| 1. Nah Who Dat |
| 2. Playaz, No Hataz |
| 3. Down South |
| 4. Serious - Ice Lord, |
| 5. Root of All Evil |
| 6. Better Things |
| 7. Goode Tyme Slym |
| 8. Say Bra |
| 9. Any Meanz - Ice Lord, Klondike Kat, Snik Nik |
| 10. Getto Lyfe - Ice Lord, |
| 11. Cruel World - Ice Lord, , Point Blank, |
| 12. Terror Struct - Ice Lord, |
Now Who Dat,Ice Lord,Big Tyme Records,Gangsta Rap,Hardcore Rap,Pop,Rap,Rap & Hip-Hop
Average customer rating:
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The Broadway Album
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000264K Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Putting It Together
- If I Loved You
- Something's Coming
- Not While I'm Around
- Being Alive
- I Have Dreamed/We Kiss In A Shadow/Something Won..
- Adelaide's Lament
- Send In The Clowns
- Pretty Women/The Ladies Who Lunch
- Can't Help Lovin' That Man
- I Loves You Porgy/Porgy, I's Your Woman Now...
- Somewhere
Amazon.com
As its title indicates, this 1985 recording marked Barbra Streisand's return to her Broadway roots (significantly, she had dropped her pop-period Guilty perm and returned to straight hair). The CD contains a broad selection of show tunes, from Guys and Dolls's "Adelaide's Lament" to Sweeney Todd's "Not While I'm Around." But let's face it: this may also be one of Babs's most dated albums, due to typically '80s synthesizer-heavy arrangements that simply don't work with the material. Company's "Being Alive" is scarred by a preening alto sax, while West Side Story's "Something's Coming" features what sounds suspiciously like syndrums. But--and it's a pretty big "but"--Streisand sounds more buttery than ever ("Send in the Clowns" may be one of her finest '80s moments), so much so that she often manages to overcome the cheesy production. Now that's a singer. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
Learning About Love While Yearning.......2007-06-09
Just past the beginning of creating "What Times Are," a musical by (a) pacifist(s) as well as an adaptation of my play "What Time Is It, Neil Armstrong?," which is a sequel to my novel "How Did That Sun Get Out," I am inspired by the yearning apparent in "The Broadway Album"--a yearning not for perfection but for worthwhile ways for people all over the earth and in space to spend time.
Great !.......2007-02-27
Number one .......2007-02-05
This is one of her finest albums.
she believes the hype.......2006-10-12
Lovely voice, lovely songs.......2006-08-02
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Golden Greats: Greatest Broadway Hits
Manufacturer: Golden Greats ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005USEJ Release Date: 2002-02-26 |
Tracks:
- Ouverture - Orchestra
- Something Wonderfull - Dorothy Sarnoff
- Doin' What Comes Natur'lly - Ethel Merman
- Life Upon the Wicked Stage - Colette Lyons
- So in Love - Patricia Morison
- You'll Never Walk Alone - Jan Clayton, Christine Johnson
- Bill - Carol Bruce
- Hello, Young Lovers - Gertrude Lawrence
- Bloody Mary - Male Chorus
- I Can't Say No - Celeste Holm
- This Was a Real Nice Clambake - Jan Clayton,
- Oklahoma! - Alfred Drake
- Sue Me - Vivian Blaine, Sam Levene
- Woman Is a Sometime Thing - Edward Matthews
- Some Enchanted Evening - Ezio Pinza,
- I Got Plenty O' Nuttin' - Todd Duncan, Todd Duncan
- Guys and Dolls - Douglas Deane, Stubby Kaye, Johnny Silver
- It Ain't Necessarily So - Lawrence Tibbett
- Make Believe - Jan Clayton
- Wonderful Guy - Mary Martin
- They Say It's Wonderful - Ethel Merman
- When the Children Are Asleep - Jean Darling, Eric Mattson
- More I Cannot Wish You - Pat Rooney, Sr., Pat Rooney, Sr.
- Puzzlement - Yul Brynner
- I Got Lost in His Arms - Ethel Merman
Tracks:
- Overture...Summertime - Anne Brown
- Why Can't You Behave? - Lisa Kirk, Harold Lang
- Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man - Carol Bruce
- There's No Business Like Show Business - Chorus
- If I Were a Bell - Isabel Bigley
- People Will Say That We're in Love - Alfred Drake, Joan Roberts
- Bess, You Is My Woman Now - Anne Brown
- Luck Be a Lady Tonight - Robert Alda
- Shall I Tell You What I Think of You? - Gertrude Lawrence
- Girl That I Marry - Ray Middleton
- Nobody Else But Me - Jan Clayton
- Carousel Waltz - Orchestra
- Dites-Moi - Barbara Luna
- Ol' Man River - Kenneth Spencer
- Summertime
- Many a New Day - Joan Roberts
- Blow High, Blow Low - Murvyn Vye
- It Takes a Long Pull to Get There - Edward Matthews
- You've Got to Be Carefully Taught - Billy Tabbert
- We Open in Venice - Alfred Drake
- I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair - Mary Martin
- Who Do You Love, I Hope? - Kathleen Carnes, Robert Lenn
- I've Never Been in Love Before - Robert Alda
- Tom, Dick or Harry - Lisa Kirk
- I Whistle a Happy Tune - Gertrude Lawrence
Tracks:
- New York, New York - Lynn Murray, Lynn Murray
- Almost Like Being in Love - Marion Bell, Dave Brooks, David Brooks
- Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered - Vivienne Segal
- Beat out Dat Rhythm on a Drum - June Hawkins
- How Are Things in Glocca Morra? - Ella Logan
- Old Devil Moon - Ella Logan
- South American Way - Carmen Miranda
- September Song - Walter Huston
- This Is the Army, Mister Jones - Irving Berlin
- Takin' a Chance on Love - Ethel Waters
- My Heart Belongs to Daddy - Mary Martin
- Anything Goes - Jeanne Aubert & The Four Admirals
- You're the Top - Jeanne Aubert & The Four Admirals
- I Get a Kick Out of You - Ethel Merman
- Night and Day - Fred Astaire
- I Got Rhythm - Red Nichols & His Orchestra
- Someone to Watch Over Me - Gertrude Lawrence
- Fascinatin' Rhythm - Adele Astaire, Fred Astaire
- Strike Up the Band - Red Nichols & His Orchestra
- Makin' Whoopee - Eddie Cantor
- Heatwave - Ethel Waters
- Easter Parade - Clifton Webb
- She Didn't Say Yes - Peggy Wood
- I've Told Every Little Star - Mary Ellis
- Johnny One Note - Lynn Murray, Lynn Murray
Album Description
Import exclusive, budget price compilation featuring Broadway classics like 'You'll Never Walk Alone', 'Summertime', & There's No Business Like Show Business', performed by Ethel Merman, Gertrude Lawrence, Celeste Holm, & many more. 75 tracks in all. Standard double jewel case. Disky. 2001.Album Details
3 CD setCustomer Reviews:
A bargain collection of showtunes.......2005-08-19
Average customer rating: |
Broadway's Fair Ladies
Manufacturer: Sony Cmg Mkt Group ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000028ZF Release Date: 1993-03-09 |
Tracks:
- My Heart Belongs To Daddy - Mary Martin
- Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man - Hellen Morgan
- How Are Things In Glocca Mora? - Ella Logan
- The Party's Over - Judy Holliday
- I Could Have Danced All Night - Julie Andrews
- Glitter And Be Gay - Barbara Cook
- If My Friends Could See Me Now - Gwen Verdon
- If He Walked Into My Life - Angela Lansbury
- My Favorite Things - Mary Martin, Patricia Neway
- The Ladies Who Lunch - Elaine Stritch
- Tomorrow - Andrea McArdle
- Everything's Coming Up Roses - Ethel Merman
Average customer rating:
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Vaughan Williams - Sir John in Love / Hickox, Northern Sinfonia
Ralph Vaughan Williams , Richard Hickox , Anne-Marie Owens , Sarah Connolly , Northern Sinfonia and Chorus , Brian Bannatyne-Scott , Donald Maxwell , Roderick Williams , Susan Gritton , Matthew Best , Mark Padmore , Stephen Varcoe , Stephan Loges , John Bowen , Richard Lloyd-Morgan , Laura Claycomb , Henry Moss , and Mark Richardson Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005M0ER Release Date: 2001-07-24 |
Tracks:
- Act I: Orchestral introduction-What hoa, what hoa
- Act I: Ahem
- Act I: This is my father's choice
- Act I: How now, what does Master Fenton here?
- Act I: Vere is dat knave Rugby?
- Act I: Episode
- Act I: How now, mine Host of the Garter
- Act I: I spy entertainment in her...
- Act I: Wilt thou revenge...?
- Act I: Love my wife? I will be patient
- Act II: Orchestral introduction-Thine own true knight
- Act II: Scene 1: Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more
- Act II: Scene 2: Bardolph! Bardolph, I say!
- Act II: Scene 2: Go thy ways, go thy ways, old Jack!
- Act II: Scene 2: Sir, my name is Brook
- Act II: Scene 2: Ha, is this a vision?
Tracks:
- Act III: Scene 1 Interlude: Orchestral introduction-Yet hear me speak
- Act III: Scene 1 Interlude: Fair and fair and twice so fair
- Act III: Scene 1 Interlude: But listen, good mine Host
- Act III: Scene 2: Orchestral introduction-When as we sat in Papylon
- Act III: Scene 2: Yonder he's coming
- Act III: Scene 2: Come, Master Ford
- Act III: Scene 2: Orchestral-introduction-What, John! What, Robert!
- Act III: Scene 3: Alas, my love, you do me wrong
- Act III: Scene 3: Mistress Ford!
- Act III: Scene 3: Ah!
- Act IV: Orchestral introduction-Pardon me, wife
- Act IV: Scene 1: There is an old tale goes that Herne the hunter
- Act IV: Scene 1: Interlude
- Act IV: Scene 2: Orchestral introduction
- Act IV: Scene 2: The Windsor bell hath struck twelve
- Act IV: Scene 2: Ah-Who Comes here?
- Act IV: Scene 2: But till 'tis one o'clock
- Act IV: Scene 2: Dance of the Fairies
- Act IV: Scene 2: But stay! I smell a man of middle earth
- Act IV: Scene 2: Nay, do not fly
- Act IV: Scene 2: My heart misgives me
- Act IV: Scene 2: Stand not amazed
Customer Reviews:
Pros & Cons for both versions.......2005-08-30
With VW, you get something much closer to the Shakespearean original, teeming with richly drawn characters and all the variety of Elizabethan/Jacobean life bustling past. Falstaff is merely the primus inter pares among them, albeit a huge one. Out of it came a great comic opera. And one that has been too seldom performed, standing in the long shadow of its predecessor.
Vaughan Williams, who was a great admirer of the Verdi piece, knew that comparisons would inevitably be made. (He would also have included his friend, Holst's, At the Boar's Head as a real rival from the Falstaff canon.) But comparisons are invidious. The VW and the Verdi operas are not comparable, either in their intentions or in their music. And both should be allowed to co-exist happily as companion pieces, not as rivals as two great comic operas we're fortunate to have.
Perhaps I protest too much. But the Vaughan Williams is such invigorating, life-enhancing, often ravishingly beautiful stuff that I'd hate to see it slip off the end of the shelf. Verdi is lauded as the great tunesmith, but how many tunes from Falstaff can you recall - Nanetta's last act aria, perhaps, a couple of snippets of Fenton, the final fugue maybe, or Sir John's 'Quand'ero paggio' which is so brief an aria that its original singer had to record it three times in succession to fill a 78 side. Perhaps that's why Falstaff is so badly represented on 78's compared to the other mature Verdi operas. Great music, yes, but singalongaFalstaff had, in his mature operas, ceased to be the composer's intention.
In Sir John in Love, on the other hand, the tunes just pour out one after the other. Which are genuine folksongs and which are VW originals is often hard to tell without a score in front of you (where the composer comes clean). Just listen to the way Dr. Caius' 'Vray Dieu d'Amour' takes over the orchestra or how 'Lovely Joan' (the tune in the trio of the famous Greensleeves Fantasia) heralds Mistress Quickly's arrival and 'Greensleeves' in situ is even lovelier than in the Fantasia. But then listen to the gorgeous tune that accompanies Ann Page's entrance, the wonderful melody for Ford's plea for forgiveness from his wife or the magical chorus that accompanies the arrival of the real bride and groom in the final scene. Those are all VW originals and great ones, to boot.
Choosing between the two performances of the piece on disc, it's a question of swings and roundabouts. This Chandos recording with Hickox at the helm benefits from his direction - a bit tauter, a little more spring to the rhythms than Davies and the choral contributions are as polished as you'd expect from a seasoned choral specialist. The Chandos recording, too, is a bit more up to date in terms of sound, a bit fuller and richer. EMI, on the other hand, probably has the superior cast with the likes of Robert Tear, Felicity Palmer, Helen Watts and Robert Lloyd seeing off their Chandos counterparts. Honours between the two Falstaffs are more even. Neither is ideal in the part. Herincx has the 'fatter' voice: Maxwell on this recording is the more characterful. But a piece like the madrigal that Sir John sings before Ford/Brook's arrival needs more warmth and more steadiness than either of them provide (would Bryn ever consider it as a partner to his Verdi Falstaff?).
It's a tough choice between the two versions. Choose the EMI for the cast (including, by a short head, Herincx's Flastaff). Choose this Chandos set for the conducting, the chorus and the more modern sound.
Five for the work ,for Hickox at least four stars!.......2001-11-09
of this masterwork.)
If you feel that Verdi has beautyfull music but it has a too much thick blood, and you think that beauty must be tensed by reason; You are looking at the right composer.
This opera or musical drama (in the wagnerian sense, cause it is a romantic comedy) makes a very whole unit, the "areas" and the recited-sung recitatives are in funtion of the "dramatic" momentum and inerce of the work. It's incredible how pleasently quick this work is heard, and yes it's very entretaining (I know that's not necesary a virtue for an opera, but here it is).
The music, well, is gorgeous as might be expected from V.W., transitions are well sewn, and the traditonal folk songs add a dash or elizabethian romanticism.
The cast is strong, Hendrix is very suited for the rol, but you may fantacised how well this rol will be portrayed now by Bryn Terfel, It's sad that Hickox not thinck (or did he?)of this in his new recording of this opera (perhaps Chandos not provide him with the budget that Abado's can manage for his new DG. Falstaff recording).
Maybe Langridge will sound more youthfull than Tear, but that is a small detail. Hellen Watts it's spicy and perky Mrs. Quickly, and Gerald English Caius' is is excellent!
Davies captures V.W. orchestration very well with a ADD recording that will cause envy in this days, and the price, is to laugh about.
Treat you and buy this forgotten treasure!
Sir John's love is more impressive the first time around.......2001-08-05
Five stars, but not the only choice........2001-07-26
If this were the first recording of the opera available, it would be easy to recommend it to any VW (or opera!) enthusiast--the orchestral details are abundant and vividly present, the choral contribution is alive and infectious, and the vocal parts are well-presented and clear. However, there is in additional recording, in EMI's British Composer series, conducted by Meredith Davies. While many comparisons are stacked in the new version's favor, there are a few shortcomings that prevent an absolute recommendation.
Where Hickox succeeds over Davies is particularly in the portrayal of Anne Page and her several suitors. Susan Gritton sings more effectively than Wendy Eathorne, while both Daniel Norman (Slender) and Adrian Thompson (Caius) seem more plausible as suitors than Bernard Dickerson and Gerald English, respectively--although overall English makes a more vivid Caius. However, there is no question that Mark Padmore is the better Fenton: as well as Robert Tear sings for Davies, I can't shake the impression that he is wooing an Amazon, and not the girl-next-door Anne.
While the supporting cast is marginally to markedly superior for Hickox, with the Fords and Pages are fairly evenly matched between the two performances, the one clear victory of the Davies version is a significant one. As the title character, Donald Maxwell's Falstaff is no match for Raimund Herincx, either in characterization or in vocal quality. Additionally, the EMI set benefits from a superior recording--there's more of a sense of a performance in a real space, which adds an extra dimension to the rather static performance as presented by Hickox. Occasionally, Hickox also omits some dramatic effects (such as gasps from the onstage characters in Act III and laughter from the chorus in Act IV) which adds to the sense that this is only a "recording" and not a "performance."
All in all, there is much to recommend the new version, but confronted with a choice between this set and the Davies set on EMI, personal taste will have to suffice in choosing between them. [You may want to sample them both before buying either.]
Average customer rating: |
Now Who Dat
Ice Lord Manufacturer: Big Tyme Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00004Y6XG Release Date: 2000-11-07 |
Tracks:
- Nah Who Dat
- Playaz, No Hataz
- Down South
- Serious - Ice Lord,
- Root of All Evil
- Better Things
- Goode Tyme Slym
- Say Bra
- Any Meanz - Ice Lord, Klondike Kat, Snik Nik
- Getto Lyfe - Ice Lord,
- Cruel World - Ice Lord, , Point Blank,
- Terror Struct - Ice Lord,
Average customer rating: |
Kick Dat Shyt
Manufacturer: Homegrown Enterprizez ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000CA3XGQ Release Date: 2004-05-04 |
Dance Music:
- Original Man [Import]
- Parlay, Parlay [Explicit Lyrics]
- Pop Trunk in Texas [Explicit Lyrics]
- Popcorn
- Quicksand [Explicit Lyrics]
- Raw Materials V.2 [Import]
- Reflection Eternal [Explicit Lyrics]
- S.D.E. [Explicit Lyrics]
- S.D.E. [Explicit Lyrics]
- Second Coming: Sworn 2 Torment [Explicit Lyrics]
Dance Music
Sing The Hits Of R and B Female Vol.4 (Karaoke)
Singles Plus [Import] [Original recording remastered]
Take Ten [Limited Edition] [Original recording remastered] [Import]