By Jeeves (2001 American Premiere Recording) [Cast Recording]
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Based on P.G. Wodehouse's Jeeves stories, which recount the adventures of hapless Bertie Wooster and his resourceful butler, Jeeves, this may be the most British musical ever written--yes, perhaps even more than My Fair Lady! In a way, Andrew Lloyd Webber and his collaborator, famed playwright Alan Ayckbourn (book and lyrics), attempt to emulate the bubble-light musicals that Wodehouse himself wrote in the 1920s and 1930s. This is particularly obvious on numbers such as the comic love anthem "That Was Nearly Us" and "When Love Arrives," a duet very much inspired by the ones in the Wodehouse/Gershwins collaboration, Oh, Kay!. It's a bit odd at times to hear Lloyd Webber's majestic chords performed by a small ensemble, but it's also nice to see the composer test himself in this way. Between its first London run in 1996 and its Broadway opening in October 2001, By Jeeves popped up in several cities. This recording is based on the Goodspeed Opera House and Pittsburgh Public Theater productions. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
By Jeeves (2001 American Premiere Recording), Music, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Cast Recordings, Original Cast Recordings, Pop, Showtunes / B'way
Average customer rating:
- For Fans of Broadway (Sondheim, Hamlisch & Bernstein e.g.):
- The songs that didn't get away
- Songs that showcase Sarah's theatrical gifts
- Good, for Sarah Brightman
- Pleasant, but not up to standard
|
The Songs That Got Away
Manufacturer: Decca Broadway
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Similar Items:
- Dive
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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 Horiuchi
Customer Reviews:
For Fans of Broadway (Sondheim, Hamlisch & Bernstein e.g.):.......2007-02-24
This is an interesting and surprising production that showcases the vocal prowess of Sara Brightman. It is not however, representative of the new and highly overproduced vocal productions that constitute her newer recordings. Although this production really allows the listener to hear a very melodic and unencumbered vocal performance, as it is pleasing in it's simplicity, yet meant for the more discriminating listener. Fans of Irving Berlin, Andrew Lloyd Weber, and Richard Rodgers will feel right at home here. For those seeking another major sonic production as in Eden, La Luna, Dive, or The Harem Tour this is not it! My criticism is not of her vocal prowess or production values but the apparently endless array of previously released material offered as a new and different recording. But I suppose that this is rather due to the greedy objectives of of A&M Records just trying to go to the bank, often and laden heavy with dollars. Nothing that any label wouldn't try to do. My advice with Sara Brightman is "caveat emptor" (buyer beware) check the disc carefully for redundancy of tracks within her discography. If you're a fan of this genre of music, you will probably respond quite well to this recording.
The songs that didn't get away.......2004-02-12
This is one of my favorite albums by Sarah. She surprised me with her ability to go from light opera to jazz. Here we don't find the over-produced albums such as Harem, just a superbly trained voice. No little girl breathy tunes here, just solid performances. This is the Sarah Brightman that I like to remember and enjoy. If you see this album and you're a Sarah Brightman fan, pick it up and treasure it. I'd like to see her do more of thisgenre, where she showcases her voice. Who ever thinks that Sarah has a small voice will be convinced otherwise by this album.
Songs that showcase Sarah's theatrical gifts.......2003-12-11
Before experimental albums like Dive and Fly, as well as the ones where her classically-trained voice enchanted millions, Sarah Brightman did a collection of musical and theatrical songs originally released in 1989, but reissued when she made it big with Time To Say Goodbye. Her vocal style leans towards the theatrical Broadway side, but more mellowed. But on songs like the strings-laden mid-tempo "Meadowlark" from Stephen Schwartz's The Baker's Wife, the way she would later do splendidly interpret Lloyd Webber's songs is in the making. Here are other highlights, including those that were reissued on Sarah's Encore album (2002).
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
Some people just love Sarah's voice, but I don't see what's so special about it. She sings in two sorts of ways, the first one is lovely, simple, forgetable, and the other sounds like Stitch with a high voice. This CD does her justice, though. A lot of the tunes are catchy and nice (how she sings them could be better) but the one I really like is "Three cornered tune." Now that's a good song! She does not have a particularly bad voice, but nothing interesting - that's for sure. And when she tries to act in her music she sounds even worse! But that's alright. After all, everyone has a different style. A highlight of this CD includes "Mr. Monotony," which, unfortunatly, did not come with lyrics in the CD case. Too bad, because its a great song. At the end of this record, though, she writes about these songs and - wow! It is amazing how many shows that song was taken out of! At one point it said it had Judy Garland singing it, and when I try to imagine her doing it I know that must have been awesome. I really want to hear Judy Garland singing this song sometime. Maybe I'll find it here on Amazon... But anyway, back to Sarah Brightman. The only other thing I can think of to say at the moment is that from what I've heard of her records, this is as good as it gets. And also, the track titled "Dreamers" is nice. I like the tune and she doesn't sing it too bad, either. It would be a good song to be played at a graduation. Only after a while the sound of it gets a little creepy and annoying. And its sticky, too. "Silent heart" is a classic, though she shouldn't sing it twice. For you see, she sings it, and then you think, "Ah, that's a sweet song. Wonderful words, soft tune," and the music gets at a great stoping point and then comes back for an encore (as one of Sarah's other records is titled). And then we have to listen to it all over again - and its not as good the second time. So overall is it good? Yes, it is. Though perhaps not good enough.
Pleasant, but not up to standard.......2003-06-22
I love Sarah Brightman's singing and her musical style as presented on Eden and La Luna. This CD is completely different in style from those two. I find it enjoyable, but it is not my favorite. Her singing is nothing special on this CD, it doesn't display her vocal range or talent in the way that her other CDs do, especially her CD "Surrender", her vocals are absolutely stunning on that CD.
Average customer rating:
- Classy,Romantic, And Stirring.
- Lovely - Just Lovely!
- Encore!
- Captivating
- Sarah Brightman's Best
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Encore
Sarah Brightman , Andrew Lloyd Webber , Richard Rodgers , Burton Lane , Peter Greenwell , Stephen Sondheim , George Gershwin , Giacomo Puccini , Harry Rabinowitz , and Michael Reed
Manufacturer: Decca Broadway
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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ASIN: B00005KBBX
Release Date: 2002-04-23 |
Tracks:
- Whistle Down The Wind (Whistle Down The Wind)
- Away From You (Rex)
- Guardami (With One Look - Italian Version) (Sunset Boulevard)
- Think Of Me (The Phantom Of The Opera)
- One More Walk Around The Garden (Carmelina)
- Surrender (Sunset Boulevard)
- If I Ever Fall In Love Again (The Crooked Mile)
- Half A Moment (Jeeves)
- Piano (Memory - Italian Version) (Cats)
- What More Do I Need (Saturday Night)
- There Is More To Love (Apects Of Love)
- The Last Man In My Life (Song And Dance)
- In The Mandarin's Orchid Garden (East Is West)
- Nothing Like You've Ever Known (Tell Me On A Sunday & Song And Dance)
- Chil Il Bel Sogno Di Doretta (La Rondine)
Amazon.com
In a career that's veered from '70s pop chanteuse to Broadway star and neo-operatic diva, Sarah Brightman has brought a critics-be-damned sense of dramatic scale to nearly every project she's tackled. As the title suggests, the tracks here are largely culled from her Songs That Got Away and Surrender song anthologies, although they do include four previously unreleased outtakes from those collections. Her 1998 recording of the title song from ex-husband Andrew Lloyd Webber's Whistle Down the Wind succeeds by emphasizing its melodic grace with a deft, airy touch, while the remainder rescue worthy songs from obscure or failed musicals. From Lerner and Lane's 1959 Carmelina comes the lovely "One More Walk Around the Garden." Stephen Sondheim's youthful 1954 debut, Saturday Night, yields a sprightly take on "What More Do I Need," while an operatic reading of "In the Mandarin's Orchid Garden," from the Gershwins' unproduced 1929 East Is West, is also included. If the selection leans a little too heavily on the Lloyd Webber connection elsewhere (including Italian versions of "Guardami (With One Look)" from Sunset Boulevard and "Piano (Memory)" from Cats delivered in her patently restraint-free soprano), they're only reminders that shrewdness has hardly been the least of Brightman's talents. --Jerry McCulley
Customer Reviews:
Classy,Romantic, And Stirring........2007-03-09
Encore is the perfect CD for those who love diversity. Classy, Romantic and Stirring. My two favorites are Piano and One More Walk Around The Garden.
Piano (Memory)is even more soul stirring in Italian than the english version.If the english version was perfection she improved upon it. One More Walk Around The Garden is sad and soul stirring bringing a tear to the eye on every play.Sarah sings her way through every song with the voice that earned her the title Angel of Music.Everyone a Gem. A must have for every true fan.
Lovely - Just Lovely!.......2007-01-04
Overall I was very pleased with the content and quality of this CD. Once again, Sarah sings beautifully. I rated this 4 stars instead of 5 simply because, like another reviewer, I, too, felt that it contained too much old material. I used to enjoy 'Memory' but it's been overdone to the point that I cringe when I hear it now. It's sung in Italian here and called 'Piano' but it's still 'Memory'.
I especially liked 'One More Walk Around the Garden' (Carmelina), 'There is More to Love' (Aspects of Love), 'The Last Man in My Life' (Song and Dance) and 'Chi Il Bel Sogno Di Doretta' (La Rondine). 'If I Ever Fall In Love Again' (The Crooked Mile) is especially well done as well.
I do enjoy playing the CD but I find that I pick the songs that I play rather than allowing it to play all the way through.
Encore!.......2005-05-29
The title of the CD is perfect. Sarah has a beautiful and flawless voice and her singing just pulls you in. If you like Sarah Brightman, this is a wonderful CD to add to your collection. I have only started to collect her CDs from concerts she has done and I love every single one of them! BUY THIS!! You won't regret it!!!
Captivating.......2004-12-25
Sarah Brightman sings beautifully. That's not even up for debate. Her choice of material is generally interesting as well. She runs through a wide variety of genre and regularly comes up with excellent pieces from each of them.
`Encore' is a compilation of material recorded between the late 1980's and 2001. It features strong renditions of `Away from You' by Rodgers and Harnick and `In the Mandarin's Garden' by George and Ira Gershwin. The orchestration on `If I ever Fall in Love Again' is a bit overblown but she sings the piece with sincerity, and very well. Her cover of Lane and Lerner's `One More Walk Around the Garden' is a thing of beauty. The same can be said for her handling of Sondheim's `What More Do I Need'. The weakest moment in the set comes during Puccini's `Chi Il Bel Di Doretta'. She sings it well but her voice doesn't quite have the pure power needed for the piece and there are moments where the strain shows.
Sarah Brightman really shines when she sings music written by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Her voice takes on an extra richness. He wrote the music for nine of the fifteen cuts on this release and can be identified as the composer of each one just by the tone her voice takes on when she begins singing any one of them. It's softer, richer, more expressive- it's as if there's an extra facet in her voice and spirit just for his compositions. He produced this collection but I don't believe that was a factor. The same thing struck me when she performed the material from the Phantom of the Opera that appeared on her La Luna concert DVD. `Think of Me' as performed by her was the song that attracted me to her voice even when I was less than sure of the scope of her talent. The recording here is the recording from `Phantom' and it's still stunning. `Piano' is hauntingly beautiful. `The Last Man in My Life' is given a ravishing performance. `Half a Moment' is devastating. The list goes on. There's not a weak cut from among his material. Webber's songs stay with the listener. Their melodic are lush and rich and have enough scope and variety to remain interesting over a long period of time. His orchestration is sumptuous, elaborately textured and a little sweet in the way that touches the listener as a caress. When she sings them they become all they can be. This isn't his music or hers. It's their music.
This is an excellent collection because of the way it showcases this. The material here has been (unkindly) labelled as `ear worms'. To an extent the term is accurate. Show tunes do lean toward catchy and easily accessible melodic lines. Their lyrics are often shallow. What's presented on this collection has more than its share of all of these faults. It's impossible to be cynical about it though. These songs, particularly the numbers penned by Lloyd-Webber, are strong on their own. When they're performed this well, and with this amount of affection, they're captivating. The quality of the sound on the release compliments the material beautifully. It's rich, lush and always crystal clear. Sarah Brightman herself is always a pleasure to listen to. Her voice it has a sparkling quality that's radiantly beautiful. The material on this collection shows that beauty to its fullest.
Listen to her singing these songs and let them wash over you. It's the perfect antidote for cynicism.
Sarah Brightman's Best.......2004-02-17
When I bought this Cd, I knew that I already had much of the music already, but there were a few new songs. I just had to get it for that reason. And I had to get it so that I had more than one recording of Sarah's finest songs. I absolutely love her and feel she was and is the ultimate Christine in "Phantom." I know I would be in a minority. I think she is past that part of her life and could not play the part again, but how I wish I had seen her. I could only imagine. If you have never heard Sarah sing before, this is a perfect CD to introduce her voice. The fact that she can sing so many different styles always amazes me. I suppose I appreciate that since I am a singer myself. I recommend this Cd to anyone.
Average customer rating:
- I waited for this for five years
- Excellent collection but BIG PUBLISHING MISTAKE!
- ONE OF LLOYD WEBBER'S BEST COMPILATIONS, DESPITE A FEW FLAWS
- SUCH MAGICAL MUSIC OF THE NIGHT!
- A Must Have for Sir Andrew fans
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Andrew Lloyd Webber: Now & Forever
Various Artists
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ASIN: B00005R5UJ
Release Date: 2001-11-20 |
Tracks:
- Jesus Christ Superstar: Overture - Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Jesus Christ Superstar: Everything's Alright - Yvonne Elliman/Murray Head/Ian Gilllan
- Jesus Christ Superstar: I Don't Know How To Love Him - Yvonne Elliman
- Jesus Christ Superstar: Gethsemane (I Only Want To Say) - Steve Balsamo
- Jesus Christ Superstar: Superstar - Murray Head
- Evita: Oh What A Circus/Sing You Fools - Antonio Banderas
- Evita: I'd Be Surprisingly Good For You - Elaine Paige/Joss Ackland
- Evita: Another Suitcase In Another Hall - Barbara Dickson
- Evita: Don't Cry For Me Argentina - Julie Covington
- Evita: High Flying, Adored - Mandy Patinkin/Patti LuPone
- Cats: The Jellicle Ball - Andrew Lloyd Weber
- Cats: Memory - Elaine Paige
- Cats: Gus: The Theatre Cat - Susan Jane Tanner/John Mills
- Cats: Mr Mistoffelees - Paul Nicholas
- Song And Dance: Take That Look Off Your Face - Marti Webb
- Song And Dance: Tell Me On A Sunday - Marti Webb
- Song And Dance: Unexpected Song - Sarah Brightman
- Song And Dance: Nothing Like You've Ever Known - Sarah Brightman
- Song And Dance: Introduction - Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Song And Dance: Variations 1 -4 - Andrew Lloyd Webber
Tracks:
- Starlight Express: Starlight Express - El Debarge
- Starlight Express: Crazy - Greg Ellis/Reva Rice/Caron Cardelle/Samantha Lane/Voyd
- Starlight Express: Next Time You Fall In Love - Reva Rice/Greg Ellis
- Starlight Express: I Am The Starlight - Lon Satton/Ray Shell
- Starlight Express: Light At The End Of The Tunnel - The Company
- Requiem: Hosanna - Placido Domingo
- Requiem: Pie jesu - Sarah Brightman/Paul Miles-Kingston
- The Phantom Of The Opera: The Phantom Of The Opera - Michael Crawford/Sarah Brightman
- The Phantom Of The Opera: The Music Of The Night - Michael Crawford
- The Phantom Of The Opera: All I Ask Of You - Sarah Brightman/Steve Barton
- The Phantom Of The Opera: Entr'acte - Andrew Lloyd Webber
- The Phantom Of The Opera: Masquerade - The Company
- The Phantom Of The Opera: Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again - Sarah Brightman
- Aspects Of Love: Aspects Of Aspects - Orchester Der Vereinigten Buehnen Wien
- Aspects Of Love: Love Changes Everything - Michael Ball
- Aspects Of Love: Seeing Is Believing - Michael Ball/Ann Crumb
- Aspects Of Love: The First Man You Remember - Kevin Colson/Diana Morrison
- Aspects Of Love: Anything But Lonely - Sarah Brightman
- Aspects Of Love: Chanson D'Enfance - Sarah Brightman
Tracks:
- Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Any Dream Will Do - Jason Donovan
- Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Joseph's Coat - Maria Friedman/Richard Attenborough/Donny Osmond
- Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Close Every Door - Donny Osmond
- By Jeeves: Travel Hopefully - John Scherer/Martin Jarvis/Don Stephenson
- By Jeeves: When Love Arrives - Steven Pacey/Diana Morrison
- By Jeeves: Half A Moment - Sarah Brightman
- Sunset Boulevard: With One Look - Glenn Close
- Sunset Boulevard: New Ways To Dream - Glenn Close/Alan Campbell
- Sunset Boulevard: The Perfect Year - Glenn Close/Alan Campbell
- Sunset Boulevard: Sunser Boulevard - Alan Campbell
- Sunset Boulevard: As If We Never Said Goodbye - Glenn Close
- Whistle Down The Wind: Whistle Down The Wind - James Graeme/Lottie Mayor
- Whistle Down The Wind: Cold - Everly Brothers
- Whistle Down The Wind: No Matter What - Children/Adult Chorus
- Whistle Down The Wind: The Nature Of The Beast - Marcus Lovett/Lottie Mayor
- The Beautiful Game: Overture - Andrew Lloyd Webber
- The Beautiful Game: The Beautiful Game - The Company
- The Beautiful Game: Our Kind Of Love - Hannah Waddingham
- The Beautiful Game: Dont Like You - Josie Walker/David Shannon
- The Beautiful Game: Let Us Love In Peace - Josie Walker/Omagh Youth Community Choir
Tracks:
- Oh What A Circus - David Essex
- Memory - Betty Buckley
- The Phantom Of The Opera - Sarah Brightman/Steve Harley
- All I Ask Of You - Sarah Brightman/Cliff Richard
- Love Changes Everything - Michael Ball
- Any Dream Will Do - Donny Osmond
- Amigos Para Siempre (Friends For Life) - Sarah Brightman/Jose Carreras
- As If We Never Said Goodbye - Barbra Streisand
- The Perfect Year - Dina Carroll
- With One Look - Petula Clark
- You Must Love Me - Madonna
- The Heart Is Slow To Learn - Kiri Te Kanawa
- A Kiss Is A Terrible Thing To Waste - The Metal Philharmonic Orchestra
- Whistle Down The Wind - Tina Arena
- No Matter What - Boyzone
- The Vaults Of Heaven - Tom Jones
- Try Not To Be Afraid - Boy George
- Pie Jesu - Charlotte Church
Tracks:
- Make Believe Love - Wes Sands
- Down Thru' Summer - Ross Hannaman
- I'll Give All My Love To Southend - Ross Hannaman
- Believe Me I Will - Sacha Distel
- Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (1969 Radio Luxembourg Commercial) - Joseph Consortium/Pete Murray
- Try It And See - Rita Pavone
- Come Back Richard Your Country Needs You - Time Rice And The Webber Group
- Goodbye Seattle - Paul Raven
- John 19:41 - The Andrew Lloyd Webber Orchestra
- What A Line To Go Out On - Yvonne Elliman
- Disillusion Me - Gary Band
- The Ballad Of Robert And Peter - Tim Rice
- Christmas Dream - Maynard Williams
- It's Only Your Lover Returning/All Through My Crazy And Wild Days/Don't Cry For Me Argentina - Julie Covington
- It's Easy For You (1977 Jungle Room Session Version) - Elvis Presley
- Magdalena - Tony Christie
- Buenos Aires - The Roja Rockers
- Pollicle Dogs And Jellicle Cats - Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Mungojerrie And Rumpleteazer (Live At The Sydmonton Festival 1980) - Gemma Craven
- I Could Have Given You More - Petula Clark
- I've Been In Love Too Long - Marti Webb
- Benedicite - The Stephen Hill Singers
Album Description
Disc 1: Selections from Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita, Cats, and Song and Dance
Disc 2: Selections from Starlight Express, Requiem, Phantom of the Opera, and Aspects of Love
Disc 3: Selections from Joseph nad the Amaziong Technicolor Dreamcoat, By Jeeves, Sunset Boulevard, Whistle Down the Wind, and The Beautiful Game
CD 4: 1. "Oh What a Circus" --David Essex 2. "Memory" - Betty Buckleey 3. "The Phantom of the Opera" -Sarah Brightman, Steve Harley 4. "All I Ask of You" --Sarah Brightman, Cliff Richard 5. "Love Changes Everything"--Michael Ball 6. "Any Dream Will Do"--Donny Osmond 7. "Amigos Para Siempre (Friends for Life)"--Sarah Brightman, Jose Caerras 8. "As if We Never Said Goodbye"--Barbra Streisand 9. "The Perfect Year"--Dina Carroll 10. "With One Look" --Petula Clark 11. "You Must Love Me" 12. "The Heart Is Slow To Learn" --Kiri Te Kanawa 13. "Whistle Down the Wind"--Tina Arena 14. "A Kiss Is a Terrible Thing To Waste"--The Metal Philharmonic 15. "No Matter What"--Boyzone 16. "The Vaults of Heaven"--Tom Jones and Sounds of Blackness 17. "Try Not To Be Afraid"--Boy George 18. "Pie Jesu"--Charlotte Church
Disc 5: (All tracks available for the first time) 1. "Make Believe Love"--Wes Sands 2. "Down Thru' Summer"--Ross Hannaman 3. "I'll Give All My Love to Southend"--Ross Hannaman 4. "Believe Me I Will"--Sacha Distel 5. "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: 1969 Luxembourg Radio Commercial--The Jospeh Consortium, Pete Murray 6. "Try It and See"--Rita Pavone 7. "Come Back Richard Your Country Needs You"--Tim Rice and the Webber Group 8. "Goodbye Seattle"-- Paul Raven 9. "John 19:41"--The Andrew Lloyd Webber Orchestra 10. "What a Line To Go Out On"--Yvonne Elliman 11. "Disillusion Me" --Gary Bond 12. "The Ballad of Robert and Peter"--Tim Rice 13. "Christmas Dream" --Maynard Williams 14. "It's Only Your Lover Returning/All through My Wild and Crazy Days/Don't Cry for Me Argentina--Julie Covington 15. "It's Easy for You" (1977 Jungle Room Session version)--Elvis Presley 16. "Magdalena"--Tony Christie 17. "Buenos Aires"--The Rioja Rockers 18. "Pollicle Dogs and Jellicle Cats"--Andrew Lloyd Webber original demo 19. "Mungojerrie and Rumpleteazer" (Live at Sydmonton Festival 1980)-Gemma Craven 20. "I Could Have Given You More"--Petula Clark 21. "I've Been in Love Too Long"--Marti Webb 22. "Benedicte"-- Stephen Hill Singers
Customer Reviews:
I waited for this for five years.......2006-06-30
Between Amazone, Ebay and Napster, I don't usually buy CDs anymore, and I usually wait till I can buy them cheaper "new and used". When this set came out, I was excited, mainly by Disc 5, but wasn't going to spend $70 on it. I waited till it was cheap enough, and got it for Father's day this year.
It was worth the wait.
The concept is great. The packaging is great. The recording is great. Disc five is really cool for an ALW aficionado. There are a few real gems on it; my favorites are Petula Clark's "I Could Have Given You More" and "Benedicite."
I've always thought "Gus the Theatre Cat" made a great medley on the piano with "Unexpected Song" and "I DOn't Know How to Love Him," but wished there was an alternate lyric to match the other two songs. Now that I know there *is*, and it's a good lyric, it's a dream come true.
The melody of "Benedicite" is one of my favorites from _Sunset_ (the book mis-identifies it as "SUrrender"; it's actually "The Lady's Paying" and "Eternal Youth is Worth a Little Suffering"). The lyrics are the canticle from Daniel 3, which comes up every odd Sunday in the Divine Office, so it's nice to have cool music to sing it with.
I haven't bought _By Jeeves_ or _THe Beautiful Game_ yet, to it was great to sample them.
There are other parts of the CD taht aren't found in my collection. I like CD 4 "The Hits."
But the selections on CDs 1-3 don't make sense.
First, any self-respecting ALW fan has the Original London Cast of _Phantom_, so six tracks are totally useless. Why not draw from the Canadian cast with Colm Wilkinson? Or pull out some obscure recordings never published.
Why two different tracks with Michael Ball singing "Love Changes Everything", yet they're hardly any different?
On Disc 5 is "It's Only Your Lover Returning," sung by Julie Covington. It's an early draft of the song (Lloyd Webber and Rice went through several suggested titles) and quite nice. The very thing one expects on a Boxed Set.
So why have the Julie Covington "Don't Cry for Me" on disc 1?? The only difference is a few words, but it's otherwise identical. Why not Elaine Paige or Patti Lupone or Madonna?
The _Evita_ section is otherwise the best, choosing a sample from each major recording, though I'd have chosen slightly differently (as above).
There is a great selection of "Mungojerrie and Rumpleteazer" from the Sydmonton festival, using the original music that was changed when _Cats_ went to Broadway_. It would have been nice if they'd included more recordings from Sydmonton, like the original lyric of "All I Ask of You" shown on the second DVD to the _Phantom_ movie.
With so many great actress-singers who've played Norma Desmond, why does the collection beat us over the head with Glenn Close?
Paul Miles Kingston must be set for life in royalties, for the number of albums the original recording of "Pie Jesu" has appeared on. "Amigos Para Siempre" is nice, but it reminds me of Shari Lewis's "The Song that Doesn't End," especially when it's been used on so many compilations.
In short, this is a great collection for the obscure material, if you can get it cheap. But for a boxed set, it's a poor sampling, drawn mostly from the most familiar recordings.
Excellent collection but BIG PUBLISHING MISTAKE! .......2006-01-10
Please beware they made a mistake on this. It's actually the shortened Ray Shell version of STARLIGHT EXPRESS from the original 1984 London cast - NOT the El Debarge single from 1987 like it says on the box. I don't know how they let that goof pass. Sorry to Ray Shell. Having said that, this is an outstanding compilation of Lloyd Webber's greatest hits.
ONE OF LLOYD WEBBER'S BEST COMPILATIONS, DESPITE A FEW FLAWS.......2005-03-21
Regardless of the fact that some of his latest efforts (most notably, The Woman in White) are disappointing, there can be little doubt that Andrew Lloyd Webber is one of the greatest composers ever to work in the musical theatre. Ever since his "Jesus Christ Superstar" hit the stage in the early 70-is, it was clear that the conception and perception of musicals are never going to be the same again. Many of his songs became standards not only in the theatre history, but also as tops on the charts. Even though he's British, his influence on the shape of the modern musical theatre expanded over the West End boundaries long ago and has thus made an enormous impact on Broadway. Two of his shows ("Cats" and "The phantom of the opera") hold the record as two the longest running shows in the history of Broadway. He has also been the only composer to have three of his shows running at Broadway concurrently. Some of his awards include three Grammies, a Golden Globe, an Oscar and a bunch of Tony awards. But perhaps most of all, Lloyd Webber is responsible for bringing the musicals and the theatre appealing to the wide audiences, who in different circumstances would not consider seeing a musical. The secret of his success is probably the mixture of beautiful and catchy melodies, interesting subject matter (though some, like Starlight Express, are too thin) and grandiose staging.
Over the years many compilations of his work have emerged. In the late 80-is and early 90-is it was the "Encore" series and lately the one-disc collection called "Gold". The one in question here can be considered one of the best currently on the market. First, it includes a 3-disc selections from all of his shows, minus the latest one, i.e., "The Woman in White", which, considering the triviality of the score, is no great lost. The fourth disc covers some of his most known songs sung by the famous artists. Then, there is the fifth disc with previously unreleased material, most of which are the songs ALW wrote with Tim Rice for various artists during the 70-is. The disks are all neatly packed in a hardcover book that features 67 pages of pictures and text with information about each of ALW's shows. One of the other assets here is the perfect sound quality, since all of the tracks have been digitally remastered.
Here are my basic impressions and comments regarding the material on the discs:
* Disc #1 has the selections from "Jesus Christ Superstar", "Evita", "Cats" and "Song & Dance". The Superstar material mostly comes from the Concept Recording. Although the songs sound beautiful as always, their orchestration is a bit dated now. Only Steve Balsamo's "Gethsemane" from the 1996 revival cast has a modern rock sound. "Evita" comes with the material from all of the major recordings: London, Broadway and the movie productions, as well as the Concept album. No objections here; since this is one of ALW's most satisfying works, every song is just perfect, although Patti LuPone, the Broadway and overall the best Evita, is left with only a couple of lines. With the selections from "Cats", however, I have some doubts. A plus to the choice of the "Jellicle ball" impressive orchestral sequence from the 1998 movie version and "Mister Mistoffelees" from the 1981 London cast. One of the best known ALW's songs, "Memory", also comes from that album. It's a pretty version and Elaine Paige's rendition cannot be matched, but why include this when the definite version, featuring an 80-piece orchestra and Elaine Paige with much better interpretation, can be found in the same movie version. Thusly, one has to buy Elaine Paige's latest 2-disc compilation "Centre Stage: The very best of Elaine Paige" to get that one. And "Gus the theatre cat" is more a recital than a song, so there was not much point in including that. Marti Webb brings her vocal charm to the "Song & Dance" sequence, Sarah Brightman sings "Unexpected song" with her famous soprano, but as much as I like her version, Bernadette Peters, who was in this show on Broadway is strangely left out here.
* Disc # 2 starts with "Starlight Express". This was never one of my favorite ALW's shows; the plot is even lighter than in "Cats" and the 1984 original cast recording is terribly dated. Yet, here we have one terrific duet, "I am starlight" from the original together with three songs from the later revivals and it seems that fresh orchestrations were just the thing Starlight needed. My favorite remains a touchy ballad, "Next time you fall in love". "Requiem" is the most solemn of all ALW's compositions, written in 1985 to commemorate the death of his father. Placido Domingo's tenor rides together with the chorus all the way through the strong "Hosanna", only to be joined by Sarah Brightman in the final moments of this song. She then gives an echoing deliverance of "Pie Jesu". What can be said of ALW's next show, "The Phantom of the Opera"? A phenomenon in its own right, it's easy to see from the six numbers included here why this is one of the best and most beloved musicals of all time. The cast, the music, the story - everything is perfect. Although "Aspects of love" was never a popular hit, it does have some of the most beautiful love melodies ALW has ever written. "Love changes everything" sung by Michael Ball is probably one of the best tunes ever about love. The rest of the selected material here has a dreamy love flavor and the melodies find their way into your brain in the best Lloyd Webber way.
* ALW's first musical, "Joseph and the amazing Technicolor dreamcoat" was more successful in its revival form than the original from the 70-is. The three songs included here are sung by the show stars, Jason Donovan and Donny Osmond. Maria Friedman was not a lucky choice to play the narrator, as the track from the 1998 movie version shows. "By Jeeves" was ALW's only big flop when it came to the stage in the 70-is. The 1995 revival sounds much better though, full of funny numbers in the best manner of the musical comedy. "Travel hopefully" remains one of the show's highlights on this compilation. "Sunset Boulevard" comes next. "Sunset" remains for me one of Webber's best scores; lush and beautiful. I listen to the original cast recording with Patti LuPone all the time. However, here most of the songs are performed by Glenn Close. A big mistake. If you've ever listened the American premiere recording with her, you'll know what I am talking about. She may have a strong stage presence, but her vocal abilities are too limited, and her aggressive approach to the role lacks any subtlety. Therefore, the two big numbers from this show, "With one look" and "As if we never said goodbye" are ruined by the fact she can't sing. The same goes for the American Joe Gillis, who was played by Alan Campbell. Luckily, Patti LuPone and Kevin Anderson, the original Norma and Joe from the London production, make their brief entrance here with the "Perfect year"; enough to show how better they are. The funny thing is, on the jacket and inside of it, Glenn Close and Alan Campbell are credited as performers in this song as well. If this was a mistake on ALW's part, it was a good one. The next ALW's show, "Whistle down the wind" was never a critic's dear and yet the audiences rushed in to see it in London. The score brings back ALW to his rock and roll roots of the seventies and the story is quite interesting. But the selections here are not the happiest, since the cast recording boasts with much better songs. And finally, "The Beautiful Game". Again, we have one of those ALW's shows that is worth in its individual parts rather than as a whole. "Our kind of love" and "Let us love in peace" are two catchy ballads. The latter is a nice amalgam version not available elsewhere. The two other tracks here I could live without.
* Disc # 4 has the songs from all the above shows performed by different artists. The assembled tracks have their pros and cons. For example, we have some previously unreleased stuff, like Dame Kiri Te Kanawa's operettic rendition of "The heart is slow to learn", or a stunning and epic "A kiss is a terrible thing to waste" from "Whistle down the wind", performed by The Metal Philharmonic Orchestra. Then again, what was the point in including almost identical tracks as the ones on the previous disks? So we have Michael Ball again singing "Love changes everything" with only a bit different orchestration; Sarah Brightman comes out again with the same Phantom duets, but only with the different male singers. It would be much more appropriate to include tracks from the Toronto Cast of the Phantom, with Colm Wilkinson. Other pop deliverances (Tina Arena's "Whistle down the wind", Barbra Streisand's "As if we never said goodbye", Boyzone's "No matter what" and many more) were wisely chosen. Patti LuPone is again nowhere to be found and Petula Clark's "With one look" sounds too worn-out.
* The last disc is probably the one that will be of most interest to Lloyd Webber aficionados. It consists of entirely previously unreleased material ALW for the most part wrote for various artists during his early years, with Tim Rice. Some of these tunes, not successful as a singles, were later used in his shows. Thus "Down thru' summer" became "Buenos Aires"in Evita, "Try it and see", an unsuccessful attempt for the Eurovision was used for "King Herod's song" in "Superstar" and so on. Some of these songs are nicely made pop songs: "Make believe love", ALW's first recorded composition, for which he provided the lyrics; "Goodbye Seattle", sung by Paul Raven, who later became Gary Glitter; "Come back Richard, your country needs you", from a never made musical, sung here by Tim Rice, or Latin flavored "Magdalena", with Tony Christie singing. My all time favorite here is a song called "It's easy for you", sung by none other than Elvis Presley himself. Lloyd Webber and Rice sent him a demo recording that he accepted and recorded this live version a couple of weeks before he died. It's amazing to hear how his voice remained in the perfect shape. Also, there is a track of Andrew Lloyd Webber singing "Policle dogs and Jellicle cats" while plying the piano. His voice doesn't sound bad at all.
Taken as a whole, this compilation makes a perfect birthday or Christmas present to any fan of Andrew Lloyd Webber shows, or just anybody interested in some of the best tunes from the modern era of the musical theatre; despite the flaws I mentioned above. To the former, it may just be the final addition for the Andrew Lloyd Webber collection.
SUCH MAGICAL MUSIC OF THE NIGHT!.......2003-01-19
"Evita." "Sunset Blvd." "Starlight Express." "Jesus Christ Superstar." "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat." "Requiem." "Aspects of Love." The man who is the most recognized composer in the history of the musical theatre, the man who has won more Tonys than any other composer, the man who boasts the best-selling show of all time ("The Phantom of the
Opera") and the longest-running show of all time ("Cats"), the man whose homes are filled with three Grammys, five Oliviers, a Golden Globe, and Oscar and too many other honors and hosannas to mention, the man knighted in 1992 certainly doesn't need an introduction. Now Decca Broadway pays tribute to Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber with "Now and Forever," a spectacular 5-CD set compiled and produced by Sir Andy himself. It's cheaper than a
ticket to "The Producers" ... and more much exciting. This treasure trove contains highlights from all of Webber's shows, and a bonus disc of tunes sung by Betty Buckley, Barbara
Streisand, Jose Carreras, Boy George, Charlotte Church, Madonna, Tom Jones, Petula Clark, even Elvis! A must for lovers of theatre---and good music.
A Must Have for Sir Andrew fans.......2002-05-21
This five-CD collection of Andrew Lloyd Webber's career is fantastic. It leaves virtually no stone unturned. I have no doubt that diehard Webber fans will love this, especially for the 5th disc entitled "From the Vaults." This disc alone is worth the price as it contains tunes never before heard by the typical fan. Who knew Elvis did a Lloyd Webber tune?!? I didn't! Also the tune "Benedictine" which the composer wrote for his most recent marriage is not only pretty, but it has the same medley as "The Lady's Paying" from "Sunset Blvd." which I found highly enjoyable. Another great track is the composer himself singing a cut song from "Cats" entitled "Pollicle Dogs and Jellicle Cats" which has the same tune as "Jellicle Songs for Jellicle Cats," but to hear Sir Andrew sing is a blast...he sounds a lot like Al "Year of the Cat" Stewart.
The cuts from the musicals are great but are likely owned by ALW fans as they are on the original cast albums. And I'm glad that there were tunes included from the composers most recent efforts which have yet to make it beyond London (Whistle Down the Wind, Beautiful Game).
My only complaint is the inclusion of way too many tracks by Sarah Brightman. She must've received a great divorce settlement that included having tunes on any ALW collection until the end of time!! Her interpretations of some of the tunes were limp and uninspired. I would've much rather heard casts from around the world rather than yet another song by this disdainful soprano! How about Colm Wilkinson's version of "Music of the Night" from the original Canadian cast of "Phantom"? Or Michael Crawford's version of "Unexpected Song"? What? No Betty Buckley from "Sunset Blvd."? And of course there are songs you KNOW are going to be on the collection before you even listen to it as they have been on EVERY ALW collection for the past decade or so.
A great collection but too much Sarah Brightman!
Average customer rating:
- GREAT SHOW!
- Great fun
- Great fun
- Wonderful world of Jeeves!
- I love By Jeeves!
|
By Jeeves (1996 London Revival Cast)
Andrew Lloyd Webber , and Alan Ayckbourn
Manufacturer: Decca U.S.
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- By Jeeves (2001 American Premiere Recording)
- The Beautiful Game (2000 Original London Cast)
- Ernest in Love (1960 Original Broadway Cast)
- The Likes of US
- The Woman in White (2004 Original London Cast)
ASIN: B000001EYU
Release Date: 1997-03-18 |
Tracks:
- Some Introductory Chat
- Wooster Will Entertain You
- The Plot Thickens
- Travel Hopefully (Part One)
- A Curious Hedgehog Incident
- Travel Hopefully - Steven Pacy/ Nicholas Haverson
- In Which My Character Is Tested
- That Was Nearly Us - Steven Pacy/ Lucy Tregear
- Days Of Jam And Mazes
- Love's Maze - Steven Pacey/ Cathy Tregear
- Wooster Thinks On His Feet
- The Hallo Song - Steven Pacy/ Nicholas Colicos/ Simon Day
- And Identity Crisis (Or Two)
- By Jeeves - Steven Pacy/ Simon Day/ Nicholas Haverson
- Wooster Noble Intercedes
- When Love Arrives - Steven Pacey/ Diana Morrison
- I Am Let Down (Badly)
- What Have You Got To Say, Jeeves?
- I Answer The Call Of The Code
- Half A Moment - Catha Sara/ Richard Long
- I Risk My Neck To Save The Bacon
- It's A Pig - Lucy Tregear/ Steven Pacey/ Diana Morrison/
- A Satisfactory Outcome
- Banjo Boy - Malcon Sinclair/ Steven Pacey/ Robert Austin/ Diana Morrison/ Simon Day/ Nicholas Haverson/ Lucy...
- Wizard Rainbow Banjo Mix
- In Conclusion
Customer Reviews:
GREAT SHOW!.......2002-12-09
I saw this show back in 1996 with the original cast in one of London's West End theatres....It was amazing and has stayed as my favorite stage perforamce up to date...I have seen other shows since but none have topped By Jeeves...its a wonderful, funny play with AMAZING music! Buy the music!
Great fun.......2002-08-05
Ya know, it's usually the little known ones that are the better ones. This is a great cast album, full of some wonderful, underrated and underrexposed talents. The story is great, I love the originality behind it and it is damn hilarious. Half A Moment is the best song, It's A Pig makes me laugh my [butt] of every time. Seals Andrew Lloyd Weber's name at the top of the list for the greatest composer of the musical stage the twentieth century has ever seen or more importantly heard. Ok, maybe it's a close race with Stephen Sondheim, but Weber is phenomenal. This gets my highest recommendation.
Great fun.......2002-08-05
Ya know, it's usually the little known ones that are the better ones. This is a great cast album, full of some wonderful, underrated and underrexposed talents. The story is great, I love the originality behind it and it is damn hilarious. Half A Moment is the best song, It's A Pig makes me laugh my ass of every time. Seals Andrew Lloyd Weber's name at the top of the list for the greatest composer of the musical stage the twentieth century has ever seen or more importantly heard. Ok, maybe it's a close race with Stephen Sondheim, but Weber is phenomenal. This gets my highest recommendation.
Wonderful world of Jeeves!.......2002-01-22
This recording is absolutely marvellous! Never mind the incredibly confusing plot (it is musical comedy!) , the music is absolutely enjoyable and there is no incessant repetition of music except for the Banjo Boy Rainbow Mix which makes for a very melodious medley of By Jeeves. This musical follows the strain of traditional musical comedy more closely, complete with a rather surprising small cast and small orchestra. Songs you will definitely love include "Travel Hopefully", my fave "Love's Maze", the delightful "The Hallo Song", "By Jeeves" and the lyrically-quirky "It's A Pig". This has to be the most humorous musical up to date by Andrew Lloyd Webber and its light-heartedness provide for a very enjoyable night at the theater.
I love By Jeeves!.......2001-11-07
I loved Jeeves, the original 1975 version of the show. The only reason the shop flopped was because it wasn't like Jesus Christ Superstar. The cast LP remains one of my favorites. Andrew Lloyd Webber has shown his versitility in musical styles, and By Jeeves is now running on Broadway, providing New York City with some much needed merriment (the same type as Urinetown and Mamma Mia!)
I am delighted with the new CDS of By Jeeves. This one features the new "Wooster Will Entertain You" and "Love's Maze." But the absolutely best song is "It's a Pig."
The older three By Jeeves CDS are now out of print. Buy them if you can, and get the latest. They are all great fun.
Average customer rating:
- Okay, but kind of disappointing
- Not quite what I expected...
- Some great performances, some not so great...
- Disappointed
- Musical Talent at Its Best
|
The Essential Songs of Andrew Lloyd Webber
Manufacturer: Metro Music
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
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ASIN: B00005Y47E
Release Date: 2002-02-22 |
Tracks:
- Any Dream Will Do
- Close Every Door
- Heaven On Their Minds
- Everything's Alright
- Gethsemane
- I Don't Know How To Love Him
- Jesus Christ Superstar
- Could We Start Again Please?
- Don't Cry For Me Argentina
- Another Suitcase In Another Hall
- Buenos Aires
- Rainbow High
- High Flying Adored
- Memory
- Jellicle Cats
- Mister Mistofeles
- Unexpected Song
- Last Man In My Life
- Rolling Stock
- U-N-C-O-U-P-L-E-D
Tracks:
- Only You
- Starlight Express
- There's Me
- Pie Jesu
- Angel Of Music
- Masquerade
- Wishing Somehow You Were Here Again
- All I Ask Of You
- The Phantom Of The Opera
- Music Of The Night
- Love Changes Everything
- The First Man You Remember
- Seeing Is Believing
- As If We Never Said Goodbye
- Sunset Boulevard
- With One Look
- Too Much In Love To Care
- Half A Moment
- Whistle Down The Wind
- Our Kind Of Love
Album Description
Full title, 'Essential Songs Of Andrew Lloyd Webber'. UK budget-price compilation. 40 superlative performances featuring songs from every one of Andrew Lloyd Webber's hit musicals. Guest artists include John Barrymore, Issy Van Randwyck, Dave Willetts, Maria Friedman, Kim Criswell, Graham Bickley and the National Symphony Orchestra. Housed in a slipcase. 2002.
Customer Reviews:
Okay, but kind of disappointing.......2006-04-17
This isn't a bad recording, but the tracks are not the actual performances off of any cast recording of any of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musicals. The reditions of the songs on the disc are of varying quality. Some are pretty good. Some are borderline awful.
It is a good collection for inexpensively getting a lot of Andrew Lloyd Webber's most popular songs in one place and having them there to be able to listen to get the idea of what a certain song sounds like and is about. It isn't the collection of definitive recordings for certain roles. In fact in a couple examples, I wonder if the performer fully understood the context of the song he or she was singing &/or what it was about. Overall, the album is good, for the most part, if not excellent.
However, the liner notes for "The Essential Songs of Andrew Lloyd Webber" is another matter. I don't mean to be unkind, but the author of the comments on the different tracks (one Rexton S. Bunnett) is blatantly WRONG in multiple instances. I don't mean just in nit-picky details, but in major plot details/context of songs, like the fact that Bunnett identifies "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again" as being sung by "our heroine" (who he does not even identify by name as Christine Daae) as she thinks about her lover, not as being sung about Christine's dead father. He also says that the Phantom has found his perfect love and "Angel of Music" in Christine... because HE is the Angel of Music who Christine believes has been sent to her by her dead father, and because although the Phantom is obsessed with Christine, that relationship is far from "loving" (even if Christine shows him compassion. I feel like these (and a couple other mistakes) are major plot points to get wrong. A good amount of the commentary reads as if Bunnett might have written it at the last minute, fudging his way through entries on musicals of which he had little knowledge; like what an essay I might write on a book I never read for my college class but had quickly looked up on Cliff's Notes would sound like. In terms of sheer editing, there are spelling mistakes, run-on sentences and spacing errors ("Any DreamWill Do")in the liner notes. Where was the copy editor?
And the most frightening fact of all, under Bunnett's credentials, it says "Harper Collins has just published his revision and updating of the Collins Book of the Musical."
I am being very critical, but I think that for a widely-released CD it is reasonable to expect the liner notes to be at a professional level, as they were most likely supposed to be.
Not quite what I expected..........2005-04-23
I was looking for a CD of the original performances and this CD doesn't have them. I suppose it was my fault for not looking closer, but the songs just weren't the same. Personally, I was not impressed. If you don't care that they aren't the originals then it is nice to listen to.
Some great performances, some not so great..........2005-04-18
This CD is actually pretty good, considering you get 40 songs for less than $16. Let's evaluate the pros and cons.
Pros:
Two classic songs that are performed excellently are Phantom of the Opera and I Don't Know How to Love Him.
Of course you want to compare Phantom to the classic Michael Crawford/ Sarah Brightman version. Well, guess what? This version is BETTER. The woman has a deeper voice than Brightman, and her singing style is just awesome. The ending of this version (you know, the "Sing, my angel of music, sing for me!") is different, but in a good way... I think.)
And of course, the standard for I Don't Know How to Love Him is Yvonne's version. This version is different, but it grew on me quickly. This version has a country feel to it, almost. Somehow it works and sounds great.
There are a lot of great performances in this collection. My favorites include: Heaven on Their Minds, Everything's Alright, Could We Start Again Please, Another Suitcase in Another Hall, Buenos Aires, Rainbow High, Only You, Starlight Express, Angel of Music, Masquerade, All I Ask of You, Half a Moment, and Whistle Down the Wind. I think they're all great versions of their more famous counterparts.
Cons:
First of all, there are some technical problems that are kind of disappointing. A few of the songs have a very echoey sound. Any Dream Will Do, Another Suitcase in Another Hall, Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again, and There's Me are the songs that come to mind that are the worst in this regard. It isn't really bad, just enough to be slightly annoying, more so when the volume is turned way up on your CD player.
A few songs are worthy of skipping over when listening to this collection. In my opinion, Superstar, Sunset Boulevard, and Gethesmane are the biggest disappointments.
Superstar just doesn't cut it for me. The singer really overdoes it, making it overstylized... really makes you yearn for Murray Head. I can't stand listening to it. Just my opinion.
Sunset Boulevard is one of my very favorite musicals, so I was really hoping that the singer would do justice to its title song. Unfortunately I don't think he did. You can't help but compare it to Alan Campbell's fantastic version. This guy has a very choppy way of singing, when I'm used to it being sung so smoothly. Maybe it would grow on me, but I don't think I'll give it a chance to. However, that last note is much stronger than Alan Campbell's. It doesn't make up for the rest of the song, though.
Finally, Gethsemane. The inevitable fact is that NO ONE can sing this song like Michael Ball. This guy tries, he really does. But he doesn't have the right voice or the right style. So please listen to Michael Ball's performance of Gethsemane if you want to know how breathtaking of a song it can be. It's on the Royal Albert Hall DVD, and I'm sure he's got it on one of his CDs.
Anyway, overall, this is a good CD if you like quantity over quality. Don't buy it for the classics, you'll probably end up disappointed with many of them. Buy it for the lesser known songs. You probably won't like every song, especially if you're a big ALW fan, but for the price, it's worth it.
If you want classic versions of classic ALW songs, you might prefer something like "The Very Best of Andrew Lloyd Webber: The Broadway Collection".
Disappointed.......2005-03-11
The singer(s)does not do justice for the lyrics. It was grating to the ears. Save your money for the originals.
Musical Talent at Its Best.......2003-01-03
What a pleasure to hear a collection of Andrew Lloyd Webber's beautiful music from such wonderful voices accompanied by an outstanding symphony. This sensational CD is a treasure to own.
Average customer rating:
- Lovely
- Encore!
- Another way to make money on the back of Sarah
|
The Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection / Encore
Manufacturer: Decca Broadway
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Gershwin
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- Time to Say Goodbye
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ASIN: B00006LLOO
Release Date: 2002-10-15 |
Tracks:
- Phantom of the Opera
- Unexpected Song
- Chanson d'Efrance
- All I Ask of You
- Don't Cry for Me Argentina
- Another Suitcase in Another Hall
- Love Changes Everything
- Amigos Para Siempre (Friends for Life)
- Memory
- Gus: The Theatre Cat
- Anything But Lonely
- Macavity: The Mystery Cat
- Tell Me on a Sunday
- Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again
- Pie Jesu
- Music of the Night
Tracks:
- Whitsle Down the Wind {From Whistle Down the Wind}
- Away from You {From Rex}
- Guardami (With One Look) {From Sunset Boulevard} [Italian Version]
- Think of Me {From the Phantom of the Opera}
- One More Walk the Around the Garden {From Carmelina}
- Surrender {From Sunset Boulevard}
- If I Ever Fall in Love Again {From the Crooked Mile}
- Half a Moment {From Jeeves}
- Piano (Memory) {From Cats} [Italian Version]
- What More Do I Need {From Saturday Night}
- There Is More to Love {From Aspects of Love}
- Last Man in My Life {From Song and Dance}
- In the Mandarin's Orchid Garden {From East Is West}
- Nothing Like You've Ever Known {From Tell Me on a Sunday and Song and D
- Chi il Bel Sogno Di Doretta {From la Rondine}
Amazon.com
In a career that's veered from '70s pop chanteuse to Broadway star and neo-operatic diva, Sarah Brightman has brought a critics-be-damned sense of dramatic scale to nearly every project she's tackled. This two-CD package of 31 hits brings together selections from Brightman's original Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection, including many definitive versions of Lloyd Webber classics. Also included are songs from her album Encore, which itself was largely culled from her Songs That Got Away and Surrender song anthologies, although they do include four previously unreleased outtakes from those collections.
Her 1998 recording of the title song from ex-husband Andrew Lloyd Webber's Whistle Down the Wind succeeds by emphasizing its melodic grace with a deft, airy touch, while the remainder rescue worthy songs from obscure or failed musicals. From Lerner and Lane's 1959 Carmelina comes the lovely "One More Walk Around the Garden." Stephen Sondheim's youthful 1954 debut, Saturday Night, yields a sprightly take on "What More Do I Need," and an operatic reading of "In the Mandarin's Orchid Garden," from the Gershwins' unproduced 1929 East Is West, is also included. If the selection leans a little too heavily on the Lloyd Webber connection elsewhere (including Italian versions of "Guardami (With One Look)" from Sunset Boulevard and "Piano (Memory)" from Cats, delivered in her patently restraint-free soprano), they're only reminders that shrewdness has hardly been the least of Brightman's talents. --Jerry McCulley
Customer Reviews:
Lovely.......2007-01-09
Both of these discs afford great pleasure. The Lloyd Webber compilation presents many of his biggest hits in fine performances by his ex-wife. The Encore disc gives fascinating glimpses of worthy but little known pieces from musicals. Arrangements are wonderful, and Sarah Brightman is in excellent voice throughout. At times she has a tendency to wax a bit operatic, but she certainly does have the chops to bring it off successfully, so I'm not complaining. Obviously, Ms. Brightman was trained in the classical tradition, and she knows how to use her voice to best advantage in service to the material. In short, she has musical integrity.
Encore!.......2004-09-29
Before she was a sparkling pop/classical diva, Sarah Brightman was a Broadway star and the onetime wife of the legendary Andrew Lloyd Webber. This two-disc set that includes her "Encore," a collection of songs from mostly-obscure musicals, and "The Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection," several of Webber's songs (mostly picked from "Songs That Got Away" and "Surrender").
"Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection" starts off with the gothic "Phantom of the Opera," but quickly moves on to lighter fare in the airy "Unexpected Song," a soaring duet with Cliff Richards in "All I Ask Of You," the sparkling "Love Changes Everything," and some tepid forays into the shrill "Don't Cry for Me, Argentina" and "Memory."
"Encore" is far more ethereal and steady. The piano-led "Whistle Down The Wind" starts it off on a strong note, before the aching "Away From You," operatic "Think of Me," affectionate "If I Ever Fall in Love Again," and the symphonic "Nothing Like You've Ever Known." A particular highlight is the sparkling "What More Do I Need," a little tune that celebrates how love brightens up even the most dingy little apartment, in the most miserable weather. "With your love/what more do I need?"
Sarah Brightman was obviously on solid footing with these two CDs. It might leave a bad taste in some fans' mouths that "Collection" is mostly compiled from a pair of other Brightman albums, but if listeners don't have "Surrender" and "Songs That Got Away," this two-disc set would be an excellent way to acquaint themselves with it.
"Encore" is steady and well-suited for Brightman's voice, as well as having a sort of Victorian-garden air. "Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection" has the most flaws of the two -- some of the songs like "Memory" aren't suited to Brightman's voice, and she comes across as shrill and uneasy. But in songs written for her talents and "Encore," her voice alternately soars and murmurs in an airy soprano.
Sarah Brightman reached her artistic pinnacle so far in the velvety "Eden," but her stuff here is still quite beautiful. "The Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection/Encore" two-pack is a satisfying look at some of Brightman's Broadway-based songs.
Another way to make money on the back of Sarah.......2002-11-28
Yes, it's true. Sarah has nothing to do with these cds, but her voice. It's another record that Andrew Lloyd Webber's Really "not that" Useful Group release to make money. Those two cds are very good though. If you have one of them, i suggest to get the other separatly.
Average customer rating:
|
Musicality of Andrew Lloyd Webber
Manufacturer: Jay Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Musical Theater
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ASIN: B00005YE50
Release Date: 2002-03-05 |
Tracks:
- Macavity - Paulette Ivory
- Any Dream Will Do - John Barrowman
- Half a Moment - Emily Loesser
- Whistle Down the Wind - James Greme
- The Phantom of the Opera - Simon Bowman and Katrina Murphy
- Pie Jesu - Janis Kelly, James Rainbird and chorus
- Starlight Express - Sean McDermott
- As if We Never Said Goodbye - Kim Criswell
- Gethsemane - Dave Willetts
- Don't Cry for Me, Argentina - Jan Horvath
- Our Kind of Love - Sally Ann Triplett
- Love Changes Everything - Company
Average customer rating:
- Don't Expect This to Be Like the London Recording
- A very different Andrew Lloyd Webber-and thats a good thing!
- Music from my favorite musical
- Loved it
- Minimalistic Webber
|
By Jeeves (2001 American Premiere Recording)
Andrew Lloyd Webber , and Alan Ayckbourn
Manufacturer: Decca U.S.
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- By Jeeves (1996 London Revival Cast)
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- Jeeves & Wooster - The Complete Series
ASIN: B00005QK57
Release Date: 2001-10-16 |
Tracks:
- Wooster Will Entertain You - John Scherer/Martin Jarvis
- Travel Hopefully - John Scherer/Martin Jarvis/Emily Loesser
- That Was Nearly Us - Donna Lynne Champlin/John Scherer
- Love's Maze - Emily Loesser/John Scherer/Martin Jarvis/Donna Lynne Champlin/James Kall/Ian Knauer...
- The Hallo Song - John Scherer/Steve Wilson/James Kall
- Entr'acte - Andrew Lloyd Webber
- By Jeeves - John Scherer/Don Stephenson/James Kall
- When Love Arrives - John Scherer/Becky Watson
- What Have you Got To Say, Jeeves! - John Scherer/Martin Jarvis
- Half A Moment - Ian Knauer/Emily Loesser Donny Lynne
- It's A Pig! - Donny Lynne Champlin/Becky Watson/John Scherer/Heath Lamberts/James Kall
- Banjo Boy - John Scherer/Martin Jarvis/Donna Lynne Champlin/James Kall/Ian Knauer/Emily Loesser...
- Wizard Rainbow Banjo Mix - John Scherer/Martin Jarvis/Donna Lynne Champlin/James Kall/Ian Knauer/Emily Loesser...
- Playout - Andrew Lloyd Webber
Amazon.com
Based on P.G. Wodehouse's Jeeves stories, which recount the adventures of hapless Bertie Wooster and his resourceful butler, Jeeves, this may be the most British musical ever written--yes, perhaps even more than My Fair Lady! In a way, Andrew Lloyd Webber and his collaborator, famed playwright Alan Ayckbourn (book and lyrics), attempt to emulate the bubble-light musicals that Wodehouse himself wrote in the 1920s and 1930s. This is particularly obvious on numbers such as the comic love anthem "That Was Nearly Us" and "When Love Arrives," a duet very much inspired by the ones in the Wodehouse/Gershwins collaboration, Oh, Kay!. It's a bit odd at times to hear Lloyd Webber's majestic chords performed by a small ensemble, but it's also nice to see the composer test himself in this way. Between its first London run in 1996 and its Broadway opening in October 2001, By Jeeves popped up in several cities. This recording is based on the Goodspeed Opera House and Pittsburgh Public Theater productions. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
Customer Reviews:
Don't Expect This to Be Like the London Recording.......2006-03-29
I first heard, and immediately bought, this musical on cassette with the London cast; I was mesmerized! I love the Jeeves and Wooster stories, and this musical does them justice. Of course, the cassette was soon outdated, and I needed to replace it with a CD. Well, I wasn't paying attention, and I bought the American cast recording, and it had none of the charm of the British recording, and this is NOT British chauvanism-- I'm an American. We Americans just can't pull off the proper mix of silliness ("It's a Pig") and sophistication to make it work. The actors are stilted, and it seems to me that they never read the Wodehouse stories, and I don't even think it's a guess to say they haven't seen Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry as Jeeves and Wooster. The whole thing just didn't work. I only gave it the extra star because the material itself is so brilliant. Unfortunately, the execution (ooh, unfortunate word choice) turned five star potential into two stars.
You should definitely liten to By Jeeves, but not this version. Be sure to get the London Cast recording.
A very different Andrew Lloyd Webber-and thats a good thing!.......2005-02-26
This is my first on-line review of anything. I am writing because I think this show deserves a HUGE loyal following. Let me be the fist to point out that I am not a huge fan of Lloyd Webber's shows. I don't like JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, hate JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT, love EVITA, am ambivalent about CATS and STARLIGHT EXPRESS, was bored by ASPECTS OF LOVE and SUNSET BOULEVARD, like PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, laughed at WHISTLE DOWN THE WIND and have yet to hear THE BEAUTIFUL GAME or WOMAN IN WHITE. But I absolutely adore BY JEEVES.
I was first introduced to the recording of this show by the 1996 London CD, which encapsulated the show with a clever narration by Jeeves and Bertie which used bits of the actual dialogue from the show. When I heard selections from the Broadway recording, I was impressed by many of the performances, most of which I knew had benefitted greatly from previous performers' onstage "moments." Perhaps the thing that sold me on the US recording came from the song "That Was Nearly Us," when Honoria, after being warned by Bertie of an upcoming "humpback bridge," actually articulates the bump as she sings...very funny stuff and quite in character with the show. All the voices are superior on the US recording...especially John Scherer as Bertie.
I must point out that, as a completist myself, I must own both the London and US recordings of this show, as I love some of the performances on the aforementioned "narrated" recording. There is a third recording of the show, virtually identical to the London recording, but possessing a different opening number, "The Code of the Woosters," which was replaced on the London and US recordings with "Wooster Will Entertain You." As I said, I am a completist, and I must have all three...all four, if they ever release the 1975 recording of JEEVES, the forerunner to this show.
Additional bonuses to the Broadway recording are the Entr'acte, some playoff music at the end, and an instrumental break in the middle of "It's A Pig!" The "banjoless" solos in "Banjo Boy" are very different than the mutterings on the London recording, and very funny to visualize.
Give this recording a try!
Wooster WILL entertain you!
You can be sure of that!
He'll prevail; should he fail,
Bertie will eat his eat-
With bags of mustard!
Music from my favorite musical.......2002-04-03
This music is wonderfully composed. It usually consists of an orchastra of about a piano, and a bass (possibly more i think) and a singer. It is now my favorite CD (though I might be partiall to it since I loved the Jeeves and Wooster stories it is based on).
Loved it.......2002-03-09
This is a wonderful show that was bludgeoned by many critics. As a friend said, the reviews were like hitting a butterfly with a sledge hammer. It is a light, silly, frothy comedy. But it is also clever, witty, delightful, and great fun to see (I saw one of the last US performances before it closed). I was particularly taken with the music and songs which are tuney (as LLoyd-Webber can sometimes NOT be) bright and well performed. I was humming the songs as I walked out, as I was at Evita. Great fun.
Minimalistic Webber.......2001-12-22
Andrew Lloyd Webber's flop "Jeeves" is reborn as "By Jeeves". It hasn't been improved, it has just been cheapened. The "Americanized Premiere Recording" features a small score played by a small orchestra with a small cast. Definitely, second rate Webber given a second rate production and recording.
Average customer rating:
- Outstanding Collection of Love Songs
- It is in need of 1 more musical.
- Not enough songs...
|
More Broadway's Greatest Love Songs
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Decca Broadway
ProductGroup: Music
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ASIN: B00005UWL2
Release Date: 2002-01-29 |
Tracks:
- Mamma Mia!: Our Last Summer - Paul Clarkston
- Hair: Good Morning Starshine - Annable Leventon
- The Phantom Of The Opera: All I Ask Of You - Sarah Brightman
- Sweeney Todd: Not While I'm Around - Vanessa Williams
- The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas: Good Old Girl - Henderson Forsythe
- The Fantasticks: Try To Remember - Jerry Orbach
- Pippin: Love Song - John Rubinstein
- Aspects Of Love: Love Changes Everything - Michael Ball
- Big River: You Oughta Be Here With Me - Patti Cohenour
- The King And I: I Have Dreamed - Peabo Bryson
- Les Miserables: I Dreamed A Dream - Randy Graff
- Evita: High Flying Adored - Mandy Patinkin
- Babes In Arms: My Funny Valentine - Julie Andrews
- Kiss Of The Spider Woman: Dear One - Howard McGillin
- By Jeeves: Half A Moment - Emily Loesser
- Call Me Madam: You're Just In Love - Dick Haymes
Customer Reviews:
Outstanding Collection of Love Songs.......2007-06-22
I have to quickly disagree with those who are looking for more songs crammed in to what is such a breathtaking album of Broadway love songs. The rendition of the songs on this album and the Broadway singers selected for each piece, just are so beautifully recorded and make chills go through me. Whoever created this album, knew exactly what they were doing. This CD is full of nostalgia and artists who know how a song should be sung. They are certainly not making noise as on some Broadway CD's, but they have created an album that will go down in history for some of us who have longed to see such muscials come back to life in a way....that sadly has become a memory.
It is in need of 1 more musical........2005-05-29
I think they need to consider putting one more musical on this CD. This musical would have to be Wicked. What about As Long As Your Mine (from Wicked of course)? I think I would like this CD better if they could put Wicked on it. But of course this may not be true for everyone because obviously my favorite musical of all time is Wicked.
Not enough songs..........2004-10-20
Okay, so I have yet to hear this CD but already I have a quip: Why are there only 16 songs on this CD when the original Broadway's Greatest Love Songs had 20. They're cheating customers out of 4 songs! Also, why doesn't this include any songs from Aida, Triumph of Love, Beauty and the Beast, R&H's Cinderella, The Lion King, or Wicked! And please, "Our Last Summer" from Mamma Mia? Don't get me wrong, I love Mamma Mia, but that is NOT a love song.
Average customer rating:
|
The Essential Songs of Andrew Lloyd Webber
Manufacturer: Metro Music
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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ASIN: B000B9G6O4
Release Date: 2005-10-03 |
Tracks:
- Phantom of the Opera/All I Ask of You
- By Jeeves/Half a Moment
- Beautiful Game/All the Love I Have
- Jesus Christ Superstar/I Don't Know How to Love Him
- Phantom of the Opera/Think of Me
- Aspects of Love/The First Man You Remember
- Starlight Express B'way/Starlight Express
- Starlight Express/Only You
- Tell Me on a Sunday/Unexpected Song
- Aspects of Love/Seeing Is Believing
- Beautiful Game/Our Kind of Love
- Tell Me on a Sunday/The Last Man in My Life
- Phantom of the Opera/Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again
- Sunset Boulevard/Too Much in Love to Care
- Tell Me on a Sunday/Tell Me on a Sunday
- Aspects of Love/There Is More to Love
- Evita/Don't Cry for Me Argentina
- Aspects of Love/Love Changes Everything
Tracks:
- Sunset Boulevard/With One Look
- Evita/Another Suitcase in Another Hall
- Cats/Memory
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Could We Start Again Please?
- Requiem/Pie Jesu
- Phantom of the Opera/Angel of Music
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat)/Close Every Door
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Gethsemane
- Whistle Down the Wind/Whistle Down the Wind
- Sunset Boulevard/As If We Had Never Said Goodbye
- Starlight Express/U-N-C-O-U-P-L-E-D
- Phantom of the Opera/The Point of No Return
- Aspects of Love/Anything But Lonely
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat/Any Dream Will Do
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat/There's Me
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Pilate's Dream
- Evita/High Flying Adored
- Phantom of the Opera/Music of the Night
Tracks:
- Cats/Macavity
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Heaven on Their Minds
- Evita/Rainbow High
- Starlight Express/Rolling Stock
- Phantom of the Opera/The Phantom of the Opera
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Hosanna
- Evita/Oh What a Circus
- Phantom of the Opera/Masquarade
- Starlight Express/Starlight Express
- Jesus Christ Superstar/King Herod's Song
- Evita/Buenos Aires
- Cats/Jellicle Cats
- Sunset Boulevard/Sunset Boulevard
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Everything's Alright
- Cats/Mr. Mistoffelees
- Phantom of the Opera/Prima Donna
- Cats/The Jellicle Ball
- Jesus Christ Superstar/Jesus Christ Superstar
Album Details
Lovesongs, Ballads and Show Stoppers. 54 Tracks, Including Some Brand New Titles Released Here for the First Time.
Music:
- Cabaret (1999 Studio Cast) (First Complete Recording) [Cast Recording]
- Candide: The New Broadway Cast Recording (1997 Revival) [Cast Recording]
- Carmen Jones (1943 Original Broadway Cast) [Cast Recording] [Original recording remastered] [Soundtrack]
- Chicago - The Musical (1998 London Cast) [Cast Recording]
- Christmas Spirit in the Air
- Classic Broadway
- Cocktail Hour: Fred Astaire
- Company ... In Jazz
- David Gurland
- Do Re Mi (1999 Broadway Revival Cast) [Cast Recording]
Music
Music