmonious and able to deliver all the emotion and the longing that the lyrics should convey.
It is difficult to describe the genre - it is not pop music, it stands on its own as being the central point at which soul joins country music. I know it sounds a bit odd to even suggest that these two styles could ever marry. The only other artist who has a song close to this in terms of the delivery and sound is Tony Rich with `Nobody Knows' - it is only an opinion, it does not mean that I am right.
My idea of hell would be for someone to do a remake of this song. Some songs are made to be left alone; a remake of songs by certain artists is a sacrilege and that would be the case if an artist tried a remake of this song.
Some hellish remakes include `Tragedy' by Steps and `Lady Marmalade' by All Saints (both British Bands). Somebody should have said `No, no, no...!. To these groups it should have been said - 'You have neither the capacity for delivery, the voice to hold the audience captive, or that certain something make that song!!!!'
Horror of horrors: can anyone imagine Mariah Carey doing a remake of 'More than Words'?
She would probably have a dress cut so low and leave her bosom unfettered such that the M11 could pass through the middle of her chest. And since Mariah has not got the ability to sing a song in a simple fashion, she is likely to pepper it with so many vocal gymnastics. The one that still tickles me pink is that she artfully points her finger upwards just to let her audience know that she wants to take the falsetto even higher. It would be an awful experience to hear her remake this song.
These songs are not common; they come along like little gems every few years or so, please buy the single, press the repeat button, sit down and savour the music.
What about the words?.......2004-10-18
Take this song. This is a song that I only heard in fragments. Friends of mine would play it. Rock compilation comercials would play a snippet. Great Love Songs. Heavy Metal Ballads. Stuff like that. And it always sounded great, the singing, the harmony, the simple guitar, pretty much what people here have been raving about it. And judging from the little bit I heard, I imagined the gist of the lyrics to be something like, "I love you more than words can say." Nice sentiment, huh?
Finally, I decided to learn how to play the song on the guitar, which forced me to learn the music AND the words. Boy! Was I in for a surprise. Here's the first verse into the refrain.
Saying, "I love you."
Is not the words I want to hear from you.
It's not that I want you
Not to say. But if you only knew
How easy, it would be to should me how you feel!
More than words
Is all you have to do to make it real.
Then you wouldn't have to say
That you love me
'Cause I'd already know.
It's a booty song! It's "A Little Less Conversation, A Little More Action." It's "Let's Get It On." The whole point of the song is, "Don't tell me you love me ... show me!" And yes, it's pretty. Yes, it's haunting. Yes, it's produced well and goes down so easy. But in essence, the song is some guy trying to sweet talk you out of your pants.
So when I hear people talk about this song as their favorite love song, I'm led to think about Sting talking about "Every Breath You Take". Sting wrote that song thinking about _1984_ and the type or totalitarian oppresive surveilance that Orwell. At the same time, he gets people saying this is their favorite love song. Sad, in a way.
The song that killed rock...........2004-06-14
This song is so much more than words.......2003-01-20
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Red Hot (From Mystic Music, As Seen On TV)
Crowded House , Level 42 , Rick Astley , Sheriff , Billy Ocean , Pat Benatar , Eddie Money & Ronnie Spector , Robert Palmer , Sheena Easton , and The Power Station Manufacturer: Mystic Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000MZSVMC |
Product Description
MYSTIC MUSIC Presents RED HOT. AS SEEN ON T.V. Disc 1 1. SOMETHING SO STRONG CROWDED HOUSE 2. OBSESSION ANIMOTION 3. SOMETHING ABOUT YOU LEVEL 42 4. IS THIS LOVE WHITESNAKE 5. EVERY ROSE HAS ITS THORN POISON 6. ALL I NEED JACK WAGNER 7. MORE THAN WORDS CAN SAY ALIAS 8. SOME LIKE IT HOT THE POWER STATION 9. TOUCH ME (I WANT YOUR BODY) SAMANTHA FOX 10. NEVER GONNA GIVE YOU UP RICK ASTLEY 11. TOUCH ME CATHY DENNIS 12. NEED YOU TONIGHT INXS 13. THE FLAME CHEAP TRICK 14. BLACK VELVET ALLANAH MYLES 15. SAVE YOUR LOVE GREAT WHITE 16. WHEN I'M WITH YOU SHERIFF 17. CAN'T STOP AFTER 7 18. ADDICTED TO LOVE ROBERT PALMER DISC 2 1. FEEL LIKE MAKIN' LOVE BAD COMPANY 2. I WANT TO KNOW WHAT LOVE IS FOREIGNER 3. SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER THE MOTELS 4. TOO SHY KAJAGOOGOO 5. SHATTERED DREAMS JOHNNY HATES JAZZ 6. WE BELONG PAT BENATAR 7. CARIBBEAN QUEEN (NO MORE LOVE ON THE RUN) BILLY OCEAN 8. I GET WEAK BELINDA CARLISLE 9. TAKE ME HOME TONIGHT / BE MY BABY EDDIE MONEY WITH RONNIE SPECTOR 10. HOLD ON TO THE NIGHT RICHARD MARX 11. LISTEN TO YOUR HEART ROXETTE 12. MISSING YOU JOHN WAITE 13. I TOUCH MYSELF DIVINYLS 14. SIMPLY IRRESISTIBLE ROBERT PALMER 15. SUGAR WALLS SHEENA EASTON 16. I CAN DREAM ABOUT YOU DAN HARTMAN 17. FREEWAY OF LOVE ARETHA FRANKLIN
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España: Anthology of Spanish Music
Manufacturer: Astree ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000026DG2 Release Date: 1993-09-01 |
Tracks:
- Cant De La Sibil.La: Sybil.La Latine (Excs) - Montserrat Figueras
- Villancicos & Ensaladas: Mundus Et Musica Et Totus Concentus (Canon Perpetum) - La Capella Reial De Catalunya/Jordi Savall
- Cantigas De Santa Maria: Cantiga 384: A Que Por Muy Gran Fremosura - Esther Lamandier
- El Cancionero De La Colombina: Propinan De Melyor - Hesperion XX/Jordi Savall
- El Cancionero De Palacio: Tres Morillas - Hesperion XX/Jordi Savall
- I Musica De Vihuela: Pavane IV - Hopkinson Smith
- Romances & Villancicos: Si Habra En Este Baldres? - Hesperion XX/Jordi Savall
- Recercadas Del Trattado De Glosas: Recercada Segunda Sobre El Passamezzo Moderno - Jordi Savall/Tom Koopman/Rolf Lislevand
- Il Sonetos, Villancicos Y Romances: Quien Amores Ten (Villancicos En Portugues) - Montserrat Figueras/Hopkinson Smith
- El Organo Historico Espanol I: Fabordon Y Glosas Del Sexto Tono - Kimberly Marshall
- Missa Pro Defunctis, A 5: Pie Jesu Domine - Hesperion XX/Jordi Savall
- Tres Libros De Musica En Cifras Para Vihuela: Fant Que Contrahaze La Harpa - Hopkinson Smith
- Ensaladas: Mateu Fleccha L'Ancien La Bomba, Ensalada Studium Musicae Valencia - Hesperion XX/Jordi Savall
- El Cancionero De Medinaceli: La Perra Mora - Hesperion XX/Jordi Savall
- Poema Harmonico: Canario, Treze Diferencias De Canario - Hopkinson Smith
- Missa De Batalla: Gloria - La Capella Reial De Catalunya/Jordi Savall
- L'Oeuvre Pour Clavecin 1: Son in a No.118-Allegro - Bob Van Asperen
- Lope De Vega: Intermedios Del Barroco Hispanico: No Hay Que Decirle El Primor - Montserrat Figueras
- El Organo Historico Espanol 9: Toccata Del Sexto Tono - Francis Chapelet
- Cancons De La Catalunya Mil.Lenaria: Els Segadors (Excs) - Montserrat Figueras
- Ariette Italiane, Seguidillas & Vars: Las Mujeres Y Cuerdas - Monterrat Figueras/Jose Miguel Moreno
- Les Sept Dernieries Paroles, Cadix: Il Terremoto. Presto Con Tutta La Forza - Le Conc Des Nations/Jordi Savall
- Una Cosa Rara: Allegretto 'Viva Viva La Regina' - La Capella Reial De Catalunya/Le Conc Des Nations/Jordi Savall
- Iberia (Version Orch): El Puerto - Orquesta De Valencia/Manuel Galduf
- El Sombrero De Tres Picos: Danse Finale (Jota) - Joven Orquesta Nacional De Espana/Edmon Colomer
- Don Quijote, Albada,...: Danza - Orquesta Sinfonica De Tenerife/Victor Pablo Perez
Customer Reviews:
Hesperion XX and others.......2007-03-28
This is the best classical music.......2001-02-05
Great collection.......2000-11-04
Highlights include:
Track 8 - Jordi Savall (gamba), Ton Koopman (harpsichord), and Rolf Lislevand (lute) turn in a brief but jaunty chamber performance of Ortiz. Left me wanting more.
Track 11 - Hesperion XX give a haunting vocal performance of Morales' Pie Jesu Domine. I'm not one to ususally appreciate this sort of music (so consider me uninformed) but I found this truly beautiful.
Track 15 - features Hopkinson Smith on the baroque guitar performing a fascinating Guerau work. Descending arpeggios like gentle, trickling waterfalls. Smith is a stunning performer. I wish he was better known in the U.S.
Track 22 - from Haydn's original orchestral version of "The Seven Last Words Of Christ On The Cross," this is the one tempestuous movement from a work of mostly subdued music. Deep, powerful string sound from Savall's Le Concert Des Nations. Very well recorded.
While I'd like to know more about the works and the composers behind them there is so much here to be enjoyed on a purely aesthetic level that I can't whine too much. If you have any interest, by all means pick up this bargain. You will be introduced to a number of great performers and works.
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Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works; Songs; String Quartet
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001RVQKU Release Date: 2004-08-10 |
Tracks:
- Preludes 1-7 - Polish Chamber Orchestra
- Fugue - Polish Chamber Orchestra
- No.1 Pensees - Krakow Radio Chorus
- No.2 Le Grand Combat - Krakow Radio Chorus
- No.3 Repos Dans Le Malheur - Krakow Radio Chorus
- Paroles Tissees - Louis Devos
- Postlude No.1 - Witold Lutoslawski
Tracks:
- No.1 The Sea - Halina Lukomska
- No.2 Wind - Halina Lukomska
- No.3 Winter - Halina Lukomska
- No.4 Knights - Halina Lukomska
- No.5 Church Bells - Halina Lukomska
- Introduction - - Ramon Jablonski
- Four Episodes - - Ramon Jablonski
- Cantilena - - Ramon Jablonski
- Finale - Ramon Jablonski
- I: Introductory Movement - Alban Berg Quartett
- II: Main Movement - Alban Berg Quartett
Customer Reviews:
two discs of fine, lesser-known Lutoslawski.......2005-06-22
The first disc opens with "Preludes and Fugue for 13 solo strings" (1972 -- 33'32). A complex work that will sound forbidding to many, it is constructed from six lines (cantabile, grazioso, lamentoso, misterioso, estatico and furioso) bundled into seven interlocked preludes and an extended fugue. Then follow two vocal works, which are quite accessible and appealing -- "Trois poemes d'Henri Michaux" (1963 -- 20'11) for twenty-part all female choir and orchestra, and "Paroles tissees" (1965 -- 13'51) featuring the tenor Louis Devos. "Trois poems" includes some of the wildest, funniest passages I've heard from Lutoslawski, while the tenor piece, which evokes medieval love poetry, is one of the warmest and most moving. The first disc ends with "Postlude No. 1" (1958 -- 4'03), a very impressive orchestral work. It makes you wish for more, but apparently Lutoslawski was dissatisfied with No.s 2 and 3.
The second disc opens with another vocal work, "5 Songs for soprano and orchestra" (1957 -- 9'59), with the topics 1) The Sea, 2) Wind, 3) Winter, 4) Knights and 5) Church Bells. My one criticism of this fine set is that there is no text provided for the songs. All three vocal works are highly evocative, and are effective on a musical level regardless, and I suppose I shouldn't complain given that this is the Gemini budget series. The last two works are not Lutoslawski's best, but these are the best performances of them that I've heard. The "Cello Concerto" (1970 -- 22'20) was written for Msistislav Rostropovich, who recorded it for EMI. Roman Jablonski is the cellist here, and he and the Polish orchestra are far more convincing than the version recorded a few years later with Andras Schiff on cello, and Lutoslawski conducting a German orchestra (that recording is found on THE ESSENTIAL LUTOSLAWSKI, on Philips). The form, pitting the soloist against the orchestra, is standard, and I find the cumulative effect underwhelming, though again, the performance is committed.
Finally, the "String Quartet" (1964 -- 23'16) is here performed by the Alban Berg Quartet. This is a much better interpretation than the Arditti Quartet's (on KURTAG LUTOSLAWSKI GUBAIDULINA on Montaigne -- see my review), and I'm convinced that it's because of the ABQ's immersion in the classical repertoire. (I haven't heard the Kronos recording.) There are four sections, a long, slow opening movement which includes an element of improvisation and sounds gently chaotic, then a second movement that begins fast and agitated, culminating in an outburst which is followed by a sad, mournful, elegiac passage, and then a calm coda which returns to the sound of the first movement. Comparing the two versions, the ABQ's is warmer, and conveys the contrast between sections much more strongly than the Arditti Quartet, which plays the first movement with an edgier tone that undercuts the dramatic shift to the second movement.
That contrast is further evidence for my view that Lutoslawski was not at his best when he strayed the furthest into avant forms (ie, Symphonies 2 and 3, the String Quartet). I would place Lutoslawski alongside Dutilleux as one of the loveliest, not the most radical, of late 20th century composers. When he stayed closer to the classical tradition, extending Bartok and Debussy rather than competing with the Darmstadt Circle, Lutoslawski found his uniquely beautiful voice, as the best works on this disc demonstrate fantastically.
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