| 1. Tenerte Para Mi (All Because of You) |
| 2. Juanto a Ti (Close to You) |
| 3. Angel |
| 4. Siempre Te Amare (Can't Stop My Heart) |
| 5. No Te Voy a Abandonar (Never Gonna Give You Up) |
| 6. Luna de Miami |
| 7. Te Extraño Mas Que Ayer (Missing You) |
| 8. Recuerdos de Ti |
| 9. Tu y Yo (All I Have) |
| 10. Te Amo |
Vivian,Vivian,RCA Intl,Latin,Latin Music,Latin Pop
Average customer rating:
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Yeah!
Def Leppard Manufacturer: Island / Mercury ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FC2HT0 Release Date: 2006-05-23 |
Tracks:
- 20th Century Boy
- Rock On
- Hanging On The Telephone
- Waterloo Sunset
- Hell Raiser
- 10538 Overture
- Street Life
- Drive-In Saturday
- Little Bit Of Love
- The Golden Age Of Rock 'n' Roll
- No Matter What
- He's Gonna Step On You Again
- Don't Believe A Word
- Stay With Me
Amazon.com
While most of their teen peers were embracing nascent '70s U.K. punk with all the snotty 'tude they could muster, Sheffield's Def Leppard instead infused then-moribund metal with bracing pop smarts. Having long since sold a gazillion or two records with that formula, the '80s superstars pay homage to the eclectic, chart-savvy tastes that spawned it on this collection of covers, recharging their contemporary fortunes a bit in the bargain. Their takes on Me Decade standards like The Faces' "Stay With Me," Badfinger's "No Matter What," and T Rex's "20th Century Boy" may be arguably too faithful, right down to Joe Elliot's often dead-on vocal chameleon routine. But elsewhere they perform some admirable pop archaeology, imparting a darker edge to David Essex's spooky "Rock On" and pumping Blondie's "Hanging on the Telephone," one-hit-wonder John Kongos's riff-fest "He's Gonna Step On You Again," and Sweet's "Hell Raiser" full of patent Lep energy. --Jerry McCulleyAlbum Description
On their highly anticipated new album, Def Leppard have created a heartfelt and hard rocking tribute to their musical heroes of the late 60's and 70's - the Kinks, Badfinger, T. Rex, David Bowie, Sweet, Roxy Music, Mott the Hoople, Free, Faces, and Thin Lizzy. Recording essential versions of the music that influenced their youth, the band have brilliantly merged the 'Now with the 'Then' to create a buzz that can only be summed up in one word: YEAH!Customer Reviews:
Cover tunes.......2007-07-16
Rock Gods did it once again!.......2007-07-08
Joe Elliot's vocals are over the top on this cd. The melodic guitars from Phil and Viv have a delightful cutting edge. Sav on Bass... What more could I say? He is a genius! Rick allen is a God himself.
Their vocal styles blend and carry each tune to higher lofts than ever before imagined. What I found most stunning.... Phil's voice on lead vocals for "Stay with me". Even my 14 year loves this CD! it rates up there with her fixation of My Chemical Romance.
I have yet to hear a bad Def Leppard song! Each cover tune they do, They leppardize it!
A loyal Leppard Fan from 1981!!!!
Another Turkey from Def Leppard.......2007-06-26
In theory, a Def Leppard album covering classic songs from the 1970s should be great, in reality; however, it is not so great.
After a string a mediocre to horrible albums that went nowhere (with the exception of 1996's underrated "Slang") Def Leppard shows the world their roots--where they came from and what influenced them with their covers albums "Yeah!" (2006).
You can't argue with the band's choices--Blondie, Bowie, T-Rex, ELO, Roxy Music, etc. It's all good stuff. The problem with "Yeah!" isn't a lack of good songs; rather the problem lies with Def Leppard themselves and their execution of the songs.
Def Leppard used to be a great band, no denying that. Their first four albums, specifically "High N' Dry" (1982) and "Pyromania" (1983) are two of the greatest hard-rock albums of the 1980s. That said, Def Leppard have sucked for years. "Slang" and the "Retroactive" (1993) compilation album aside, everything the band has released since the death of Steve Clarke has ranged from mediocre (1992's Adrenalize, 1999's "Euphoria") to downright horrid (2002's atrocious "X"). In short, it's been a long time since Def Leppard knew how to rock and they have long since lost their balls. So even when Def Leppard tries to cover rocking songs, they can't, they just don't know how.
If Def Leppard had released the same collection of songs on a covers album twenty-five years ago, (when they had Pete Willis and Steve Clarke on guitar) it would have been great. Now, however, it just sounds weak. As previously noted, the band no longer has any balls; the performance of the songs on this album is too smooth, with no sense of urgency, no teeth, no rock n' roll spirit. Most of the time the songs sound either forced, i.e., Sweet's "Hell Raiser" or too sugary, i.e., The Kinks "Waterloo Sunset." This album sounds like a bunch of over-the-hill rockers trying to sound vigorous and it just doesn't work. "Yeah!" is an album for soccer moms and Bryan Adams fans, not for people who wanna rock.
There are some decent moments on "Yeah!" Blondie's "Hanging on the Telephone," ELO's "10538 Overture" and Badfinger's "No Matter What" aren't bad, although not as good as the originals. Everything else on this album is totally lame.
FINALLY, a complete review of .......2007-05-09
This record makes a whole lot of sense and squashes many things that people mistakenly think the Leps are, musically. NWOBHM or pop-metal??!!?? BAH!!
Try glam-influenced powerpop, or a British, glam-influenced Cheap Trick, and you're on target. And honestly, I think it's a mistake that the Leps are constantly on nostalgic summer package tours with horrible corporate rock bands like Journey...shoot me, Journey fans, I don't care, your band and taste is terrible!!! Same with KISS!!! If anything, the Leps should play with musically-compatible bands like Cheap Trick, or newer Britpop bands like the Arctic Monkeys or the Kaiser Chiefs or great new Scottish bands like the View or the Fratellis, to show these younger bands and fans they are still vital...not just for their parents' generation. Gosh, I feel old.
Anyhoo, about the Leps' recent covers album, "Yeah!!!", from 2006, it's possibly the best covers album in recent memory, if not EVER. It's totally fun, not obvious, has many of my fave bands and shows the band's impeccable taste and ability to rock out and have a good time...it probably made the band feel like kids again. The album artwork and nods to the classics is a nice fun touch...the liner notes are informative and infectiously written by Phil and Joe, both obviously music connosseurs and collectors. The intros by Sav and Viv are cool as well.
Now, there are 4 different versions of the album...the regular 14-tracker, the BestBuy version with 2 bonus tracks, the Target edition with 2 completely DIFFERENT bonus tracks, and the Japanese edition has 2 bonus tracks. PLUS Walmart had a separately-sold companion bonus DISC with 8 more tracks (5 additional covers and 3 interviews) which put the whole project into proper perspective. The Japanese disc has only 2 of these Walmart tracks as bonuses. Here's my take on the whole kitten caboodle:
REGULAR ALBUM:
1- "20th Century Boy"...the T-Rex song, an amazing song and great energetic cover...fits the Leps to a T.
2- "Rock On"...the David Essex song, also covered by Michael Damian (a #1 hit in the US but it was lame) and Toni Basil!?!?...her version was cool and on the US version of "Word Of Mouth" following "Mickey"...the Leps cover beats them all...love the way the song kicks in, AC/DC-style.
3- "Hanging On The Telephone"...the 1976 Nerves powerpop classic popularized by Blondie...surprisingly awesome.
4- "Waterloo Sunset"...the 1960s Kinks classic, originally placed on the Leps 2CD import "Best Of", in a better home here on "Yeah!!", great version that grows on you.
5- "Hell Raiser"...the Sweet classic...I know the Leps have cited Sweet as an influence, and they give a kicking rendition here...the funny, campy Steve Priest vocal lines are done here by, NOT Joe Elliot, but guest Justin Hawkins, former lead singer/songwriter of campy Brit hardrockers the Darkness, to fine fun effect...
6- "10538 Overture"...ELO's debut single, when Roy Wood was in the band, after the Move split up...GREAT and a surprisingly fitting choice for the Leps...great guitar work, and features guests on strings, the Stepaside Symphonia...
7- "Street Life"...the 1973 Roxy Music classic...shows the Leps are NOT a pop metal band, but a glam-influenced powerpop band, more taken by punk and new wave, as 1970s UK glam was the precursor to this inferior style of rock, and the Leps do some nice noise on their guitars...LOVE this song...
8- "Drive-In Saturday"...the obscure-in-the-US, HUGE-in-the-UK David Bowie classic from 1973's "Aladdin Sane"...see my take on previous song by Roxy Music.
9- "Little Bit Of Love"...the Free song, a big surprise for me, as I am NOT a Paul Rodgers/Bad Company fan at all...I think BC was probably the most overrated band of them all, really boring actually. Free, on the other hand, I have not heard much of, besides "All Right Now", which was decent but played out, yet still better than all of Bad Company combined. Perhaps, Paul Rodgers sounded great in this band, I don't know, but this song is actually a pretty good pop tune...I may have to investigate Free's catalogue now.
10- "The Golden Age Of Rock 'N' Roll"...the Mott The Hoople classic...probably my fave track on all of "Yeah!!"...just amazing, what rock & roll is all about...Ian Hunter is just swell, as a rock & roller, as a songwriter and as a person...I had the opportunity to see Ian live recently and he blew me away...pictures I took, I gave doubles to Joe himself when I met him at the aftershow party for the NYC "X" club gig at Irving Plaza, now the Fillmore, because I knew Ian was Joe's hero. Ian does the intro here...very cool...and features guests like Joe's wife on BV's, Viv's bro on honking sax and Canadian singer/songwriter Emm Gryner on BVs and piano...just awesome...and I can hear the Sex Pistols influence here too, as is mentioned in the liner notes.
11- "No Matter What"...the Badfinger powerpop classic...arguably the first ever true powerpop song, let alone hit, and yeah, the Leps' version is almost identical, which proves that the Leps are, at heart, a powerpop band, not a metal/pop metal band. Love this remix better than the version on the US 2CD "Rock Of Ages" collection...fits better here too, as this is, after all, an album of covers.
12- "He's Gonna Step On You Again"...the John Kongos classic...honestly, I thought I was the only one who knew who John Kongos was!!! I had the original album with this song, and "Tokoloshe Man", on it...both songs were covered by UK rave rockers Happy Mondays in the early 90s...the band recently reunited as well...turns out the Leps, espesh Joe, were big fans as well...possibly because of the "jungle drums"...great track.
13- "Don't Believe A Word"...the Thin Lizzy song...see my entry for the Sweet cover...I knew Phil Lynott was a big influence on the Leps as well, and this is a great song...I'm also happy they didn't do one of the obvious songs either...here or on the whole album really...
14- "Stay With Me"...the Faces song...featuring PHIL on lead vocals and Joe on Ian McLagen-ish keyboards...it kicks arse, nuff said...the Faces were the only time Rod Stewart was any good, and I do agree with Joe that "Pool Hall Richard" was their best song.
Now, the bonus tracks:
Target's CD:
15- "Action" (Live, 2005)...the Sweet song, and the studio version was a B-side and on 1993's "Retroactive" compilation...GREAT live version with lots of exuberant energy...being it's a live track, not studio, nothing has been recycled, and it's from the recent 2005 US Rock Of Ages tour.
16- "When I'm Dead And Gone"...an obscure 1970 UK hit by British duo McGUINNESS FLINT, written by Benny Gallagher and Graham Lyle. Before getting this CD, I had never heard this song or of the act before, but this cover is totally charming, a memorable and melodic, scruffy, acoustic, singalong, off-the-cuff track...a true gem with no pretentions whatsoever.
BestBuy's CD:
17- "No Matter What" (Live, 2005)...a cool live take of the Badfinger classic, probably from the same show, definitely the same 2005 US tour as the Leps cover of "Action".
18- "Winter Song"...another 1970 obscurity by UK band LINDISFARNE...like the McGuinness Flint song, I had never heard of this either, but it's equally as good, and makes me want to investigate further. The song is more reflective and is a moving Christmas-y type of song, not unlike something Cat Stevens would do...done acoustic style by the Leps...
WalMart CD:
19- "American Girl"...the Tom Petty classic...proves again how the Leps are more powerpop than metal...Joe sounds a bit like Tom here as well, and his jangly Byrds-y style fits the Leps much better than you would think...one of 2 bonus tracks on the Japanese edition of "Yeah!!"...
20- Backstage Interview #1...the band talks about the 2005 tour and their fanbase evolving & getting older.
21- "Search & Destroy"...the Iggy & The Stooges dangerous punk prototype from 1973's Bowie-produced landmark "Raw Power" album...with PHIL singing lead and playing all instruments...just proves that Phil comes from the punk world, whilst the rest of the Leps were from the glam and powerpop world...this track sounds like the Stooges themselves and Phil like Iggy that it's uncanny...it sounds vital and dangerous...this track is the second of 2 bonus tracks on the Japanese "Yeah!!"...
22- Backstage Interview #2...sums up the purpose of "Yeah!!", their inspirations, the rules for picking the tracks, and it shows how the Leps are more glam/powerpop than pop-metal...
23- "Space Oddity"...the second Bowie cover, done completely by Joe...shows how talented he really is as a 1-man band...doesn't sound far from the original at all, from the playing and arrangement to the atmosphere...pretty remarkable actually...
24- Backstage Interview #3...a conclusion to a swell interview...
25- "Dear Friends"...an obscure Queen song written by Brian May (whom I met in JFK airport in 2003, BTW, totally nice gracious guy), from Queen's 1974 debut album...sung and played completely by bassist Rick Savage...shows how talented and overlooked he is in the Def Leppard canon...the guy's a great singer in his own right and a talented multi-instrumentalist as well...who knew???
26- "Heartbeat"...an obscure 1974 song by [...] UK glamster JOBRIATH BOONE, who was always referred to as a poor man's David Bowie. Apparently, Morrissey was a huge Joby fan, that he reissued an album (or a compilation, I'm not sure) called "Jobraith" on his reactivated Attack label through Sanctuary. The guy died of AIDS in 1993 in NYC, depressed and broke...maybe he will get his due, I'm not sure, but Joe was apparently a fan...enough that he covered "Heartbeat", playing fairground organ and backed by Dave Browne on piano and Ronan McHugh on cellos...this cover is quite moving, maybe moreso that Joby died of AIDS...
Anyhoo, overall, possibly the best covers album ever recorded...now that Def Leppard got this long-gestating album out of their system...they've been wanting to do a covers album or their take on Bowie's "Pin-Ups"...since they got a record deal back in 1979, or at least Joe did...now, they can do a kickbutt album of new Lep originals...I heard the next album will be sort-of like "Back In Black"...
I think the band is revitalized...just like the Smithereens are after doing their recent cover album of the Beatles debut, "Meet The Smithereens"...that's what covers albums actually do when done right...they refresh the band and remind them of why they became a band in the first place...that's what happened with Def Leppard and "Yeah!!", but what makes this covers album better than most is that it's not just a footnote curio...it's a fun, rocking record that will be listened to many times in the future, as it stands up against the rest of Def Leppard's catalogue...
It will also remind people of what rock & roll is all about, period.
'Nuff said, I'm done.
Not Rockin.......2007-03-10
Average customer rating:
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DEBUT - Alisa Weilerstein & Vivian Hornik Weilerstein ~ Works for Cello and Piano
Niccolo Paganini , Antonin Dvorak , Alberto Ginastera , Felix Mendelssohn , Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky , Gabriel Faure , Leos Janacek , Camille Saint-Saens , Manuel de Falla , Alisa Weilerstein , and Vivian Hornik Weilerstein Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00003ZKRO Release Date: 2000-08-01 |
Tracks:
- Variations On One String On A Theme By Rossini
- Forest Quietude, Op.68 No.5
- Pampeana No.2, Op.21
- Lied Ohne Worte, Op.109 (Posth.)
- Pezzo Capriccioso, Op.62
- Apres Un Reve, Op.7, No.1: After A Dream
- Pohadka - Fairy Tale: I
- Pohadka - Fairy Tale: II
- Pohadka - Fairy Tale: III
- The Carnival Of The Animals: The Swan
- Popular Spanish Suite: I. El Pano Moruno (The Moorish Cloth)
- Popular Spanish Suite: II. Asturiana
- Popular Spanish Suite: III. Jota
- Popular Spanish Suite: IV. Nana (Lullaby)
- Popular Spanish Suite: V. Cancion (Song)
- Popular Spanish Suite: VI. Polo
Customer Reviews:
Hear Her Live.......2006-12-19
Weilerstein Debut.......2006-01-21
powefull.......2005-12-18
Florida Music Lover.......2002-10-12
Love it or hate it!.......2002-05-21
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Love Story
Vivian Green Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006LWQI Release Date: 2002-11-12 |
Tracks:
- Wishful Thinking
- 24 Hour Blue (Just One Of Those Days)
- Superwoman
- What Is Love?
- Music
- Emotional Rollercoaster
- Final Hour
- No Sittin' By The Phone
- Affected
- Fanatic
- Ain't Nothing But Love
- Be Good To You
- Complete
- Keep On Going
Amazon.com
When Philly soul sister and onetime Jill Scott backing singer Vivian Green nails a jazzy supper club vibe--as she does on songs like "What Is Love?" and the impossibly sad "No Sittin' by the Phone" from her lovely Love Story debut--you feel more elegant just listening to her. Green has one up on her hero, Barbra Streisand--she writes her own songs, credibly draws on the rich tapestry of gospel and R&B, and she can play. "24 Hour Blue" is equal parts funk and soul; "Superwoman" is a fluid, string-boosted call-to-arms for unappreciated women everywhere; and "Music" is an impossibly hip midnight-hour declaration of love for her craft. Manicured but never bloodless, slick but not austere, A Love Story stands as one of the most confident, accomplished, and sexy urban debuts in memory. --Kim HughesCustomer Reviews:
A Good Love Story.......2007-06-27
The song writing is very good and the lyrics are arranged in a way that works with the music production. check it out
If you like this cd check out...Chrisette Michele's I Am (better album than this one as a whole, so if money is low and you can't get both, get Chrisette's)...Terry Ellis, Lovely Voise also..good cd...Conya Doss is worth checking out also, she has 3 albums
What Is Love???.......2007-05-15
THE most beautiful voice.......2006-03-10
Lovely tracks like what is love ,which contains gorg background music,aint nothing but love ,where vivians voice soars, the uplifting gotta keep going on and the amazingly touching no more sittin by the phone pure heartbreak convade in vivians voice .
While i do like her follow up this album just feels more spritually together from a woman who knows where shes going.x
UNIQUE AND UNSTOPPABLE.......2005-12-05
Ten Stars!!!.......2005-11-29
Average customer rating:
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Vivian
Vivian Green Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000CMNJFE Release Date: 2005-06-28 |
Tracks:
- Wish We Could Go Back
- Mad
- Frustrated
- Damn
- Selfish
- Under My Skin
- I Like It (But I Don't Need It)
- Sweet Memory (Beautifully Young)
- Gotta Go Gotta Leave (Tired)
- Perfect Decision
- All About Us
- Sweet Thing
- Outro (Family & Friends)
- Bonus Track 1
Customer Reviews:
Hey Viv.......2007-01-17
Keep up the good work, and congratulations on a Fabulous, Fabulous album.
Vivian is a winner!.......2006-12-02
very good.......2006-11-10
SOULFUL, WONDERFUL, AND BEAUTIFUL.......2006-08-05
Clean, crisp and refreshing........2006-06-02
This album consists of songs that are atypical of R&B these days also. They don't depend on driving choruses, or thumping bass. They just depend on her voice, and the words she's singing. And they WORK. Instead of giving us an album consisting of a few singles and some filler, we get a solid block of material that holds up and doesn't become old or faded. Long after you stop playing your current album-of-the-minute with the big hits on it that get inevitably replaced by bigger hits on another day, you can keep right on playing this one.
My one complaint (and the reason it's four stars and not five) is that the album isn't as good as her first one. That one really consisted of songs that fit her voice perfectly and had much stronger, more poignant writing overall. It was more soulful than this one, and emotionally heavier. This one is excellent, but it's very light compared to her debut.
And hey, there's nothing wrong with that. She's obviously able to stretch and be flexible. And if that means that every album she puts out will maintain her high quality and yet be different from the last, that's really exciting. Not many artists can make that kind of promise, but when Vivian does, you can trust her, and trust in her music. This CD is definitely a keeper.
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Marie Christine (1999 Broadway Cast)
Manufacturer: RCA Victor Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004SBUT Release Date: 2000-04-18 |
Tracks:
- Prelude: A Prison: Before The Morning
- Prelude: A Prison: Mamzell' Marie
- Prelude: A Prison: Your Grandfather Is The Sun
- Act One: Beautiful
- Act One: In An Instant
- Act One: Way Back To Paradise
- Act One: When You Look At A Man
- Act One: The Storm
- Act One: C'Est L'Amour/To Find A Lover
- Act One: Nothing Beats Chicago/Ocean Is Different
- Act One: Danced With A Girl
- Act One: Tout Mi Mi/He Is My Release
- Act One: Miracles And Mysteries
- Act One: I Don't Hear The Ocean
- Act One: Bird Inside The House
- Act One: We're Gonna Go To Chicago
- Act One: And You Would Lie/I Will Give
- Act One: Act I Finale
- Act Two: Cincinnati
- Act Two: You're Looking At The Man
- Act Two: The Scorpion
- Act Two: Lover, Bring Me Summer
- Act Two: Tell Me
- Act Two: Billy Was Sweet/Paradise Is Burning Down
- Act Two: Prison In A Prison
- Act Two: Better And Best
- Act Two: Good Looking Woman
- Act Two: No Turning Back/Before The Morning (Reprise)
- Act Two: Beautiful (Reprise)
- Act Two: I Will Love You
- Act Two: Your Name
- Act Two: Finale-Innocence Dies
Amazon.com
A retelling of Medea transposed to 19th-century America, Marie Christine falls short of its lofty ambitions, which still makes it more audacious than most of the current Broadway fare. Composer-lyricist Michael John LaChiusa's lyrics can be cumbersomely narrative, and too often he dispatches a song without letting it develop fully, as if refusing to be overly easy on the ear. But the man's dramatic flair is undeniable, and this recording allows us to fully appreciate subtleties that got drowned in Graciela Daniele's often-dreary staging at Lincoln Center. Second-act opener "Cincinnati" shows that when he feels like it, LaChiusa can write the kind of boisterous big number that brings down a house. In the title role, Audra McDonald confirms that she is an incandescent presence. This welcome recording may help rehabilitate a misunderstood show. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
OUTSTANDING! NOT TO BE MISSED . . . . . . .......2007-05-25
With MARIE CHRISTINE, Michael John LaChiusa firmly establishes himself at the forefront of the "serious" composers for the American Musical Theater. Upon LaChiusa's acceptance of a residency with the Lyric Opera of Chicago in 2004, USOperaWeb Managing Editor Robert Wilder Blue wrote, "We don't imagine that musical theater composer Michael John LaChiusa woke up one morning in the later years of the 1990s and made a decision to be more controversial.
"Nonetheless, he set Broadway astir . . . with MARIE CHRISTINE and THE WILD PARTY, musicals whose subject matters (the Medea story and sexual escapades in the 1920s, respectively) were found to be unsuitable for that Disney-esque landscape, and whose music didn't set audiences to whistling upon leaving the theater. Worse yet, those works didn't conform to many critics' and theatergoers' preset ideas of categorization: were they musicals or were they operas? Finally, how were they to be judged? Were they the work of a genius or a hack? Critics and audiences have not been so divided in their impressions and opinions since Stephen Sondheim's COMPANY hit the stage in 1970."
David Finkle wrote (in "The TheaterMania Guide to Musical Theater Recordings"), "LaChiusa has a gift for ravishing melody but cuts corners by not bothering to develop the themes and motifs into rounded songs. Seemingly allergic to the thirty-two-bar ditty, he prefers to construct his scores as if they're ever-evolving fragments of music. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it can strike the listener as continual 'songus interruptus.'"
It works for me, and works incredibly well. Finkle further states, "LaChiusa's great fortune is in having Audra McDonald apply her gorgeous mezzo-soprano to his concoctions." He is also fortunate in having Anthony Crivello playing the part of Dante Keyes, Mary Testa as the Entertainer, and an outstanding cast of singers. Equally fortunate is having Jonathan Tunick supply the exciting orchestrations.
Opera or Broadway musical? Do we really have to make that distinction? All I can tell you is that MARIE CHRISTINE is the most exciting piece of music I have heard in a long, long time.
One of my fondest memories is seeing the great Dame Judith Anderson as MEDEA back in the mid-60s. I think she would be very pleased with Mr. LaChiusa's musical and especially with Audra McDonald's ravishing performance.
NOT TO BE MISSED!
Life embodied.......2006-02-13
Misunderstood.......2006-02-01
I say all that to say that from the first time I heard Marie Christine I could not - for the life of me -- figure out what the *&(& it was doing on Broadway. Kudos for the reviewer who noted Medea isn't a sympathetic figure -- she isn't by B'way terms.
However, she fits comfortably into the world of opera - a place filled with unsympathetic leads.
I'd like to see MC staged by an opera company. Not "sold" as a B'way musical. Look at MC compared to Hairspray, Spamalot, even Guettel's Light... then place it in context with La Traviata, Aida, Carmen...
Beautiful... but how is it a show?.......2005-05-27
My biggest complaint with with music is that LaChiusa refuses to allow his melodies to develop fully, which is unfortunate, because he's written some of the most beautiful music to come to New York since Adam Guettel's Floyd Collins, or even Sondhiem's Passion. In too many songs, he allows the song to build much too quickly; "Tell Me" for example, moves in suddenly, which, while striking, fails to fully develop the rage Marie Christine feels. Also, it seems LaChiusa feels that no chord, or even rhythm can be anything less than confusing. There doesn't need to be three melodies within the chord at the end of "Finale", nor does he need to follow the one truly melodic song in the entire show, "I Will Love You", with a jarring and, frankly painful, chord that seemed to assault my ears. This certainly doesn't help the hummable factor.
On another note, Audra McDonald is astoudning. She owns every note of LaChiusa's amazingly complex score. Her presence fills up the air from the moment you hear her voice. Anyone else in this role would have resulted in a complete wreck of a musical\"chamber opera". The rest, with the possible exceptions of Mary Testa and Darius DeHaas, are adequate and have their moments.
Ultimately, LaChiusa's music leaves a powerful impression; For all it's faults, I can't stop listening to several songs from Marie Christine: "Tell Me," "Your Name," "Paradise is Burning Down," "Prison in a Prison," and of course, "Beautiful" all enter my mind and won't let go, much like Marie herself.
Interesting, but cold.......2005-04-29
The show is by necessity very dark in tone, and the heightened passions that are expressed can only be properly explored in a chamber opera format. The result is that there are no clearly defined songs, hooks or choruses, but rather a series of tunes (some memorable, most not) which are cleverly intertwined to tell the story.
Audra McDonald is superb in the title role and LaChiusa's music gives her voice full reign. She and he co-star, Anthony Crivello, completely immerse themselves in their roles and bring a terrifying intensity to the recording. They are matched by the rest of the cast who provide support as both individual characters and as the 'Greek chorus' who comment on the action as the story progresses.
As a side note, the audio production on this CD is stunning - every nuance of voice and instrument comes across clear as a bell.
As someone else has said, this is an easy score to admire - it's very cleverly written, with an interesting density mostly lacking from musicals. However, it's the performances of the actors that give the show what little heart is has. It's very hard to actually feel anything but horror at Marie Christine's actions, and her descent into madness doesn't make her sympathetic (if that was what the authors intended). Maybe only seeing a live production would bring this clever, complex, but ultimately cold score to life.
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Mrs. Henderson Presents
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000CC3SDC Release Date: 2006-01-03 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- Bored with Widowhood
- Letting in the Sunshine
- Revuedeville
- Persuading Tommy
- Sweet Inspiration
- Vivian Van Damm
- Goody Goody
- After the Ball
- Shilling for the Hour
- Joyride
- Fall of France: La Marseillaise
- Blitz: Bombing/The Grecian Frieze/Defiance
- Babies of the Blitz
- Blue Nightfall
- Girl in the Fan
- All the Things You Are
- Elegy
- Sails of the Windmill
- Girl in the Little Green Hat
Customer Reviews:
Mrs Henderson Presents.......2007-05-16
Absolutely infectious!!!.......2007-03-28
A Creation and Recreation of Nostalgia.......2006-04-23
Fenton includes such terrific oldies as Johnny Mercer's 'Goody Goody', Charles Harris' 'After the Ball', Noel Gay's 'Letting in the Sunshine', Frank Loesser's 'Blue Nightfall', and Jerome Kern's 'All the things you are'. He segues these pieces with his own fine orchestrations and the result is a score that not only enhances the mood of the film, but one that stands alone as a recording. The various performers include Camille O'Sullivan, Charlene Ford, Ciaran Connolly, Elise Audeyev, Frances Garvey, Frank Lawson, Joseph McMurray, Kate Power, Matthew Hart, Melody Squire, Rachel Lawrence, Sir Thomas Allen!, Sophie Brown, The O'Brien Sisters, Vanessa Barmby, Vicki Davids, and Victoria Hay.
This is a recording to conjure up memories not only of a successful film but also of a time when music conveyed a lot of emotion during times of stress. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, April 06
Mrs. Henderson Presents.......2006-03-24
I've played this CD for others - of all age groups - all agree it's a defininte winner.
Upbeat and Fun!.......2006-03-22
Average customer rating:
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Handel - Israel in Egypt / Bostridge, Chance, Gritton, Varcoe, King's College Choir, The Brandenburg Consort, Cleobury
King's College Choir - Cambridge , and The Brandenburg Consort Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004SDRE Release Date: 2000-06-13 |
Tracks:
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: Prelude
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: The Sons Of Israel Do Mourn
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Put On Righteousness
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: When The Ear Heard Him Soprano
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: How Is The Mighty Fall'n
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Deliver'd The Poor
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: How Is The Mighty Fall'n
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: The Righteous Shall Be Had
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: Their Bodies Are Buried In Peace
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: The People Will Tell Of Their Wisdom
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: They Shall Recieve A Glorious Kingdom
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: The Merciful Goodness Of The Lord
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: Now There Arose A New King Over Egypt
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: And The Children Of Israel Sighed
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: Then Sent He Moses
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: They Loathed To Drink Of The River
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: Their Land Brought Forth Frogs
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Spake The Word
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Gave Them Hailstones For Rain
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Sent A Thick Darkness
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Smote All The First-Born Of Egypt
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: But As For His People
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: Egypt Was Glad
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Rebuked The Red Sea
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: He Led Them Through The Deep
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: But The Waters Overwhelmed Their Enemies
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: And Israel Saw That Great Work
- The Ways Of Zion Do Mourn: And Believed The Lord
Tracks:
- Part III: Moses' Song: Moses And The Children Of Israel
- Part III: Moses' Song: I Will Sing Unto The Lord
- Part III: Moses' Song: The Lord Is My Strength
- Part III: Moses' Song: He Is My God And I Will Exalt Him
- Part III: Moses' Song: The Lord Is A Man Of War
- Part III: Moses' Song: The Depths Have Covered Them
- Part III: Moses' Song: Thy Right Hand O Lord, And In The Greatness
- Part III: Moses' Song: Thou Sentest Forth Thy Wrath
- Part III: Moses' Song: And With The Blast Of Thy Nostrils
- Part III: Moses' Song: The Enemy Said
- Part III: Moses' Song: Thou Didst Blow With The Wind
- Part III: Moses' Song: Who Is Like Unto Thee, O Lord, The Earth Swallowed Them
- Part III: Moses' Song: Thou In Thy Mercy
- Part III: Moses' Song: The People Shall Hear
- Part III: Moses' Song: Thou Shalt Bring Them In
- Part III: Moses' Song: The Lord Shall Reign For Ever And Ever
- Part III: Moses' Song: For The Horse Of Pharoah
- Part III: Moses' Song: The Lord Shall Reign For Ever And Ever
- Part III: Moses' Song: And Miriam The Prophetess
- Part III: Moses' Song: Sing Ye To The Lord
Amazon.com
Israel in Egypt is by far the most choral of all of Handel's oratorios. Indeed, Part II (which describes the plagues of Egypt with extraordinary vividness) is all chorus, apart from one short alto aria. For the most part, the King's College Choir, Cambridge, does a splendid job here. There's something unutterably beguiling about the freshness of children's voices in this context, especially when they are warmed with the delicate touch of vibrato which the "King's sound" requires. If the young singers do not have the sophistication of the adult female voices of, say, the Monteverdi Choir, they certainly have an unmistakable bloom. Cleobury keeps things very clear in the contrapuntal and fugal sections, but is less inspired in the passages that need more drama and orchestral color: the plagues of flies, lice, and locusts are woefully restrained, for example. The soloists, however, do their best to inject some theatricality during their arias. Ian Bostridge is in particularly fine form, and Susan Gritton sounds gorgeous. An attractive interpretation. --Warwick ThompsonCustomer Reviews:
a voice teacher and early music.......2006-03-21
Israel in Egypt - Baroque Recording.......2006-02-01
Superb recording of one of Handel's great oratorios.......2005-10-18
His "Israel in Egypt" dates from 1738 as he was winding down his composition of operas. In its original form the first part reused the mournful funeral anthem he had composed for the funeral of his patron Queen Caroline. While included in this recording, it has usually not been performed in concert over the centuries. Why? It may be that opening a dramatic work with so many choruses of a sad affect may wear an audience out before the quite different second and third parts even begin. Its texts are drawn from Lamentations, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and others representing Israel mourning the death of Joseph.
The second part is the Exodus from Egypt. These texts are drawn from Exodus and Psalms and the music is full of text painting during the plagues and the escape through the Red Sea. Part III is the most operatic in character and probably the part the audiences love the most. It is a setting of Moses' Song drawn from Exodus 15. It has the most work of soloists, ensembles and choruses.
The work did not please its first audiences and Handel adapted it over the years to find an audience for it. However, nineteenth century audiences loved it and performed it more than any other of Handel's oratorios save, of course, "Messiah".
Handel was a composer who often borrowed and reused music. He did that with his own works and the works of others. It is not straight plagiarism by today's standards, because he reworked, extended, and transformed the music. However, it surely would have gotten him on the wrong side of copyright laws, if any had existed. But they didn't and many other composers over the centuries also used borrowed material. Handel's genius improved the music and made it immortal.
This recording is of all three parts, done with the superb and historic King College Chorus of Cambridge with its thirty voices. This choir uses only boys for the trebles and provides a wonderful sound for this music. The soloists are all superb and the orchestral playing is spot on and supports the voices perfectly.
If you want to hear works by Handel and enjoy choruses, this is a great choice. Just don't expect another "Messiah". It is not the same kind of use of soloists and chorus. There are two disks and a small booklet with some history and the libretto.
A Magnificent Performance of One of Handel's Finest Oratorios.......2005-08-07
The soloists are all superb interpreters of the style and music of Handel and while tenor Ian Bostridge, countertenor Michael Chance and soprano Susan Gritton contribute the strongest roles, the work of Libby Crabtree, Angela East, Stephen Varcoe, and Henry Herford are also consistently excellent. The 'major role' in this opus is divided between the chorus and the orchestra and here is where the recording is the most radiant of any. The King's College Choir and the Brandenburg Consort are as fine as ensembles come for this music and Cleobury knows how to coax the beauty of line and energy of text from the entire ensemble.
For those unfamiliar with Handel's oratorios this recording is a fine start. And for those lovers of baroque music (and Handel in particular), this is a superlative example of how Handel's oratorios should be sung and played. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, August 05
Passionate Reconstruction of First Version on Period Instr's.......2004-10-24
Here in wonderful fashion on period instruments with solid soloists and great baroque orchestra, this all comes together in a solid performance. Harpsichord and organ accompaniment are awesome, and strings do substantial job as well.
Great two CD set!
Average customer rating: |
Panorama: Gabriel Fauré
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005IB63 Release Date: 2001-08-14 |
Tracks:
- Requiem, Op.48: 1. Intro Et Kyrie: Requiem Aeternam Dona Eis, Domine/Kyrie Eleison - Philharmonia Chor/Horst Neumann/Timothy Farrell
- Requiem, Op.48: 2. Offertoire: O Domine Jesu Christe, Rex Gloriae - Andreas Schmidt/Philharmonia Chor/Horst Neumann/Timothy Farrell
- Requiem, Op.48: 3. Sanctus: Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus Dominus, Deus Sabaoth - Philharmonia Chor/Horst Neumann/Timothy Farrell
- Requiem, Op.48: 4. Pie Jesu: Pie Jesu Domine - Kathleen Battle/Timothy Farrell
- Requiem, Op.48: 5. Agnus Dei: Agnus Dei, Qui Tollis Peccata Mundi - Philharmonia Chor/Horst Neumann/Timothy Farrell
- Requiem, Op.48: 6. Libera Me: Libera Me, Domine, De Morte Aeterna - Andreas Schmidt/Philharmonia Chor/Horst Neumann/Timothy Farrell
- Requiem, Op.48: 7. In Paradisum: In Paradisum Deducant Angeli - Philharmonia Chor/Horst Neumann/Timothy Farrell
- Pelleas Et Melisande, Op.80: 1. Prld. Quasi Adagio - Boston SO/Seiji Ozawa
- Pelleas Et Melisande, Op.80: 2. Fileuse. Andantino Quasi Allegretto - Boston SO/Seiji Ozawa
- Pelleas Et Melisande, Op.80: 3. Chanson De Melisande - Lorraine Hunt
- Pelleas Et Melisande, Op.80: 4. Sicilienne. Allegro Molto Moderato - Boston SO/Seiji Ozawa
- Pelleas Et Melisande, Op.80: 5. Molto Adagio (La Mort De Melisande) - Boston SO/Seiji Ozawa
- Une Chatelaine En Sa Tour, Op.110 - Nicanor Zabaleta
Tracks:
- Pavane, Op.50 - Tanglewood Festiival Chor/John Oliver
- Dolly, Op.56: 1. Berceuse. Allegretto Moderato - Alfons Kontarsky/Aloys Kontarsky
- Dolly, Op.56: 2. Mi-a-ou. Allegro Vivo - Piu Lento - Allegro - Alfons Kontarsky/Aloys Kontarsky
- Dolly, Op.56: 3. Le Jardin De Dolly. Andantino - Alfons Kontarsky/Aloys Kontarsky
- Dolly, Op.56: 4. Kitty-Valse. Tempo Di Valse - Alfons Kontarsky/Aloys Kontarsky
- Dolly, Op.56: 5. Tendresse. Andante - Alfons Kontarsky/Aloys Kontarsky
- Dolly, Op.56: 6. Le Pas Espagnol. Allegro - Alfons Kontarsky/Aloys Kontarsky
- Les Berceaux, Op.23 No.1 - Gerard Souzay/Dalton Baldwin
- Le Secret, Op.23 No.3 - Gerard Souzay/Dalton Baldwin
- Soir, Op.23 No.2 - Gerard Souzay/Dalton Baldwin
- L'Horizon Chimerique, Op.118: 1. La Mer Ist Infinie - Gerard Souzay/Dalton Baldwin
- L'Horizon Chimerique, Op.118: 2. Je Me Suis Embarque - Gerard Souzay/Dalton Baldwin
- L'Horizon Chimerique, Op.118: 3. Diane. Selene - Gerard Souzay/Dalton Baldwin
- Apres Un Reve, Op.7 No.1 - Jules Eskin
- Elegie, Op.24 - Jules Eskin
- Nocturne No.4 in E flat, Op.36 - Pascal Roge
- Barcarolle No.2 in G, Op.41 - Pascal Roge
- Masques Et Bergamasques, Op.112: 1. Ov. Allegro Molto Vivo - Orpheus CO
- Masques Et Bergamasques, Op.112: 2. Menuet. Tempo Di Minuetto - Allegretto Moderato - Orpheus CO
- Masques Et Bergamasques, Op.112: 3. Gavotte. Allegro Vivo - Orpheus CO
- Masques Et Bergamasques, Op.112: 4. Pastorale. Andantino Tranquillo - Orpheus CO
- Cantique De Jean Racine, Op.11 - King's College Chor, Cambridge/Stephen Cleobury/James Vivian
Average customer rating:
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Two Sides of If
Vivian Campbell Manufacturer: Sanctuary Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000AMWIYE Release Date: 2005-09-27 |
Tracks:
- Messin With The Kid
- Im Ready
- Calling Card
- Come On In My Kitchen
- The Hunter
- Like It This Way
- I Aint Superstitious
- Spoonful
- Reconsider Baby
- Good Or Bad Times
- 32/20 Blues
- Willin For Satisfaction
Album Description
Super talented heavy rock guitarist Vivian Campbell burst onto the Irish rock scene in a band called Sweet Savage. Soon thereafter in 1982 Ronnie James Dio recruited the young prodigy as the lead guitarist for the then brand new band Dio, and Vivian is featured on the first three legendary Dio albums. Via stints in David Coverdale's Whitesnake and Lou Gramm's Shadow King, Vivian joined mega band Def Leppard in 1992 and remains one of the 2 lead guitarists of Def Leppard, touring and recording with them to this day. A long time fan of the blues, Vivian Campbell was determined to one day record his interpretations of great American blues songs. In April 2005, Vivian and 5 fellow musicians, including the great drummer Terry Bozzio (Mothers Of Invention, Missing Persons), recorded this great electric blues album. Two Sides Of If features classics originally recorded by blues legends like Muddy Waters, Albert King and Robert Johnson as well as songs from the likes of Rory Gallagher and Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac. The album closes with an original by ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons and last but not least the great Joan Osborne performs sizzling lead vocals on a great cover of Howlin' Wolf's classic song "Spoonful."Customer Reviews:
I really wanted to like this CD.......2006-12-10
I'd have to say that "Spoonful" is the only righteous tune on this "guitar is my hobby now" release, thanks entirely to Joan Osborne's kickass vocal. Too bad Campbell doesn't back up Osborne by burning up the fretboard with his fingers (like he used to do, you know, back in the good old days). Instead, he insists on showing off his barely adequate slide playing skills. My advice? Go back to the boardroom. Play some golf. Keep singing along with Bon Jovi in the shower (that is who you're trying to sound like, right?) ... who knows ... you might be a star again someday.
Way to go Viv!.......2006-11-23
As far as his voice, it does take an adjustment but to be honest I love it! The blues are gritty and raw sometimes and considering he recorded the album in just 3 days you get a good feel for the energy.
I'm glad this CD is part of my collection.
Who decides?.......2006-01-23
Vivian is out of his element--total waste of money.......2005-12-22
I agree...boring!.......2005-12-15
Average customer rating:
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The Songs That Got Away
Manufacturer: Decca Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005S0R Release Date: 1999-11-16 |
Tracks:
- Meadowlark
- I Am Going To Like It Here
- I Remember
- Mr. Monotony
- Dreamers
- Silent Heart
- Lud's Wedding
- Three-Cornered Tune
- If I Ever Fall In Love Again - Sarah Brightman Sarah Brightman
- What Makes Me Love Him?
- Chi Il Bel Sogno Di Doretta
- Away From You
- If Love Were All
- Half A Moment - Sarah Brightman Sarah Brightman
Amazon.com
For those Sarah Brightman fans who didn't spring for The Songs That Got Away when it was a pricey import, this domestic release will be a must-buy. Originally recorded in 1989 shortly after she achieved international fame in The Phantom of the Opera, the album spotlights obscure American and British musical theater songs that either were removed from shows or were "lost" when the shows themselves slipped out of the repertoire. (Of course, some of the songs aren't nearly as obscure as they were in 1989--the opening track, Stephen Schwartz's soaring "Meadowlark," has since been claimed by Liz Callaway, Patti LuPone, and Betty Buckley, while Stephen Sondheim's "I Remember"--well suited to Brightman's glasslike tones--is now recognized as one of his most gorgeous and haunting compositions.) Brightman performs well on this diverse collection of entertaining and often lovely songs, including an early draft of Frank Loesser's "Fugue for Tinhorns," here sung as a triple-tracked, lilting waltz, and the Puccini aria "Chi il bel sogno di doretta," which foreshadows her later, more ambitious crossover projects. There's also a tune from Jeeves by then-husband Andrew Lloyd Webber, who produced this album not long before he and Brightman divorced in 1990. --David HoriuchiCustomer Reviews:
For Fans of Broadway (Sondheim, Hamlisch & Bernstein e.g.):.......2007-02-24
The songs that didn't get away.......2004-02-12
Songs that showcase Sarah's theatrical gifts.......2003-12-11
Stephen Sondheim's "I Remember" is a sad ballad told from the POV of a window mannequin remembering the sights it has experienced throughout the seasons, but the memories are now hazy and at the end, it sings, "At times I think/I would gladly die/for a day of sky."
Some songs like "Lud's Wedding" from Bernstein's failed bicentennial musical, only seem to work due to Sarah's voice. Ditto for the simple "Three-Cornered Tune." Consisting of three verses, each repeated twice. However, Irving Berlin's "Mr. Monotony", a tune understandably cut from Easter Parade, is not a particularly inspiring song.
Marvin Hamlisch's "Dreamers" is one of my favourites here, as I have affinity to it, and I'm sure Sarah is one at heart as well. "Only dreamers have wings with which to fly far away", as in their own fantasies, but unfortunately, "sometimes dreamers are forced to leave their dreams far away", i.e. the harshness of reality. However, it paints them in a positive light and states that everyone needs to have some sort of dream "to take time to find treasures and mountains we can climb."
"Silent Heart" really showcases Sarah's voices, on how some things the heart is best left silent, as in things that really thrill it. "If I Ever Fall In Love Again" is taken from The Crooked Mile and is a nice love song Sarah really wraps herself in.
"Chi Il Bel Sogno Di Doretta" from Puccini's La Rondine is a great showcase of the operatic voice that would come into full bloom on Time To Say Goodbye. This song would be reissued on Encore.
"Away From You" by Richard Rodgers, and taken from a musical biog of Henry VIII (!!!). "The clocks are frozen and time's a traveler who's lost his way" is one of the sentiments Sarah conveys effectively. Also reissued on Encore.
"If love were all, I should be lonely" sings Sarah from Noel Coward's Bittersweet, "If Love Were All" was the one song that stood out for me when I first heard this CD. The ability of a talent to amuse is seen as a solid standing for mental security. A definite standout here.
From Lloyd Webber's Jeeves, the lush strings of "Half A Moment" features the vocal stylings familiar enough to those who have Sarah's Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection. It focuses on how important the capture of a moment to bright up a future rainy day is. Also reissued on Encore.
Initially, I dismissed this as the songs that should've stayed away. Although they lack the magical punch of Time To Say Goodbye or La Luna, it's still a worthwhile collection, because Sarah's clear birdlike theatrical/musicals voice makes it all worthwhile.
Good, for Sarah Brightman.......2003-08-25
Pleasant, but not up to standard.......2003-06-22
Salsa Music:
- 14 Exitos, Vol. 1
- 14 Romanticas: El Tiempo
- 15 Inmortales
- 16 Exitos
- 17 Bailables Para Una Fiesta Espectacular
- 18 Super Exitos: Primera Epoca
- 20 Grandes Exitos [Import]
- 40 Continuados Para Fiestas
- 60 Boleros de Oro [Box set]
- A Bailar El Danzon
Salsa Music
Authentic New Orleans Jazz Funeral
Basic Tracks [Special Edition]
Bob Miller Sings From The Heart ... GOSPEL
Arthur Berger: The Complete Orchestral Music