| 1. Commencement |
| 2. Passagers |
| 3. Serpent Sans Importance |
| 4. Pluies Chaudes de l'été |
| 5. Bords de Seine - Etienne Daho, Astrud Gilberto |
| 6. Me Manquer |
| 7. Soudain |
| 8. Enfer Enfin |
| 9. Timide Intimité - Etienne Daho, The Swingle Singers |
| 10. Rendez-Vouz au Jardin des Plaisirs |
| 11. Quand Tu M'Appelles Eden |
| 12. Des Adieux Trés Heureux |
Editorial Reviews
One of the French Crooner's Best and Varied Albums, featuring Guest Appearances from Sarah Cracknell (Saint Etienne) on 'les Passagers', the Legendary Swingle Singers, who Add Sparkle and Zest to 'timide Intimide', and the Legendary Astrud Gilberto, who Duets on 'les Bords Du Seine'. 'soudain', 'au Commencement', and 'me Manquer' were also Big Hits on the Charts.
Eden,Etienne Daho,Virgin France,Electronica,Int'l & World Music,Italian Pop,Pop
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Eden (US Release - 16 tracks)
Sarah Brightman Manufacturer: Angel Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IL1K Release Date: 1999-04-20 |
Tracks:
- In Paradisum - Brightman/Peterson
- Eden - Callier
- So Many Things - Traditional/Brightman
- Anytime, Anywhere - Albinoni/Brightman
- Bailero - Traditional
- Dust In The Wind - Livgren
- Il Mio Cuore Va (My Heart Will Go On, From 'Titanic') - Horner/Jennings
- Deliver Me - Marsh
- Un Jour Il Viendra - Yared/Jonasz
- Nella Fantasia - Morricone
- Tu - Cano
- Lascia Ch'io Pianga - Handel
- Only An Ocean Away - Andreason
- Scene D'Amour - Lai
- Nessun Dorma - Puccini
- The Last Words You Said (This track only on US release)
Amazon.com essential recording
In this follow-up to the smashing success of her 1997 CD Time to Say Goodbye, Sarah Brightman continues down the primrose crossover path, blithely gliding from covers of Hooverphonic (the title track) and Kansas ("Dust in the Wind") to Puccini and film scores (Titanic and The English Patient). Sometimes, as in "Anytime, Anywhere," the crossover happens within the same song--in this case welding a rhythm track to the somber harmonies of Albinoni's "Adagio." But there's nary a stylistic speed bump to jolt her listeners, as Brightman focuses her tiny, seraphic voice like a beam of light on each melody. The result, bless her heart, may be the invention of a whole new form of kitsch. Like plastic surgery, Brightman's years of specialized vocal training have helped refine her ability to float confidently well-rounded, sparkling tones in her upper range. These have a Dresden china-like, touching fragility in such songs as "So Many Things" and are well-suited to the gauzily romantic (and overproduced) gloss of the string-heavy arrangements that predominate. Eden also introduces Brightman as songwriter ("In Paradisum," with its mix of sitar and modal chant) and features a bonus track unavailable on the album's European-released version ("The Last Words You Said"). --Thomas MayAmazon.com
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More from Sarah Brightman
Time to Say Goodbye |
Classics |
Diva: The Singles Collection |
Diva: The Video Collection |
Live from Las Vegas, Chloe |
La Luna (Live in Concert) |
Album Description
Asian edition of the sensational soprano's 1998 album 'Eden' with 'Lost Words You Said' (composed by & featuring Richard Marx) added as a bonus track. 1999 release. Comes packaged in a full color, embossed brilliant box.Album Details
Another Special Asian Release.Customer Reviews:
Sarah Brightman.......2007-08-04
Superb.......2007-07-15
AMAZING!.......2007-04-12
I'm not an operatic snob, and I'm not a classical officionado, but I do know what I like, and this is it! Brightman always seems to start of her CDs with a little interlude at the beginning of her albums (in LA LUNA - "La Lune", from FLY - "The Fly", from HAREM - "Kama Sutra"). Her "In Paradisum" is long and beautiful, her voice soaring to high vocals. The next piece is "Eden", originally created by Hooverphonics, and this version is more classical than the other! It's really great! "So Many Things" is a great piece, followed by "Anytime, Anywhere", a Foreign Language - English piece (which works really well by the way). Bailero is the next piece, and it's great as well! Honestly, every single piece is beautiful, and it's a MUST-HAVE for any Sarah Brightman fan! However, the standout piece has to be "Nessun Dorma", which is a male aria, usually sung by Pavarotti or any other male. However, Sarah thought she could do it, and she did! Buy this CD!
Like an old friend .......2007-03-16
Eden is classic Sarah Brightman.......2007-01-25
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Our Time in Eden
10,000 Maniacs Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002HBI Release Date: 1992-09-29 |
Tracks:
- Noah's Dove
- These Are Days
- Eden
- Few And Far Between
- Stockton Gala Days
- Gold Rush Brides
- Jezebel
- How You've Grown
- Candy Everybody Wants
- Tolerance
- Circle Dream
- If You Intend
- I'm Not The Man
Amazon.com essential recording
The last album the band recorded before lead singer Natalie Merchant departed for a solo career, Our Time in Eden is the actualization of an unassuming college folk-rock band turned adult-contemporary group in the best possible way. Merchant's lullaby voice is more pure and confident than ever before. And although the music is still dominated by chiming rhythm guitar, the band incorporates an emphatic horn section on several tracks (most notably on "Candy Everybody Wants"). The best track is the sentimental swan song "These Are Days," which will evoke a distant smile and maybe even a teary eye, no matter how hard you try not to let it. --Beth MassaCustomer Reviews:
How they've grown........2006-01-22
Films For Radio.......2005-03-18
Each song, both musically and lyrically is extremely emotive, Our Time In Eden is probably the Maniacs album where the disparity between the light pop-folk melodies and Natalie Merchant's dark, moody lyrics was at it's least, in part due to a slight lightening up of Merchant's subject matter, allowing for a more streamlined sound here than on previous efforts.
The album hasn't aged a day in the 13 years since it's relaese, Natalie's vocals are confident and clear and the music perhaps more experimental than previous works by the band is just beautiful
The standouts here are the lovely single These Are Days, Stockton Gala Days, Noah's Dove and Tolerence.
Sit back, close your eyes and let these songs, the melodies and the words from images in your mind.
One of my favorite bands of all time.......2005-02-22
The fact that you didn't hear 10,000 Maniacs songs every 5 minutes on the radio is one of the things I loved most about them. I never had the chance to get sick of their music. The original 10,000 Maniacs wrote some of the best music of their time, in my opinion...rich melodies, stunning vocals, and intelligent lyrics.
Their sound changed/evolved from CD to CD, but still maintained a uniqueness of sound and style I've not heard before or since. Our Time In Eden is the most polished of the bunch. I think their most unique sounding CD was their debut CD, The Wishing Chair. A few of the songs, like Scorpio Rising and Lilydale, were never really replicated by the Maniacs again. Some of Natalie's solo work sounds similar to songs like Lilydale, but that's it.
The Maniacs wrote many great songs over the years: Can't Ignore the Train, Lilydale, Scorpio Rising, YMaddox Table, You Happy Puppet, Trouble Me, What's The Matter Here?, The Painted Desert, Don't Talk, Hey Jack Kerouac, Cherry Tree, City of Angels, These Are Days, Stockton Gala Days, Noah's Dove, Gold Rush Brides, Eden, Few
Best thing they ever did.......2004-10-24
Solid.......2004-10-19
The first thing I noticed when opening the fold-out for the CD is that the lyrics are written in a narrative form instead of verse form. The style of the music matches the narrative form. Many artists think and write in verse form, and to create music in narrative form is more difficult because of the difficulty and complexity of matching the syllables and pacing of the narrative to the music. The narrative form is usually the style of story tellers, and each of these songs comes across as a vignette.
The first vignette is "Noah's Dove," which comes across several ways. Noah's dove was the bird he sent out to find dry land. When at last the dove did not return, Noah knew that the dove had found dry land. Thus, the story is about someone seeking something, perhaps the something they will not find because it does not exist, but that person will continue to search, never realizing what they have in the here and now.
The second song, "These Are the Days," relates to the first song because the emphasis of this song is the here and now. The lyrics advise the listener that now is the golden time, the time that in later years the listener will look back on with fondness as one of the best times of their lives. One has to wonder whether this song was a lament at the imminent breakup of 10,000 Maniacs.
Each of these songs is full of allegory. "Eden" seems to have several allegories. The first is the allusion to the beauty on the surface of those you see, but the thorns are the reality. The song contrasts the illusions we create, even to ourselves, to our desire and willingness to be something else. How much is illusion and how much is reality is anyone's guess, because we choose, consciously or unconsciously. "Few and Far Between" continues the train of thought started in "Eden," this time from the viewpoint of accumulating the baggage of the past and regret, and not having enough room for the future.
"Stockton Gala Days," given that the singer is female, sounds a lot like a lesbian experience, particularly the line "There was no girl as warm as you." The song explains that the person she is singing about will never know how the singer felt about that experience and what it meant to the singer. "Jezebel" may fall into the same category as this song as the singer laments that she has allowed her marriage vows to cover the truth of her life and who she is.
"Gold Rush Brides" wonders where the strong women who overcame the legal limitations of the day to help win the west are documented. Most stories are of men, but women were integral to keeping everything together and often were the reason things happened. "Coming of Age" is song about how we change as we grow older. We always remember someone as the way we saw them last.
"Candy Everybody Wants" has a moral to it. Many of us consider blood, lust, hate and love of a sexual kind to be bad, yet those things are readily available in movies, books, and even song. If those things are truly wrong, the song questions who is to blame given how popular those things are. We hide behind others, blaming, but not wishing to be blamed. "Tolerance" also addresses avoidance. This time the issue is as stated in the title. When we hear of violence and intolerance, what do we do? We had away from it hoping that it will go another direction from us because we fear to take a stand.
"Circle Dream" is another wonderfully complex song. On the one hand the circle could be the world in which we live. The maze in the circle is the difficulty of living and finding our way. The face in the circle represents love and understanding, perhaps a lover. While the song has implications of an alternative lifestyle, it also implies the life we all live.
"If You Intend" is a song for lovers and loved ones, regardless of lifestyle. The song addresses commitment and love, and how the first step in realizing that love is to reach for the love, to express your intentions. Once again, the lament of the singer is for the listener to overcome their fears because the result otherwise is dreams unfulfilled.
The last song, "I'm Not the Man," caps off the running theme of intolerance and prejudice to those who are different from the "norm." In this case the victim is someone accused of the crime because of race or some similar reason. However, the singer was elsewhere, yet no one came forward. The evidence was thin, but the conviction assured. We know this scene, but it takes someone to have the power to step forward and stop it.
These songs are powerful and dramatically scrape open many of the problems of society. It is amazing that a group as well known as 10,000 Maniacs would address social issues unabashedly and ultimately create a beautiful work. Music like this dates back centuries to the days of bards. Music like this that appeals to a large audience happens all too rarely in this day of statistics and sales and station play.
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Children Of Eden (1998 New Jersey Cast)
Jim Weaver , Ann Bass , Vicki Carter , Barry Cavanagh , Vincent D'Elia , and Darius de Haas Manufacturer: RCA Victor Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000006OP3 Release Date: 1998-05-19 |
Tracks:
- Let There Be
- The Tree Of Knowledge
- The Naming
- Grateful Children
- Father's Day
- Perfect
- The Spark Of Creation
- In Pursuit Of Excellence
- The End Of A Perfect Day
- Childhood's End
- A World Without You
- The Expulsion
- The Wasteland
- The Spark Of Creation (Reprise 1)
- Lost In The Wilderness
- Close To Home
- A Ring Of Stones
- The Death Of Abel
- The Mark Of Cain
- Children Of Eden
Tracks:
- Generations
- The Gathering Storm
- A Piece Of Eight
- The Return Of The Animals
- Noah's Lullaby
- Stranger To The Rain
- In Whatever Time We have
- The Flood
- What Is He Waiting For?
- Sailor Of The Skies
- The Spark Of Creation (Reprise 2)
- The Hardest Part Of Love
- Words Of Doom
- The Hour Of Darkness
- Ain't It Good?
- Precious Children
- In The Beginning
Customer Reviews:
Excellent recording .......2007-01-09
Diverse music that grows on you.......2006-09-09
As good as any musical recording..........2006-06-24
For whatever it's worth, I have some serious theological issues with this show. I wouldn't actually recommend anyone to casually watch the show because I think that there are some unfortunate misrepresentations of the character of God. However, there are also some powerful moments of personalizing the story of the human experience within God's creation that become real in ways that only theatre can provide. And it offered hours of good conversation for my wife and me afterwards.
Specifically related to this album, I love it. I'd recommend it to anyone who likes the musical theatre format but who wants some more depth than many Broadway shows.
Fantastic........2006-03-21
"The hardest part of love is the letting go..."
In the Beginning.............2005-01-23
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Spirit of Eden
Talk Talk Manufacturer: Capitol ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005RS5 Release Date: 1998-11-17 |
Tracks:
- The Rainbow
- Eden
- Desire
- Inheritance
- I Believe In You
- Wealth
Album Description
1997 EMI release, their fourth album (1988) digitally remastered. The album features six extended ambient tracks, including 'Desire', 'Eden' and 'I Believe In You'.Customer Reviews:
thank goodness this cd is in my life.......2007-04-03
I love this whole CD, from that amazing harmonica to the percussion spectacle in the middle of "Desire". My friend was right in saying that he's ruined me for life. The production and emotion of this album can only be truly appreciated blasted on decent headphones or speakers. One part of me wants to buy a bazillion copies of this and air-drop it over the world so everyone can hear it, but another part of me likes having it as my own personal gem. An incredible piece of work.
Not your mamas new wave! .......2007-03-27
this is the one.......2007-02-21
If you at all familiar with "It's My Life", please do buy this album right away. "It's My Life" is the detail painting for "Spirit of Eden". That feeling you get from the songs on "It's My Life", those feelings are refined and poured into a romantic, modern vessel of aural beauty. As I listen to it at this very moment, I wonder at its beauty.
There's a beautiful plaintive appeal to the singer's voice that the listener appreciates as s/he realizes how few vocals there are on this album.
Wow.......2007-02-01
Visceral, Cathartic, and Sublime.......2006-12-08
The first section is a twenty-three minute long monstrosity called "The Rainbow / Eden / Desire" that dominates the album. As I listen to the album, by the time the last note of Desire fades away I'm in a total meditative state for the duration of the last three tracks. There's little point in even attempting description of the music without resorting to simile.
Pretty much any serious listener can tell you the same thing. I hear Miles Davis and his rythmic organic compositions. I hear Kevin Shields and his whispered lyrics and screaming noise. I hear Brian Eno and his self-conscious introspection. I hear vintage Pink Floyd and another little twenty-three minute long beast called "Echoes." I hear Vangelis and Yes and their inability to go quietly into a box. I hear nameless blues masters lost to the mists of time. "Spirit of Eden" is all these people and none of them. It's as if a fertile soil was planted with these musical seeds, and what grew from them twisted together into a tree called "Spirit of Eden."
The album isn't perfect. But that's not important. What's important is that the music has been crafted well enough to accept its own flaws. It is a masterpiece; visceral, cathartic, and sublime.
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The Apple Tree (1966 Original Broadway Cast)
Sheldon Harnick Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000027WD Release Date: 1992-11-24 |
Tracks:
- Eden Prelude
- Here In Eden
- Feelings
- Eve
- Friends
- The Apple Tree (Forbidden Fruit)
- Beautiful, Beautiful World
- It's A Fish
- Go To Sleep, Whatever You Are
- What Makes Me Love Him?/Eden Postlude
- The Lady Or The Tiger? Prelude/I'll Tell You a Truth/Make Way
- Forbidden Love (In Gaul)
- The Apple Tree (Reprise)
- I've Got What You Want
- Tiger, Tiger
- Make Way (Reprise)/Which Door/I'll Tell You a Truth (Reprise)
- Passionella Prelude
- Oh, To Be A Movie Star
- Gorgeous
- (Who, Who, Who, Who) Who Is She?
- I Know
- Wealth
- You Are Not Real
- Passionella Postlude/Finale
Customer Reviews:
Very good show which I hadn't heard of..........2007-05-13
THE APPLE TREE (1966 ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST).......2007-04-10
I still remember these songs after 40 years.......2006-11-05
Really 2.5.......2006-07-25
Boring material that you forget very easily.......2006-06-29
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Hair - Actors' Fund of America Benefit Recording
Galt MacDermot , James Rado , Gerome Ragni , Lillias White , Lea Delaria , Harvey Fierstein , Liz Callaway , Jai Rodriguez , Euan Morton , Ana Gasteyer , Shoshana Bean , Laura Benanti , Adam Pascal , Gavin Creel , Raul Esparza , Jennifer Hudson , John Tartaglia , Christopher Sieber , Annie Golden , Eden Espinosa , Sherie Rene Scott , Billy Porter , Darius de Haas , and Norm Lewis Manufacturer: Ghostlight ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000929ADW Release Date: 2005-06-14 |
Tracks:
- Aquarius - Lillias White
- Donna - Lea DeLaria
- Hashish - Paul Castree,
- Sodomy - Chuck Cooper
- Colored Spade - Euan Morton
- Manchester, England
- Dead End - Shoshana Bean
- Sheila Franklin/I Believe in Love
- I'm Black/Ain't Got No
- Air - Harvey Fierstein
- Initials - Laura Benanti
- I Got Life - Adam Pascal
- Going Down - Gavin Creel
- Hair
- My Conviction - Charles Bush
- Easy to Be Hard - Jennifer Hudson
- Don't Put It Down! - Christopher Sieber, John Tartaglia
- Frank Mills - Annie Golden
- Be-In (Hare Krishna)
- Where Do I Go? - Julia K. Murney
- Hippie Life - Eden Espinosa
- Electric Blues - Toxic Audio
- Black Boys - Kathy Brier, Ann Harada, Orfeh
- White Boys - Ledisi, , Shayna Steele
- Walking in Space
- Yes I's Finished on Y'All's Farmlands
- Four Score/Abie, Baby - Billy Porter
- Good Morning Starshine - Liz Callaway
- Three-Five-Zero-Zero
- What a Piece of Work Is Man - Norm Lewis
- Flesh Failures (Let the Sunshine In) - Jai Rodriguez
Customer Reviews:
Belt 'em if you got 'em........2007-01-07
Here, though, there's no such problem.
There's a whole lotta belting goin' on in this album. Because each singer only has one song, and there's no need to conserve their voices for later in the show, everybody gives it their all - and in the case of such powerful singers as Gavin Creel, Lillias White, Shoshana Bean, Raul Esparza, Adam Pascal, Eden Espinosa, Orfeh, Jennifer Hudson, and Billy Porter? That's quite a lot. And the backup voices, if anything, are even more spectacular: listen to that anonymous chorus girl hit an air-raid-siren high note at the end of "Goin' Down".
Track-by-track:
1. "Aquarius" - The famous chorale opening, led by the inimitable Lillias White. The orchestrations and backup singing sends shivers down the spine, and White brings the gospel something fierce. 5/5
2. "Donna" - In the first of many gender-bendings on the album, "Donna" is here sung by Lea DeLaria, who does a passable job, if she tends to overemote. 3/5
3. "Hashish" - All-chorus listing of various hallucinogens and illegal mind enhancers. Fun as always, but a trifle. 2/5
4. "Sodomy" - That timeless ode to deviant sexual practice, here sung in a pure, innocent choir-boy tenor by Jai Rodriguez of Zanna, Don't! and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy fame. 5/5
5. "Colored Spade" - For everyone who's ever wanted to hear Tony-winning bass-baritone Chuck Cooper declare himself "President of the United States of Love". 4/5
6. "Manchester, England" - A four-decade-old antecedent of Britpop, charmingly given life by Euan Morton. 4/5
7. "Dead End" - The first really high-energy number since "Aquarius" kicks things back into high gear. Ana Gasteyer shows off the pipes that would later land her the role of Elphaba on Broadway in "Wicked". There's a big black woman hiding inside that white comedienne! 4/5
8. "Sheila Franklin/I Believe in Love" - Shoshana Bean, if you've ever heard her, is infamous for singing every song as one giant melisma. She does it here too, of course, but particularly impressively. She rockets through all of her 72 octaves in the course of a minute and nineteen seconds. 5/5
9. "I'm Black/Ain't Got No" - A kind of pointless song, the whole chorus yelling about what they lack in life. Fun ending, though. 2/5
Ahh, now we're getting into the really good stuff. The meat of the disc is from the middle to the end, and it's a three-course meal from here on out.
10. "Air" - Harvey Fierstein, he of the goose-strangled-with-barbed-wire voice, rasps out this little ditty in an inspired bit of gimmick casting, and manages to not cough up any internal organs, despite the ungodly noises toward the end of the track. 5/5
11. "Initials" - What was originally a choral number is now handed primarily to the divine Laura Benanti. And what do you know, she's funny! Topping the whole thing off with an operatic high C doesn't hurt matters, either. 5/5
12. "I Got Life" - Broadway's resident rock star, Adam Pascal, shows off the voice that he should have blown out looong ago in a rollicking, fast-paced number. Great fun, but I wouldn't recommend trying to emulate it. 5/5
13. "Goin' Down" - Gavin Creel has a voice of honey and silk that can rise into an impressively soulful belt when he feels like it. And here, he feels like it. Another energetic roof-raiser. 5/5
14. "Hair" - These three songs, these three singers, one right after the other? It's bliss. Raul Esparza snarls out the first verse, then roars full-throttle into a higher octave for the last few stanzas. A fitting title song. 5/5
15. "My Conviction" - Another fun trifle, amusingly given voice by a veddy proper Charles Busch. 3/5
16. "Easy To Be Hard" - Jennifer Hudson, post-American Idol and pre-Dreamgirls, is revelatory here. She tears the lid off this already-impassioned number and absolutely rips it to shreds. Just the right amount of emoting, just the right amount of full-throated vocalizing. The definitive rendition of this song, EVER. (I was unconvinced she was right for Effie, until I heard this. It gave me chills like I hadn't felt since Jennifer Holliday's performance in... well, you know.) 6/5
17. "Don't Put it Down!" - Funny indictment of patriotism, given an unfortunately nasal rendition by the duo of Christopher Sieber and John Tartaglia. It passes quickly. 2/5
18. "Frank Mills" - The sweetly-warbling Annie Golden is adorable in this lament for a lost love. 4/5
19. "Be-In Hare Krishna" - Catchy as all hell. This has been in my head for approximately... ten years. 5/5
20. "Where Do I Go?" - Another gender switch. Here, Julia Murney sings a song of uncertainty. Fans of the Wild Party will be unsurprised to learn that it does end in a big, belty final phrase. However, she has grown into her voice, and shows a bit of welcome nuance in the plaintive lyrics. 5/5
21. "Hippie Life" - Eden Espinosa does her thing with some dated lyrics and some insanity-belting. 4/5
22. "Electric Blues" - The most aurally interesting track on the album, and also the one that takes the most liberty with its source material - there's no instrumentation and no lead vocalist. The a cappella group Toxic Audio is menacing, and yet somehow amusing, showing that even though they lack the Broadway star status of most of the other participants, they more than deserve it. 5/5
23. "Black Boys" - Part one of a two-part ode to jungle fever. Odd tempo and some strange, strange metaphors comparing black men repeatedly to candy. 3/5
24. "White Boys" - Part two, and by far the more satisfying. True, the whole thing is basically a long contest to see which girl can belt the highest and riff the most, but by God it's fun as hell to listen to Shayna Steele, Brandi Chavonne Massey, and Orfeh skip up half step after half step, till you're not sure they can continue to do that without hurting somebody. 5/5
25. "Walking in Space" - Another paean to the positive aspects of drug use, sung gorgeously by Sherie Rene Scott. 5/5
26. "Yes, I's Finished on Y'all's Farmlands" - Short and good. 4/5
27. "Four Score/Abie, Baby" - Gives the legendary Billy Porter the Emancipation Proclamation and lets him run with it, with fantastic results. 5/5
28. "Good Morning Starshine" - Sweetly given voice by Liz Callaway. Shows off MacDermot's uncommon melodic gift, and the inanity of Gerome Ragni's lyrics. 5/5
29. "Three-Five-Zero-Zero" - Absolutely terrifying choral requiem for Vietnam. 5/5
30. "What a Piece Of Work is Man" - Darius DeHaas again shows why he deserves a lot more work than he gets, and also why he's known to possess a killer tenor voice. 4/5
31. "The Flesh Failures/Let the Sunshine In" - Possibly the best track on the album is saved for last. The incomparable Norm Lewis starts things off with uncertainty in his deep, resonant tenor, built around a repeating bassline. As the orchestration builds and he climbs up the staff, Euan Morton makes a return appearance as Claude, screaming in anguish. The chorus joins in gradually, Billy Porter and Darius DeHaas start exhorting the audience to let the sunshine in, and joy breaks through the clouds, though that minor key constantly reminds us that there are no clean-cut happy endings.
Unreal!!!.......2006-11-10
This recording is very disappointing............2006-05-31
Power vocals en masse!.......2006-04-21
SHRILL!!!.......2005-12-22
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Celtic Psalms
Eden's Bridge Manufacturer: Straight Way ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000006002 Release Date: 1998-03-10 |
Tracks:
- Fear No Evil
- Praise The Holy Lord Above
- The Lord Is My Light
- I Lift Up My Eyes
- El Shaddai
- He Will Never Be Shaken
- Blessed Is The Man
- In The Lord Lord My Heart Takes Refuge
- How Long O Lord
- Shout For Joy
- In The Morning
- Psalm 23
- Your Love Is Better Than Life
Customer Reviews:
Amazing Celtic Band.......2006-01-29
Simply Excellent.......2006-01-13
Pure Heaven.......2005-09-09
Wow!.......2004-05-15
Healing and Comforting.......2003-05-07
Thank you, Eden's Bridge! :)
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East Meets East
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00009KPH0 Release Date: 2003-07-22 |
Tracks:
- Ajde Jano
- Lullaby For Kamilla
- T 4.2
- Eden
- Dafino
- Jovano Jovanke
- Ederlezi
- Kazimierz
- One Voice
- Tribute To Maria Tanase
- Time 4 Time
- Vino
- Lost In Time
- Kukush
Customer Reviews:
Superb.......2007-06-20
Wonderful!.......2007-01-26
(2) That said, this is not really a classical violin disk, per se. Kennedy complements Kroke, but does not impose himself at all--what great modesty and restraint for a player of Kennedy's renown! Bottom like, this is an awesome E. European folk disk accompanied by some of the most inspired and flawless violen playing that I have (in my admittedly limited experience) ever heard.
This is just a wonderful, fun and eclectic disk that has much to offer music lovers of a number of different persuasions. (I must admit that Ajde Jano is still my favorite track.)
Can't stop listening.......2004-02-04
I have been to Krakow and with this music in the back of my mind I am looking forward to going back again and to hopefully find folk bands which are similar to this astonishing master piece performed by Nigel Kennedy.
Enjoy!
Uwe
Eden for ears and dancing feet.......2003-08-18
Eastern Folkmusic meets an incredible strings section and sometimes vocals that I like and that I don't (!!!!) like.
Kroke, the incredible Trio from Krakow, Poland is working together with Kennedy in the whole Eeast European music history and they give their chosen music a modern touch with sometimes jazzy influences I like and a really cool picked in e-violin. The album is almost very danceable and that is quite lovely. I like those tunes.
1.) Ajde Jano ... is the first track it has a really danceable lovely rhythm. I remember that tune cuz I heard it as opening track at Krokes solo tour this year in February in Germany. I absolutely don't know the vocals. I dunno why. I think after listening to it for even more times I will got to love it. I see small kids dancing at bloomy fields when I am listening to that tunes.
2.) Lullaby for Kamila ... is a melancholy tune. I really love it. I love all tragical melancholy sounds. They make me smile and the simple *mmmh mmmmmh* backup vocals are breathtaking for me.
3.) T 4.2 (hint:Tea for two) is just cool ... I heard it for the first time at the Berlin Museumsinsel Gig last year in Berlin. ... And well I was dancing on my chair ... ... (the rough mix of that piece is at "Ten pieces to save the world" without Kennedys e-violin ---> he goes crazy ... *yummy*)
4.) Eden ... is a track that is on "Ten Pieces to save the world" by Kroke as well without Kennedys e-violin and that was my favourite one of their album. It is a good way straight to Eden. That is honey for ears ( ... with feet ) FOLKY ROCK'N'ROLL, Yeah!)
5.) Dafino ... mmmmh ... that is "stolen" at one Slawish wedding party ... maybe ... ... It sounds really lovely ... I see the happy people taking each other by their hands ...
6.) Jovano Jovanke ... that is music for taking a trip on a long lonesome bad road with a even more bad car and someone in the back is telling you stories of the region where you are right now. It can be that you are on the road with horses as well but it is definitely a traditional Roadmovie soundtrack ... ... or it is the last song at one very long party ... you know when the sun is almost coming again in the morning. Everyone seems to be tired but none will stop. Just lovely. And when the sun is up. The band at the party will find new energy and kicks all their energy in the last tunes.
7.) Ederlezi ... that is originally by Goran Bregovic ... I love this interpretation ...
8.) Kasimierz ... He is Jewish and he is telling us a story ... it isn't a sad story ... it is one with happy end ... it is maybe a story about a love ... .. who cares. It is lovely.
9.) One voice ... someone is telling a sad story ... definitely ... it is without happy end. That was my first impression. That's it. I love Kennedys violinpart.
10.) Tribute to Maria Tanase ... was a Romanian singer ... she was known as East European Edith Piaf. I got some tunes of her at one Vinyl LP. She is incredible.
... well and she is dead and these tunes are for her. A better tribute cannot exist.
11.) Time 4 Time ... that is a joke with time ... and with rhythm and with folky tunes. I really love it.
12.) Vino ... means Wine ... so it is clear it can be just a drunken song ... ... it shows me how my brain looks like in delirium. ... everything isn't that clear I want to see.
13.) Lost in Time ... is just and simply wonderful.
14.) Kukush ... is my favourite track ... that is Hardcore Party. I love those tracks I love those music. I know such similar tracks from my trips I have done already to Romania. And I want to dance of course. It is my favourite, definitely before Eden!
Absolutely mesmerizing!.......2003-08-13
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Rage in Eden
Ultravox Manufacturer: Caroline ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000024S8U Release Date: 2000-03-21 |
Tracks:
- The Voice
- We Stand Alone
- Rage In Eden
- I Remember (Death In The Afternoon)
- The Thin Wall
- Stranger Within
- Accent On Youth
- The Ascent
- Your Name (Has Slipped My Mind Again)
- I Never Wanted To Begin
- Paths And Angles
- I Never Wanted To Begin (Extended Version)
Album Description
Part of the EMI Gold series. Reissue of the Midge Ure fronted new wave act's 1981 album. Nine tracks including the hits, 'The Thin Wall', 'The Voice' and an extended version of 'I Never Wanted To Begin'. 1997 release. Standard jewel case.Album Details
Reissue of their 1981 Classic with B-side Bonus Tracks. Produced by Conny Plank.Customer Reviews:
What ages well? Not this--pompous, dated, and embarassing.......2007-08-01
To my ear, even the sound on these albums is thin, easily classifiable as "80's synth rock". This is a real shame, considering their 1978 album Systems of Romance is a superb fusion of punk/new wave energy combined with electronic/synth sounds, and with much better/more inventive guitar playing courtesy of Robin Simon and a more robust production job from Conny Plank, who thinned out the sound on Vienna and Rage In Eden for some inexplicable reason.
Music is of course subjective, and a large part of why I dislike this and most other Ultravox albums is due to Midge Ure, who is just embarassing. If you are interested in hearing Ultravox at their best, listen to Systems of Romance, which has John Foxx leading the band. Apart from being a much cooler, less melodramatically overwraught vocalist, Foxx presents much more interesting themes than Midge Ure. Ure sings about entire movements of new european youth and cold war intrigue (he seems to want to be Graham Greene or something) while Foxx sings about personal impressions (a sleepy conversation, the taste of snow being like tin, the change of the seasons). It's for this reason that I feel John Foxx's approach on 'Systems' has aged much better than Ure's failed attempt at grandiosity. Think of Midge Ure as one of these twerpy British New Romantics, and John Foxx as a more reserved, impressionistic singer/lyricist. Finally, Foxx is a lot less slick sounding than Ure in his vocal delivery.
Along with Visage, Flock of Seagulls, Human League, and most Gary Numan, Ultravox were at the vanguard of a style of 80's synth rock that just sounds horribly dated now, having aged very badly. Ironic that on a lower budget and with less advanced equipment, Ultravox were able to put out a stellar recording that combined punk energy and machine like synths in Systems of Romance, only to later churn out half a dozen albums or so of pseudo european new romantic drivel for the rest of their career. It might have been the rage ion '81, but today it's fuel for SNL skits.
A great haunt.......2006-12-31
Rage in Eden ~ Ultravox.......2005-07-29
**** # 1 CLASSIC - TOP OF THE LINE ****.......2004-11-04
What a sound... new, powerful, beautiful, rich and unique.
Ultravox (and its off-shoots Visage / and the New Romantics in general) represented the essence of the word 'Euro'.
Clearly influnenced by the cold machinery of Kraftwerk and the cool boldness of Bowie, Ultravox carved out a style of their own.
Midge Ure is a master of the hook. The song constructions and melodies are of first-class attraction. He sings with the concentrated power of a Gene Pitney and deliveres a song with 'heart-felt' soul sincerity like Scott Walker.
Just as the 60's sound sculptures were The Beatles, Stones and Motown; the 70's Led Zepplin, Pink Floyd and Bowie; the 80's belonged to U2, Tears for Fears and Ultravox.
I just wish Ultravox stayed around a little longer and that Americans would have embraced them more.
Oh I Remember...........2003-08-20
Back in the 80s, I discovered Ultravox with "Vienna", coming from a steady diet of overblown 70s prog rock. What attracted me to Ultravox, was the intelligence of their music. There was nothing light and fluffy about this band. The keyboard arrangements are well thought out and almost classically inspired (Billy Currie after all was classically trained), and the way they used the guitars and violins/violas really was different for the era. Another thing I liked about them was how drastically they could change their sound from song to song, but without disturbing the flow or continuity of the album.. one song will be triggered synth bass and drum machines and all keyboards, the next will be live bass, drums, guitars, piano, etc... and all kinds of different variations thereof. Regardless of the instrumentation, Ultravox had an incredible way of making highly emotionally charged music... They were masters of making machines have feelings... Alot of this had to do with Midge Ure's incredible voice and his emotional guitar playing. The piano and violin/viola helped with this alot too... Basically, against the trends that were popular in the day, Ultravox had talent and weren't afraid to use it... Now for a song by song breakdown:
The Voice: For some reason, Ultravox had a way of starting off an album with (in my opinion) one of its weakest songs (i.e. sleepwalk, the voice, reap the wild wind). This song is good, but only a glimpse of what is to come... (Live Drums, Live Bass, Lots of Keyboards, Piano)
We Stand Alone: This song haunts me constantly... I love the keyboards, and the chorus... Midge's guitars are also used very tastefully to add to the tension... (Live Drums, Triggered Synth Bass, Guitars, Keyboards)
Rage In Eden: Nice title track.... mysterious, haunting, moody... I like the backwards chorus ("Oh I remember death in the afternoon" - as someone else said.. a great lead in to the next song... very clever). Again, the guitars add lots of interesting effects and tension to this one... (Drum Machines, Triggered Synth Bass, Guitars, Keyboards)
I Remember (Death in the Afternoon): Excellent song... beautiful piano, powerful drums, great melodies. (Live Drums, triggered synth bass, Guitars, Keyboards, Piano)
The Thin Wall: Always one of my favorties from this CD. I love the pulsing synth bass, and the funky rhythm guitar, and Midge's vocals, but this song is really a showcase for Billy Currie... his multi tracked violins, keyboard solo and violin or viola solo... (Drum Machine, Triggered Synth Bass, Guitar, Piano, Keyboards, Violin, Viola)
The Stranger Within: I agree with others... this is a very disturbing and paranoid song... not to be listened to in a dark house by yourself... I love the way the synth and guitar noises pop in and out to add to the eerieness... Funky Bass by Chriss Cross over very rigid machine drums. I also like how Billy Currie added real strings to the synth strings to give it a nice full texture. (Drum Machines, Real Bass, Guitar, Violin/Viola, Keyboards)
Accent on Youth: Maybe a slight step down from the last few tracks... the chorus and the lead-in to the chorus are great, but the verses don't really do alot for me. (Live and Electronic Drums,Triggered Synth Bass, Keyboards, Guitar)
The Ascent: Instrumental Coda to Accent on Youth... Nice transition from Live Drums in the previous track to the drum machine here. This is another showcase for Billy Currie's talent. (Drum Machine, Synth Bass, Violin, Viola, Keyboards)
Your Name Has Slipped My Mind Again: I think this song is a perfect ending to this release... it strips away everything down to a stark backdrop for Midge Ure's haunting vocals. This song kind of reminds me of Queen a little... (Percussion, Piano, Processed Piano, Guitar)
I Never Wanted to Begin: I love this song.. this is probably my all time favorite Ultravox B-Side. Tribal Drumming (machine and real/electronic drums), Violins/Violas, Nice keyboards, cool guitar solo, and the trademark Ultravox enigmatic lyrics.
Paths and Angles: Another cool B-side.. this time with Warren Cann handling the Vocals (ala Mr X). Again.. very machine-like, but brought to life by the piano, guitar and violin/viola.
I'm not sure why they included the extended version of "I never wanted to begin", it doesn't really add much to the CD, but it's cool nonetheless.
Anyways... enough rambling for now... This is an amazing CD... I wish someone would wake up and release some live recordings from this era... I went to see them on the Quartet Tour and they were amazing live...
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Brooklyn The Musical (2004 Original Broadway Cast)
Mark Schoenfeld , Barri McPherson , and Eden Espinosa Manufacturer: Razor & Tie ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0006L0LMK Release Date: 2004-12-14 |
Tracks:
- A Good Crowd Goin'...
- Heart Behind These Hands
- Thank You, Sir
- Scene One
- Christmas Makes Me Cry
- Not A Sound
- Brooklyn Grew Up
- Creating Once Upon A Time
- Once Upon A Time
- A Witness To History
- Superlover
- The Challenge
- Brooklyn In The Blood
- Brooklyn Grew Up (Reprise)
- Magic Man
- Once Upon A Time (Reprise)
- Love Was A Song
- I Never Knew His Name
- The Truth
- Does Anybody Wanna Buy A Memory?
- Raven
- Sometimes
- Madison Square Garden
- Love Me Where I Live
- Love Fell Like Rain
- Magic Man (Reprise)
- Streetsinger
- Once Upon A Time (Reprise)
- Heart Behind These Hands (Reprise)
Amazon.com
When Brookyn the Musical landed on Broadway, many reviewers said that the American Idol sound had come along with it. It¹s hard to disagree, especially when Eden Espinosa, playing the title character, opens her mouth. Espinosa, who learned the performing ropes in California theme parks, is an unfocused belter who mistakes grandstanding melisma for emotion. And overemoting is the last thing you want to do when you have to deliver lines such as "This weight in my heart/This ache in my soul/This yearning in my heart just keeps on going on/There's a voice deep inside/And it cries and it cries." Unfortunately, the tunes (mixing rock, gospel and R&B, and recorded in front of a live studio audience) don't make much of an impact. Newcomers Mark Shoenfeld and Barri McPherson have come up with a well-meaning show that brims with enthusiastic naïveté but ultimately fails to convince. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
not RENT, but give it a try.......2007-03-26
awesome. that's it. it's not comparable to Rent because, with the exception of character types and the set, it is not at all like Rent. It's worth $25 just to hear Eden belt out "Once Upon A Time." However, i don't reccomend just buying that song on iTunes or something because there are deffinately other really good songs (heart behind these hands, raven, etc.) don't be afrai to buy this because it's not like Rent. in case you didn't notice a lot of other really good musicals are also not like Rent... if you are at a loss of thinking of some, let me help you- Wicked, The Light in the Piazza, Spamalot, Sound of Music, Gypsy, Pajama Game, Millie, Avenue Q. oh, PS most of thoses musicals were nominated for BEST MUSICAL at the TONYS and they arn't like Rent either.
Not the next Rent...just as good.......2006-10-26
Now go broaden your broadway collection and stop listening to Rent, Wicked, Les Mis and Phantom....there's so much more!
Why I lyk it.......2006-03-26
Not worth it..........2006-02-26
Not worth it..........2005-11-03
It's really not worth your money, either on Broadway or in a recording.
World Music:
- Eu Sou O Samba [Import]
- Eva [Import]
- Fala da Palavra [Import]
- Fushigi Shoujo [Import]
- Garden Of Dreams
- Gli Altri Siamo Noi [Import]
- Gosto Tanto [Import]
- Groovemaster Compilation [Import]
- Guitar Bizarre, Vol. 1 [Import]
- Hiromi Go No Hanzai [Import]
World Music
Sergej Larin - Songs by The Mighty Handful
Hampton Hawes Sessions [Import]
The Definitive Collection [Import]
Sinfonie Der Sterne, 3 [Import]
Tears Roll Down (Greatest Hits 82-92) [Import]
Rodrigo: Concierto de Aranjuez; Walton: 5 Bagatelles; Christopher Parkening
The Ongaku Masters, An Anthology of Japanese Classical Music, Volume Three: Modern Japan