| 1. Prologue | |||
| 2. Overture - Threepenny Opera Orchestra | |||
| 3. Ballad of Mac the Knife | |||
| 4. Morning Anthem - Martin Wolfson | |||
| 5. Instead-Of-Song - Martin Wolfson | |||
| 6. Wedding Song - John Astin, , , Paul Dooley | |||
| 7. Pirate Jenny - Lotte Lenya | |||
| 8. Army Song - John Astin, , , Paul Dooley, , | |||
| 9. Love Song - Jo Sullivan | |||
| 10. Ballad of Dependency | |||
| 11. Melodrama and Polly's Song - Jo Sullivan | |||
| 12. Ballad of the Easy Life | |||
| 13. World Is Mean - Jo Sullivan, Martin Wolfson | |||
| 14. Barbara Song - Bea Arthur | |||
| 15. Tango Ballad - Lotte Lenya, | |||
| 16. Jealousy Duet - Bea Arthur, Jo Sullivan | |||
| 17. How to Survive - Ensemble | |||
| 18. Useless Song - Martin Wolfson | |||
| 19. Solomon Song - Lotte Lenya | |||
| 20. Call from the Grave | |||
|
See all 22 tracks on this disc
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The Threepenny Opera,Kurt Weill,Kurt Weill,Beatrice Arthur,Charlotte Rae,George Tyne,Geraldine Price,Jo Sullivan,Lotte Lenya,Martin Wolfson,Scott Merrill,That's Entertainment,Classical,German/Austrian 20th/21st Century Opera,Opera
Average customer rating:
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The Threepenny Opera (1954 New York Cast) (Blitzstein Adaptation)
1954 Off-Broadway Revival Cast , and Bertolt Brecht Manufacturer: Decca Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004X09T Release Date: 2000-08-29 |
Tracks:
- Prologue (spoken)
- Overture
- The Ballad of Mack the Knife
- Morning Anthem
- Instead-Of-Song
- Army Song
- Wedding Song
- Love Song
- Ballad of Dependency
- The World Is Mean
- Melodrama and Polly's Song
- Pirate Jenny
- Tango-Ballad
- Ballad of the Easy Life
- Barbara Song
- Jealousy Duet
- How to Survive
- Useless Song
- Solomon Song
- Call from the Grave
- Death Message
- Finale: The Mounted Messenger
- The Ballad of Mack the Knife (bonus track) -- Lotte Lenya (vocalist), Marc Blitzstein (piano)
Customer Reviews:
Worth much more than Threepenny.......2007-05-08
A classic returns.......2007-02-06
Still the best.......2006-11-10
A Good Musical With Some Outstanding Performers.......2006-08-03
threepenny opera blitzstein.......2006-05-28
Average customer rating:
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Broadway - The American Musical (PBS Series)
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00064ADMK Release Date: 2004-10-19 |
Tracks:
- Give My Regards To Broadway- Joel Grey
- Swanee- Al Jolson
- When The Moon Shines On The Moonshine- Bert Williams
- A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody- John Steel
- My Man- Fanny Brice
- Fascinating Rhythm- Fred Astaire, Adele Astaire
- If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie)- 78rpm Version Eddie Cantor
- Someone To Watch Over Me- Gertrude Lawrence
- Bill- 78 rpm Version Helen Morgan
- Ol' Man River- Paul Robeson
- Ain't Misbehavin'- Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra
- Ten Cents A Dance- Ruth Etting
- Body And Soul- Libby Holman
- Brother, Can You Spare A Dime- Bing Crosby
- Night And Day- Fred Astaire
- Heat Wave- Ethel Waters
- Smoke Gets in Your Eyes- Tamara
- You're The Top- Ethel Merman
- Summertime- Anne Brown
- September Song- Walter Huston
- My Heart Belongs To Daddy- Mary Martin
- It Never Entered My Mind- Shirley Ross
- Bewitched, Bothered, Bewildered- Vivienne Segal
- Oh, How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning- Irving Berlin
- Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'- Alfred Drake
Tracks:
- New York, New York- Cris Alexander,Adolph Green,John Reardon
- If I Loved You- John Raitt,Jan Clayton
- Come Rain Or Come Shine- Ruby Hill,Harold Nicholas
- There's No Business Like Show Business- Ensemble
- How Are Things In Glocca Morra? From "Finian's Rainbow"- Ella Logan
- Once In Love With Amy- Ray Bolger
- Wunderbar- Alfred Drake,Patricia Morison
- Some Enchanted Evening- Ezio Pinza
- Lost In The Stars- Todd Duncan
- Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend- Carol Channing
- Luck Be A Lady- Robert Alda,Guys
- Getting To Know You- Gertrude Lawrence
- Who Cares?- Jack Carson,Betty Oakes
- Stranger In Paradise- from " Kismet" Doretta Morrow,Richard Kiley
- Ballad Of Mack The Knife- Gerald Price
- Hey There- from "The Pajama Game" John Raitt
- Whatever Lola Wants- Gwen Verdon
- I Could Have Danced All Night- Julie Andrews
- Standing On The Corner- from "The Most Happy Fella, 1956" Shorty Long,John Henson,Alan Gilbert
- The Party's Over- Judy Holliday
- Glitter And Be Gay- Barbara Cook
- Tonight- Larry Kert, Carol Lawrence
Tracks:
- Seventy-Six Trombones- Robert Preston
- I Enjoy Being A Girl- from "Flower Drum Song, 1958" Pat Suzuki
- Everything's Coming Up Roses- Ethel Merman
- My Favorite Things- from "The Sound Of Music" Mary Martin
- Put On A Happy Face- from "Bye Bye Birdie" Dick Van Dyke
- Try To Remember- Jerry Orbach
- Camelot- from "Camelot" Richard Burton
- Love Makes The World Go 'Round- Anna Maria Alberghetti
- I Believe In You- Robert Morse And Co.
- The Sweetest Sounds- Diahann Carroll,Richard Kiley
- Comedy Tonight- Zero Mostel
- What Kind Of Fool Am I?- Anthony Newley
- As Long As He Needs Me- Georgia Brown
- Hello, Dolly!- Carol Channing,Cast
- People- Barbra Streisand
- Anyone Can Whistle- from "Anyone Can Whistle" Lee Remick
- If I Were A Rich Man- Zero Mostel
- Night Song- Sammy Davis, Jr.
- The Impossible Dream- Richard Kiley
- If My Friends Could See Me Now- Gwen Verdon
- Open a New Window- from Mame Voice
Tracks:
- Willkommen- from "Cabaret" Joel Grey
- Let The Sunshine In- James Rado,Lynn Kellogg,Melba Moore,Cast
- I'll Never Fall In Love Again- Jill O'Hara,Jerry Orbach
- The Ladies Who Lunch- from "Company" Elaine Stritch
- Tea For Two- Roger Rathburn,Susan Watson
- I'm Still Here- Yvonne De Carlo
- I Don't Know How To Love Him- Yvonne Elliman
- We Go Together- Adrienne Barbeau,Barry Bostwick,Walter Bobbie,Cast
- Corner Of The Sky- John Rubinstein
- Send In The Clowns- Glynis Johns
- Ease On Down The Road- Stephanie Mills,Tiger Haynes,Ted Ross,Hinton
- One- from "A Chorus Line" Cast
- All That Jazz- Chita Rivera,Ensemble
- Tomorrow- Andrea Mcardle
- Don't Cry For Me Argentina- Patti Lupone
- Come Follow The Band
- Lullaby Of Broadway- Jerry Orbach
- And I'm Telling You I'm Not Going- Jennifer Holliday
- The Bells Of St. Sebastian- Raul Julia
Tracks:
- Memory- Betty Buckley
- I Am What I Am- George Hearn
- Move On- Bernadette Peters,Mandy Patinkin
- Do You Hear The People Sing?- Michael Maguire,Cast
- The Music Of The Night- Michael Crawford
- You're Nothing Without Me- James Naughton,Gregg Edelman
- The American Dream- Jonathan Pryce,Cast
- Doctor Jazz- Gregory Hines,Company
- With One Look- Glenn Close
- On Broadway- Adrian Bailey,Frederick B. Owens,Ken Ard,Victor Trent Cook
- Le Jazz Hot- Julie Andrews,Ensemble
- Seasons Of Love-
- Hakuna Matata- Max Casella,Tom Alan Robbins,Scott Irby-Ranniar,Jason Raize
- I Wanna Be A Producer- Matthew Broderick,Ensemble
- Dancing Queen- Louise Plowright,Jenny Galloway
- Good Morning Baltimore- Marissa Jaret Winokur
- Movin' Out- Michael Cavanaugh,Band
- I Go To Rio- Hugh Jackman,Company
- Defying Gravity- Kristin Chenoweth,Idina Menzel
Customer Reviews:
Fabulous for any Broadway-lover.......2007-01-30
Top Shelf.......2007-01-04
TERRIFIC CD'S.......2006-03-23
Great Collection of Broadways greatest Songs .......2005-06-14
Great Compilation!.......2005-01-17
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September Songs: The Music of Kurt Weill
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000029WM Release Date: 1997-08-19 |
Tracks:
- Mack The Knife - Nick Cave
- Ballad Of The Soldier's Wife - P.J. Harvey
- Alabama Song - David Johansen
- Youkali Tango - Teresa Stratas
- Lost In The Stars - Elvis Costello
- Pirate Jenny - Lotte Lenya
- Speak Low - Charlie Haden
- Oh, Heavenly Salvation - The Persuations
- Lonely House - Betty Carter
- Surabaya- Johnny - Teresa Stratas
- Furchte Dich Nicht - Mary Margaret O'Hara
- September Song - Lou Reed
- Mack The Knife - Bertolt Brecht
- What Keeps Mankind Alive? - William S. Burroughs
Customer Reviews:
some brilliant renditions, but can't quite all mix together.......2006-10-19
In all, there are some brilliant interpretations of Weill here. I am a fan of Cave's "Mack the Knife" and David Johansen's "Alabama Song," and how can someone NOT like Lotte Lenya herself on "Pirate Jenny" and the drolling of the immortal William S. Burroughs talking through "What Keeps Mankind Alive?"
But other tracks feel to be just too short of brilliance. I love that Lou Reed tries to turn "September Song" into a kind of rock ballad, almost a VU "It Was a Pretty Good Year," but the rendition seems a little short of energy and falls flat after a while. Elvis Costello, though magnificent as an overall artist, just doesn't bring new life to "Lost in the Stars."
Perhaps the problem in the end that the choices were a little too much of the Top 40 Weill (if there really can be such a term). These are songs that have for a long time been regarded as the best of Weill, and it might have furthered the purpose of his music to find new gems and bring them into the sunlight.
Cool and Camp.......2006-08-24
September Song Music of Kurt Weill.......2006-08-22
It's a long time between January and December.......2004-06-11
Paul
Ain't we Hip?!!?.......2003-07-23
The mystery here is that there's a perfectly good compilation from the 80s, "Lost in the Stars: the Music of Kurt Weill", featuring many of the same songs--and, if I'm not mistaken some of the same performers. That's the one you want. Too bad it's OP.
Average customer rating:
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Die Dreigroschenoper: Berlin 1930
Manufacturer: Teldec ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005Y34P Release Date: 2003-02-18 |
Tracks:
- Ouvertd Moritat Von Mackie Messer
- Seererjenny
- Kanonensong [Cannon Song]
- Liebeslied
- Barbara Song
- Erstes Dreigroschen-Finale
- Abschied
- Zuherbassatle
- Ballade Von Angenehmen Leben
- Eifersuchtsduett - Lotte Lenya, Theo Mackeben & his Jazz Orchestra
- Zweites Dreigroschen-Finale - Lotte Lenya, Theo Mackeben & his Jazz Orchestra
- Lied Von Der Unzullichkeit des Menschlichen Strebens
- Moritat und Schlusschoral - Marlene Dietrich
- Wie Man Sich Bettet - Curt Bois
- Alabama Song - Marlene Dietrich
- Nachtgespenst
- Peter - Lotte Lenya, Theo Mackeben & his Jazz Orchestra
- Guck Doch Nicht Immer Nach Dem Tangogeiger Hin
- Jonny
- Vom Seemann Kuttel Daddeldu
- Chant des Canons
- Chant d'Amour
- Tangoballade
- Ballade de la Vie Agrle
- Die Seererjenny
- Barbara Song
- Die Moritat Von Mackie-Messer
- Lied Von Der Unzullichkeit des Menschlichen Strebens
- Alabama Song [Alternate Take]
Amazon.com
Performed in 1930 by the cast and orchestra of the 1928 Berlin premiere (except for Willi Trenk-Trebitsch, the Mackie of the 1929 Prague premiere), this extraordinary recording must be the last word in genuine, unvarnished "authenticity." Even the remastered sound is amazingly good and life-like. The half-spoken, half-sung delivery captures the biting sarcasm of Brecht's text as well as the abrasive bitterness and sinuous lyricism of Weill's melodies, underlined by the punchy, swinging rhythms and indigenously jazzy sound of the orchestra. The result is an uncanny evocation of a historical period and its atmosphere. One can smell the smoky nightclub air, see the garish colors, and feel the unbridled sensuousness. This "abridged" version offers 13 familiar numbers, with most strophic repeats omitted, but includes alternate versions of several songs--four in French, two sung by Brecht himself. There are also two songs from Mahagonny, a long "scene" by Wilhelm Grosz, and two songs each by Rudolf Nelson and Friedrich Hollaender (who wrote the music for the film "The Blue Angel), two of them sung by Marlene Dietrich with her inimitable lascivious sensuality. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
Wonderful original recording, plenty extras. .......2006-09-11
- If you're at all familiar with the Dreigroschenoper and all its incarnations, be sure to buy this album. It's the closest you could get to an 'original'.
- If you're completely new to the Threepenny story, I would recommend starting with the 1999 Nina Hagen concert version instead. It's got all the songs left out here, better recording quality, and a more modern approach to the music.
This is not a complete collection of original cast Dreigroschen songs. Rather, it's a selection of the best tracks from the play, often censored and cut short (in all the usual ways), and filled up with seemingly random extras in the genre.
The performers are all quite brilliant, and it's refreshing to hear a 3P without all the screaming and biting from recent versions. Though the songs are by no means slow, they're much more relaxed, more saccharine I would say, than what they've later evolved into. I love both type interpretations, but I often prefer this one.
One very nice bonus is the inclusion of a handful Threepenny songs in French. Otherwise pretty hard to come by. Also, the famous final lines of the movie version (Moritat reprise) are present, which I've only seen in one other recording (the 1981, also led by Miss Lotte Lenya). All in all, an essential CD for Brecht/Weill fans.
This one is really fine. .......2006-03-03
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The Threepenny Opera (1994 London Donmar Warehouse Cast)
Kurt Weill , Bertolt Brecht , Tom Hollander , and Sharon Small Manufacturer: Jay Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005BGU Release Date: 1997-02-18 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- Peachum's Morning Song (Morning Chorale)
- Kids Today
- Gang Song (Wedding Song)
- Pirate Jenny
- Squaddies Song (Cannon Song)
- Love Duet
- Barbara Song
- Life's A Bitch (Dreigroschenfinale)
- Melodrama/Polly's Song
- The Ballad Of Sexual Imperative
- Knocking Shop Tango
- The Flick Knife Song (Moritat)
- Easy Life (Ballade)
- Jealousy Duet
- What Keeps A Man Alive? (II Dreigroschenfinale)
- What's The Point? (LIed.17)
- The Socrates Song (Solomonsong)
- A Call From The Grave
- Ballad In Which Macheath Begs All Mens' Forgiveness (Grabschrift)
- Act III Finale
Customer Reviews:
Outstanding!.......2003-07-04
This is definitely one of the very best performances I've heard. The acting, the singing, the instrumental performances, the language are all spectacularly perfect. I just wish I'd gone to London in 1994 to see this version. Must have been the experience of a lifetime.
only true version!.......2002-11-07
The truest Threepenny experience I've ever had.......2000-11-06
Real Londoners.......2000-10-21
deliciously brecht.......2000-09-04
I've read several customer reviews of this recording, and people seem to be missing the point of the show entirely. People are lamenting the loss of the romance and beauty of the show - unfortunatly this show is about murderers, whores and businessmen and is not meant to be a musicalization of a Bronte novel. Brecht was making strong political points with these characters, so strong a point that the show ran until the Nazi's closed it, and manged to destroy most of the prints of (horrible) film-version.
I'm not too familiar with the Blitzstein translation, but what I have heard of it is flat, colourless and boring - sans all the vulgarity of the characters singing the songs. This version (thank god!) uses the "f-word" (among others) to great affect. I actually happened to see an american company do this version. While the modernazation of the peice was pointless (and moslty unnoticable) the production stands up better when we hear "The Life's a Bitch Song" sound like life's a bitch. (In this particular performance there was an improved reference to Monica Lewensky - which, though completely inapproriate, was deliciously funny.)
Also, the Ballad of Mack the Knife (here, "The Flick-Knife Song") has been reassigned to Jenny Diver (at last we hear her last name pronounced correctly) - and it ended the first half. It was DELICIOUS to hear, and the perfect character in the show to sing it, too, who knows Mackie better than Jenny? (Also, this performers voice is amazing in the role, which is a nice change from the strage gutteral and oddly Scottish performance of Polly.)
The lyrics have bite, now, witch matches the score itself. Bad lyrics always aggravate me - and these work.
If you're looking for romance, stick to Phamtom of the Opera. But if you're looking for a great modern treatment of a strong (and very entertaining) pollitical work - then get this recording. Even if you suspect you'll dislike it, and are familiar with other recordings/traslations of the work, its truly interesting to hear the differences in interpretation from version to version.
All in all this is a great version of the show, and true to the vulgarity and humour of Brect's style. And it also includes the best recording of Mack the Knife/Flick-Knife Song, with some attitude - not the jazzed-up lounge version that was latter adapted into a McDonalds ad.
(Its also interesting to note that the score was being played the the actor/dancers in the ensemble. And the "What's the Point Song" has removed the orchestral accompaniment, and replaces instruments, note-for-note, with the esembles voices. This is the same company the debuted the revival of Caberet currently on broadway, so if you're familiar with that revival, you may notice some similarities.)
Average customer rating:
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Lotte Lenya sings Kurt Weill's The Seven Deadly Sins & Berlin Theatre Songs
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000029YI Release Date: 1997-12-09 |
Tracks:
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Prologue: Andante sostenuto
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Idleness: Allegro vivace
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Pride: Allegretto, quasi andantino - Schneller Walzer
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Anger: Molto agitato
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Gluttony: Largo
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Lust: Moderato
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Avarice: Allegro giusto
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Envy: Allegro non troppo - Alla marcia, un poco tenuto
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Epilogue: Andante sostenuto
- The Threepenny Opera: 'Moritat vom Mackie Messer'
- The Threepenny Opera: 'Barbara-Song'
- The Threepenny Opera: 'Seerauberjenny'
- Aufstief und Fall der Stadt mahogany: 'Havanna-Lied'
- Aufstief und Fall der Stadt mahogany: 'Alabama-Song'
- Aufstief und Fall der Stadt mahogany: 'Denn Wie Man Sich Bettet'
- Happy End: 'Bilbao-Song'
- Happy End: 'Surabaya-Johnny'
- Happy End: 'Was die Herren Matrosen sagen'
- Das Berliner Requiem: 'Ballade vom ertrunkenen Madchen'
- Der Silbersee, Ein Wintermarchen: 'Lied der Fennimore'
- Der Silbersee, Ein Wintermarchen: 'Casar Tod'
Amazon.com essential recording
Whether playing Anna in The Seven Deadly Sins or singing "Moritat vom Mackie Messer" ("Mack the Knife"), Lotte Lenya helped define the music of her husband, Kurt Weill. The duo literally created the soundtrack for the prewar Berlin of our fantasies--an exotic land of nicotine and nightlights--where cabaret, jazz, and the odd American instrumental influence all coexist happily. Now remastered, this collection gathers Lenya's legendary 1957 recordings of Sins and her 1955 recording Sings Berlin Theatre Songs. Forget subtlety--Lenya is all about emotion. On cuts like "Pirate Jenny," Lenya's voice sounds fluttery and frantic, and on "Surabaya-Johnny," her German sounds fragile and sweet, but mostly she's just herself--bittersweet, raw, and (most of all) human. In spirit, Marianne Faithfull, PJ Harvey, and a host of others all kept the torch of Lenya's style going. But after listening to these Berlin theater songs in classic form (and in their original tongue), you'll never hear them the same way again. --Jason VerlindeCustomer Reviews:
One of the greats.......2007-04-17
Now that CDs have made phonograph records obsolete, I've wanted to replace my LP version of the Berlin Theatre Songs for some time. Well, I feel that I've hit the jackpot with this Masterworks Heritage CD reissue which is packaged with the Brecht-Weill THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS, an experimental dance-drama that Brecht and Weill created in Paris after fleeing Nazi Germany. I had never heard THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS. It is a revelation. It could have been written by no one else. The haunting melodies, the offbeat orchestrations and the unorthodox subject matter combine to form a Brecht-Weill classic. I love this music and have played it repeatedly for weeks. Lenya's voice during this period had not yet become raspy and her saucy personality shines through. My German is much better now than it was as a college student and I can at last appreciate Lenya's perfectly enunciated German. I find this recording mesmerizing. The CD is packaged as a foldout album/book, rather than a jewel box. It includes a brief essay by Teresa Stratas and helpful notes by Mario R. Mercado. Also included are more than a dozen sepia-toned photos of the recording session and four beautiful color photographs of Lenya in Hamburg in 1956. And of course, that wonderful Saul Bolasni portrait that graced the original LP is included on the inside cover of the jacket.
I think this CD is essential. For me, it conjures up a whole era, maybe a whole century. Five stars.
I cannot live without this album. .......2006-06-09
In short: the Seven Sins is unbelievable. It's Brecht/Weill at their very best. It will latch itself onto your brain, stick its claws into your skull, surpass anything you've ever heard before. From the very start -- just three notes that will, I promise, make you shiver -- to the beautiful, melancholy ending; it's what opera should be like, and it's beyond perfect.
Miss Lotte Lenya, who was the smartest woman in the world for marrying Kurt Weill TWICE, sings what's probably the definitive version of Anna-Anna. Yes, it's two octaves lower than what was intended (but if it's high-pitched warbling you're after, I can highly recommend the lovely Anne Sofie von Otter version), and some people seem to be slightly allergic to Lotte's voice. Which I still fail to understand. She embodies everything Weill writes -- every word out of her mouth feels just right, just exactly the way it was intended.
One other version I'm particularly fond of is the one starring Marianne Faithfull. The differences are easy to spot: Marianne sings in English. Marianne sounds more stoic. Marianne's choir is more overwhelming, but smoother, though the pieces don't fit together quite as well. Marianne is just slightly faster, less emotional, slightly sweeter. Lotte, on the other hand, gives it everything she's got -- never holds back -- and fills the part with emotion. Lotte's choir is tinny, Berlin-y cabaret-y. Lotte's orchestra is much more solid. And Lotte toys more with the lyrics. Both versions are perfect, and I would VERY highly recommend buying both if you can afford it, if just to compare.
Just like Marianne's CD, this album is filled up with as much other Brecht/Weill stuff as would still fit on the disc. The final notes of the Seven Sins epilogue are quickly followed with a gorgeous full Mack The Knife (yes, uncensored), an unbelievable (and definitive) Pirate Jenny, an Alabama Song... pretty much everything these people are famous for, and even some rather obsure songs. The orchestra and background singers mix perfectly with Lotte's vocals on every track. There's not a single flaw -- not in the music, not in the recording quality, nothing -- every bit of it is as perfect as these songs get.
Whether you're just starting out collecting Berlin cabaret, or finally look to complete your collection, this album is simply something you can't NOT buy. So buy it. Buy it. Yes. Excellent. And, if you're searching for more excellent related stuff, here's some other CDs I can recommend:
- Die Dreigroschenoper: 1999 version, starring Nina Hagen, Max Raabe, HK Gruber
- The Threepenny Opera: 1954 Blitzstein adaptation (English softened version)
- Jasperina de Jong - Sieben Rosen hat der Strach (Brecht tribute)
- Cathy Berberian - The Unforgettable
- The Tiger Lillies - Twopenny Opera (It's One Cheaper)
And a final note: avoid the Ute Lemper version at all costs. She's a great singer, absolutely, but will never be Anna-Anna.
Lenya and Weill at their best! Buy It........2005-11-04
As a lifelong Weill fan who has heard many different interpretations of these songs most notably from Ute Lemper and Maria Stratas, I was struck by how dramaticly better was Lenya's performance of the lyrics. I think this goes far beyond the fact that many of these works were written specifically to be performed by Lenya in Berlin between 1927 and 1933. It is obvious to my ear that even though Lemper is a great cabaret singer, Lenya trumps this with years of performing on the live stage without the aid of electronic amplification.
Lenya does 'Die Sieben Todsunden' with the version done for a lower voice (same as Lemper) rewritten for her by Weill. As other reviewers have noted, this was originally a combination ballet / song cycle commissioned in Germany by George Balanchine where the singer and the ballerina perform two sisters, both named Anna.
None of the individual songs are nearly as popular on their own as the following collection of songs from the German works, 'The Threepenny Opera', 'Mahagonny', and 'Happy End'.
My first encounter with Lotty Lenya's singing was on a Columbia collection done on vinyl in the 1960s, done, probably following on her appearance in the second James Bond movie, 'From Russia, With Love' as the Russian Colonel Klebb. I think this recording is far superior to that issue or to any other recent recording where Lenya does songs she never performed on the stage.
"An important landmark in dancing history".......2001-06-16
"An important landmark in dancing history".......2001-06-16
Average customer rating:
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Round About Weill
Manufacturer: Ecm Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007DHQ34 Release Date: 2005-04-19 |
Tracks:
- Dov'e La Citta
- Ach, Bedenken Sie, Herr Jack O'Brien
- Tango Ballade
- Improvvisamente
- Divagazioni Su 'Youlkali'
- Mahagonny, Scene 6
- Ein Taifun!...Tifone? No, Pioggerella
- Lieben
- Boxen
- Round About Weill I/Denn Wie Man Sich Bettet, So Liegt Man
- Mahagonny, Scene 13
- Essen
- Round About Weill II
- Tief In Alaskas Schneeweissen Waldern
- Ach, Bedenken Sie, Herr Jack O'Brien, Var
- Mahagonny, Scene 4
- Aber Dieses Ganze Mahagonny
- Alabama Song
- Mahagonny, Scene 6, Var.
- Alabama Song, Var.
- Interludio 'Ma Che Modi Sono?...': Cumparsita Maggiorata
- Interludio 'Ma Che Modi Sono?...': Tristezze Di Fra' Martino
- Denn Wie Man Sich Bettet, So Liegt Man, Var.
Customer Reviews:
HIDDEN JEWELS.......2006-04-22
Gianluigi Trovesi (clarinets) & Gianni Coscia (accordion), In Cerca di Cibo (5*)
Gianluigi Trovesi is a hidden jewel in today's jazz. Perhaps he's undersung because he's Italian: he performs and records in Italy, not in American jazz clubs or for a central American jazz label. Maybe, on these two albums, it's because some afficionados look down on the "European" clean jazz typical to ECM records. Above all, I suspect it's because the music he plays --though not the way he plays it-- is hard to classify.
Take these two albums. Are they jazz? Italian folk music? Composed or 'classical' music? Trovesi and Coscia mesh as well as any duo in jazz --think of the exquisite music made by duos such as Charlie Haden and Kenny Baron, Jim Hall and Ron Carter, or Gary Burton and Chick Corea on Crystal Silence. But the music Torvesi and Coscia produce on these two albums is devilishly difficult to classify. Sometimes they settle for composed lines, heartbreaking melodies played simply, simply. At other times, they clearly improvise, but seldom on recognmizable jazz lines. They are demons --Trovesi especially-- at quoting wildly from other pieces: they close one piece on the Weill album with "Blue Moon," another time with (almost) "Frere Jacques." But it's jazz nonetheless, played by two hyper-alert and super-intelligent musicians who mine their musical ancestry to consummate effect.
Of the two albums, my wife has a very slight preference for the Weill album, which is made up half of tunes written by Weill and most of the rest of the artists' own tunes that fit the mood of Weill. Both clarinet and acordion capture well the cabaret atmosphere of so many Weill tunes, including different versions of "Alabama Song" and "Tango Ballade."
On the Weill album, Trovesi continues his fascination with John Lewis's "Django," the moving funeral dirge for French gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt first recorded by the Modern Jazz Quartet. (Trovesi plays "Django" on In Cerca di Cibo and quotes it on Around Small Fairy Tales.) This is appropriate because in some respects, Trovesi is like Lewis, though much hotter and more earthy at times. Both composed and have led groups that played music that critics saw as too 'classical.' Both used non-jazz idioms for jazz purposes.
I own five albums by Trovesi now, which is all I've been able to find and buy to date. Around Small Fairy Tales features Trovesi playing his own compositions with a string orchestra. From G to G and Fugace feature his octet, which sounds at times like a slightly woozy stepchild of the great George Russell experimental groups of the very early sixties. In an age that slights the clarinet as a solo instrument, Trovesi is arguably the best clarinetist in jazz, a major soloist and melodist.
I love this man and he's never sounded better than playing with Coscia. Needless to say, these two ECM albums are impeccably engineered for sound.
Dave Keymer
Innovative and dreamlike.......2005-10-24
This is amazing.......2005-07-02
magical music.......2005-05-03
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The Collector's The Threepenny Opera
Manufacturer: VAI Audio ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000053W80 Release Date: 2000-01-01 |
Tracks:
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Ov - Lewis Ruth Band/Theo Mackeben
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Moritat (Mack, The Knife) - Kurt Gerron
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Ballad Of The Agreeable Life - Willy Trenk-Trebitsch
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Love Duet - Erika Helmke/Willy Trenk-Trebitsch
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Cannon Song - Kurt Gerron/Willy Trenk-Trebitsch
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Pirate Jenny - Lotte Lenya
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Act I Finale - Lotte Lenya/Erika Helmke/Erich Ponto
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Barbara Song - Lotte Lenya
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Jealousy Song - Lotte Lenya/Erika Helmke
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Farewell - Erika Helmke/Willy Trenk-Trebitsch
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Act II Finale - Willy Trenk-Trebitsch
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Procurer's Ballad - Lotte Lenya/Willy Trenk-Trebitsch
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Song Of The Inadequacy Of Life - Erich Ponto
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Moritat (Reprise) - Lotte Lenya
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Final Chor - 1930 German Cast
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Moritat - Bertolt Brecht
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Song Of The Inadequacy Of Life - Bertolt Brecht
- Kleine Dreigroschenmusik (Little Threepenny Ste): Moritat - Berlin State Opr Orch/Otto Klemperer
- Kleine Dreigroschenmusik (Little Threepenny Ste): Ballade - Berlin State Opr Orch/Otto Klemperer
- Kleine Dreigroschenmusik (Little Threepenny Ste): Tango-Ballade - Berlin State Opr Orch/Otto Klemperer
- Kleine Dreigroschenmusik (Little Threepenny Ste): Cannon Song - Berlin State Opr Orch/Otto Klemperer
- Die Dreigroschenoper: Moritat - Mme. Damia
- Mahagonny: Alabama Song - Lotte Lenya/The Three Admirals
- Mahagonny: As You Make Your Bed - Lotte Lenya
- Mahagonny: Medley - Lotte Lenya/Berlin Cast Of The Kurfurstendamm Theatre, Berlin
- Happy End: Bilbao Song - Lotte Lenya
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Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50
H.K. Gruber , and Palast Orchestra Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000055YBR Release Date: 2001-02-12 |
Tracks:
- Mile After Mile
- Bilbao Song
- Stay Well
- Life, Love And Laughter
- My Ship
- Green-up Time
- The Little Gray House
- Blues Potpourri
- September Song
- All At Once
- Le Roi d'Aquitaine (Waltz)
- Foxtrot Potporri
- Alabama Song
- Lied Der Jenny
- Speak Low
- It Never Was You
- What Good Would the Moon Be
- Tango Ballade
- Kanonen-Song
Amazon.com
Here's a disc of 19 familiar and unfamiliar Kurt Weill songs arranged for dance band and played by an expert group of specialists in Roaring Twenties band music. They're led by singer-conductor-composer H.K. Gruber, whose previous recordings include Weill's Die Dreigroschenoper. The result is a start-to-finish delight. From the first notes, you're beamed back in time to one of those sleek transatlantic passenger liners, sitting in an art deco ballroom watching elegant couples in tuxedos and ball-gowns swirl by while the band plays hits from Weill's German and Broadway triumphs. Sure, the venom is leached from the originals, but who needs agitprop when you're on a dance floor? The arrangements are by a variety of hands, hired by Weill's European and American publishers with his approval to get more mileage from his musical theater works. They're delightfully square rhythmically and formulaic in transferring Weill's music to conventional dance bands, but the music still holds up and is fun to hear in its new clothes. A special treat is the eight tracks with Max Raabe, whose light tenor and falsetto singing preserve the spirit of Weill's songs, as well as perfectly mimic the boy band singers of times gone by. --Dan DavisCustomer Reviews:
SAIL ON, KURT!.......2006-04-23
Shoenberg and Webern expressed their disdain of Weill's music; curiously, Arnold had also disclosed a secret wish of having his own audiences walk back home "whistling his tunes", oh, don't ask why... You can certainly whistle, hum and sway your partner now, as the transatlantic's bouncy dancehall sails on just as Kurt, Lotte and the lot of them did when escaping the lethal hounds of early 30s Berlin.... the-next-little-dollar bound.
Not at All Vile Weill.......2001-08-13
ELEVATOR MUSIC.......2001-05-23
But Weill was an innovator: a man who can still be listened to experiencing the thrill of something fresh and new. One immediately thinks of his collaborations with Bertolt Brecht in Germany: "Threepenny Opera" and "The Rise & Fall Of The City of Mahagonny" or "The Seven Deadly Sins", etc. his American opera, "Street Scene" with Langston Hughes or his American musical plays: "One Touch of Venus" with Ogden Nash or "Love Life" with Alan Jay Lerner, etc. The songs on this CD all deserve great recordings from the "Alabama Song" to "September Song" but they turn into a kind of flattened elevator music instead of having fresh interpretations or even more traditional ones. What happens is that the longing in "What Good Would the Moon Be" and the romance of "Speak Low" and the raucousness of "Bilbao Song" are all much too similar and much too easy.
It's a little weird to think of husbands whispering to their wives," Listen, honey, they're playing 'As You Make Your Bed' from "Mahagonny".........let's fox trot!"
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Ute Lemper Sings Kurt Weill
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041VG Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- The Winter's Tale: Fennimores Lied
- The Winter's Tale: Casars Tod
- The Winter's Tale: Die Moritat Von Mackie Messer
- The Winter's Tale: Salomon - Song
- The Winter's Tale: Die Ballade Von Der Sexuallen Horigkeit
- The Winter's Tale: Zu Potsdam Unter Den Eichen
- The Winter's Tale: Nannas Lied
- The Winter's Tale: Lied Des Lotterieagenten
- The Winter's Tale: Alabama-Song
- The Winter's Tale: Denn Wie Man Sich Bettet
- The Winter's Tale: Je Ne T'Aime Pas
- The Winter's Tale: I'm A Stranger Here Myself
- The Winter's Tale: Westwind
- The Winter's Tale: Speak Low
Customer Reviews:
Affecting but oversold.......2006-11-28
Great vocalist in three languages. Very best Weill interpreter.......2005-10-01
The first disc has fourteen tracks with three from `Der Silbersee' with lyrics by Kaiser, three from `Die Dreigroschenoper' with lyrics by Bertolt Brecht, two from `Berliner Requiem' with lyrics by Brecht, two from `Mahagonny' with lyrics by Mahagonny, `Je ne t'aime pas with French lyrics by Magre, and three from `One Touch of Venus' with English lyrics by S.J. Perelman and Ogden Nash.
The middle disc includes both works performed in their original German. After having listened to `The Seven Deadly Sins' done by several different artists, and having just reviewed a CD on which Anne Sofie von Otter does this work, I discover for the first time that the piece was written in two versions, one for a low voice and one for a high voice. Von Otter does the version for high voice and Lemper does the version for low voice that, I suspect, is the way it was originally performed by Fraulein Lenya. One service done by comparing Lemper and von Otter's performance is to see how much closer Lemper is to the original spirit of the work than is von Otter. Weill's venue was not the opera stages of Berlin or Vienna, it was the popular stage, actually much closer to what we see in the movie `Cabaret' than what we see in `Amadeus'. I enjoy von Otter's rendition, but Lemper stirs my heart where von Otter does not. Lemper also seems to have the benefit of a much better cast of supporting voices on the two works on Volume 1.
All albums are done with the backing of the RIAS Berlin Sinfonietta, conducted by John Mauceri who seems to get just the right tone of sleaze out of his ensemble to match the tone of the composition and lyrics by Weill and his various librettists, especially Berthold Brecht.
Volume 2 showcases Lemper's ability to sing with equal facility and understanding in German (Songs from `Happy End'), French (Songs from `Marie Galante'), and English (Songs from `Lady in the Dark'). While my understanding of French is far weaker than my understanding of the German and the English, when I compare Ms. Lemper's French interpretations with the French of Ms. Von Otter, I definitely prefer Lemper's treatment. She may not quite match Edith Piaf, but I feel she has a cachet all her own.
Lemper is a vocalist in that great European femme fatale tradition of Lenya, Piaf, and Dietrich and certainly to my lights the leading interpreter today of Weill's songs plus works by other European composers for the musical and cabaret (See her album `City of Strangers'). Compared to even some of the greatest contemporary American female vocalists on the stage such as Streisand and Minelli, both Yanks have their strength, but they can't or don't try to achieve the same depth of feeling behind the European `Weltschmertz' you hear from Lemper and her forerunners. The closest may be Minelli's performance as Sally Bowles in `Cabaret', but even there, she can't seem to hide her American innocence.
Of the three albums, the first of the three, `Ute Lemper Sings Kurt Weill' may be the best introduction, as it includes two of Weill's best English songs, `I'm a Stranger Here Myself' and `Speak Low'. The third, `Ute Lemper Sings Kurt Weill Vol. 2' has two of Weill's most famous German songs outside of `Die Dreigroschenoper', `Bilbao-Song' and `Surabaya-Johnny'.
If you encounter this review and have never heard Ute Lemper, I strongly urge you to try one of these albums. If the German and French turns you off, try Lemper's recent album, `Punishing Kiss'.
Very highly recommended.
Ute dramatically renders the best of Weill and Brecht!.......2004-09-25
Voice non par excellence.......2004-03-18
These interpretations are just incredible, ultra-clear, and just the way one would imagine these songs presented. Several of the selections are more suited to a smoky speakeasy rather than the stage which is just fine by me. Lemper runs the gamut from the catty growl to the ultra-lush to the quiet melancholy to the joyous Bronx of "I'm Just a Stranger Here Myself." The three languages presented absolutely no problems: The German was sufficiently guttural, the French erotic and the English - well, as only English can sound.
A near perfect recording by a near perfect artist.
Ute! She knows how to trill me!.......2003-11-17
Meditation Music:
- Una furtiva lagrima
- Under My Skin
- Verdi: Aida
- Verdi: Aida; Un ballo in maschera
- Verdi: Il Trovatore
- Verdi: La Traviata
- Verdi: Le trouvère (Highlights)
- Verdi: Un Ballo In Maschera
- Very Best of Gilbert & Sullivan
- Wagner: Meistersinger von Nürnberg WWV96; Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos
Meditation Music
Bizet: Suites from Carmen and L' Arlésienne
Die Oboe Meisterhaft gespielt (Virtuoso Oboe Music) by Fasch, Telemann, and Donizetti
Music: Welcome to the Celebrity Fog Donkey [Import]
Calm Before the Storm [DualDisc] [Enhanced]
Buffett Live: Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays [Enhanced] [Live]
Barber's Adagio / Munch, Galway, Boston SO Strings