September Song [Import]
Editorial Reviews
Album Details
Scat / Jazz Masteress Sarah Vaughn's Vocal Prowess Put her in the Same Category as Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald. Her Illustrious, Near-40 Year Career Produced Many Outstanding Muscial Numbers, Many of which Are Found on this Release. Includes 'the One I Love', 'i Feel So Smoochie', 'trouble is a Man', 'lover Man' and 13 More.
September Song, Music, Sarah Vaughan, Jazz, Jazz Vocals, Pop, Traditional Pop, Vocal Jazz
Average customer rating:
- Fabulous for any Broadway-lover
- Top Shelf
- TERRIFIC CD'S
- Great Collection of Broadways greatest Songs
- Great Compilation!
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Broadway - The American Musical (PBS Series)
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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ASIN: B00064ADMK
Release Date: 2004-10-19 |
Tracks:
- Give My Regards To Broadway- Joel Grey
- Swanee- Al Jolson
- When The Moon Shines On The Moonshine- Bert Williams
- A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody- John Steel
- My Man- Fanny Brice
- Fascinating Rhythm- Fred Astaire, Adele Astaire
- If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie)- 78rpm Version Eddie Cantor
- Someone To Watch Over Me- Gertrude Lawrence
- Bill- 78 rpm Version Helen Morgan
- Ol' Man River- Paul Robeson
- Ain't Misbehavin'- Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra
- Ten Cents A Dance- Ruth Etting
- Body And Soul- Libby Holman
- Brother, Can You Spare A Dime- Bing Crosby
- Night And Day- Fred Astaire
- Heat Wave- Ethel Waters
- Smoke Gets in Your Eyes- Tamara
- You're The Top- Ethel Merman
- Summertime- Anne Brown
- September Song- Walter Huston
- My Heart Belongs To Daddy- Mary Martin
- It Never Entered My Mind- Shirley Ross
- Bewitched, Bothered, Bewildered- Vivienne Segal
- Oh, How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning- Irving Berlin
- Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'- Alfred Drake
Tracks:
- New York, New York- Cris Alexander,Adolph Green,John Reardon
- If I Loved You- John Raitt,Jan Clayton
- Come Rain Or Come Shine- Ruby Hill,Harold Nicholas
- There's No Business Like Show Business- Ensemble
- How Are Things In Glocca Morra? From "Finian's Rainbow"- Ella Logan
- Once In Love With Amy- Ray Bolger
- Wunderbar- Alfred Drake,Patricia Morison
- Some Enchanted Evening- Ezio Pinza
- Lost In The Stars- Todd Duncan
- Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend- Carol Channing
- Luck Be A Lady- Robert Alda,Guys
- Getting To Know You- Gertrude Lawrence
- Who Cares?- Jack Carson,Betty Oakes
- Stranger In Paradise- from " Kismet" Doretta Morrow,Richard Kiley
- Ballad Of Mack The Knife- Gerald Price
- Hey There- from "The Pajama Game" John Raitt
- Whatever Lola Wants- Gwen Verdon
- I Could Have Danced All Night- Julie Andrews
- Standing On The Corner- from "The Most Happy Fella, 1956" Shorty Long,John Henson,Alan Gilbert
- The Party's Over- Judy Holliday
- Glitter And Be Gay- Barbara Cook
- Tonight- Larry Kert, Carol Lawrence
Tracks:
- Seventy-Six Trombones- Robert Preston
- I Enjoy Being A Girl- from "Flower Drum Song, 1958" Pat Suzuki
- Everything's Coming Up Roses- Ethel Merman
- My Favorite Things- from "The Sound Of Music" Mary Martin
- Put On A Happy Face- from "Bye Bye Birdie" Dick Van Dyke
- Try To Remember- Jerry Orbach
- Camelot- from "Camelot" Richard Burton
- Love Makes The World Go 'Round- Anna Maria Alberghetti
- I Believe In You- Robert Morse And Co.
- The Sweetest Sounds- Diahann Carroll,Richard Kiley
- Comedy Tonight- Zero Mostel
- What Kind Of Fool Am I?- Anthony Newley
- As Long As He Needs Me- Georgia Brown
- Hello, Dolly!- Carol Channing,Cast
- People- Barbra Streisand
- Anyone Can Whistle- from "Anyone Can Whistle" Lee Remick
- If I Were A Rich Man- Zero Mostel
- Night Song- Sammy Davis, Jr.
- The Impossible Dream- Richard Kiley
- If My Friends Could See Me Now- Gwen Verdon
- Open a New Window- from Mame Voice
Tracks:
- Willkommen- from "Cabaret" Joel Grey
- Let The Sunshine In- James Rado,Lynn Kellogg,Melba Moore,Cast
- I'll Never Fall In Love Again- Jill O'Hara,Jerry Orbach
- The Ladies Who Lunch- from "Company" Elaine Stritch
- Tea For Two- Roger Rathburn,Susan Watson
- I'm Still Here- Yvonne De Carlo
- I Don't Know How To Love Him- Yvonne Elliman
- We Go Together- Adrienne Barbeau,Barry Bostwick,Walter Bobbie,Cast
- Corner Of The Sky- John Rubinstein
- Send In The Clowns- Glynis Johns
- Ease On Down The Road- Stephanie Mills,Tiger Haynes,Ted Ross,Hinton
- One- from "A Chorus Line" Cast
- All That Jazz- Chita Rivera,Ensemble
- Tomorrow- Andrea Mcardle
- Don't Cry For Me Argentina- Patti Lupone
- Come Follow The Band
- Lullaby Of Broadway- Jerry Orbach
- And I'm Telling You I'm Not Going- Jennifer Holliday
- The Bells Of St. Sebastian- Raul Julia
Tracks:
- Memory- Betty Buckley
- I Am What I Am- George Hearn
- Move On- Bernadette Peters,Mandy Patinkin
- Do You Hear The People Sing?- Michael Maguire,Cast
- The Music Of The Night- Michael Crawford
- You're Nothing Without Me- James Naughton,Gregg Edelman
- The American Dream- Jonathan Pryce,Cast
- Doctor Jazz- Gregory Hines,Company
- With One Look- Glenn Close
- On Broadway- Adrian Bailey,Frederick B. Owens,Ken Ard,Victor Trent Cook
- Le Jazz Hot- Julie Andrews,Ensemble
- Seasons Of Love-
- Hakuna Matata- Max Casella,Tom Alan Robbins,Scott Irby-Ranniar,Jason Raize
- I Wanna Be A Producer- Matthew Broderick,Ensemble
- Dancing Queen- Louise Plowright,Jenny Galloway
- Good Morning Baltimore- Marissa Jaret Winokur
- Movin' Out- Michael Cavanaugh,Band
- I Go To Rio- Hugh Jackman,Company
- Defying Gravity- Kristin Chenoweth,Idina Menzel
Customer Reviews:
Fabulous for any Broadway-lover.......2007-01-30
Packs into 5 CD's a sampling of Broadway tunes from the 20's thru (almost) today, mostly from original cast recordings. Includes not just well-known hits, but also some lesser-known gems. Sound quality is first rate, booklet is informative too. Have given this as a gift to several friends with rave reviews.
Top Shelf.......2007-01-04
This is THE definitive collection of Broadway hits. I have other collections, and none of them measure up. A great deal of care was obviously taken in compiling and presenting this box set. It covers a lot of ground, starting with some long-forgotten but still very enjoyable hits from the days of yore, and finishing with present-day favorites. To the best of my knowledge, the recordings are by those who made them famous. You won't be disappointed.
TERRIFIC CD'S.......2006-03-23
THESE BROADWAY MUSICALS CD'S ARE A BROADWAY LOVERS DREAM. WITH EACH SONG, MEMORIES COME FLOODING BACK. BOTH THE FAMILIAR AND THE FORGOTTEN SONGS ARE A TRUE LISTENING PLEASURE. IF YOU LIKE BROADWAY, YOU'LL LOVE THIS SET.
Great Collection of Broadways greatest Songs .......2005-06-14
This Collection was perfectly made it has almost all the most famous Broadway songs on this 5 cd set. The Music is great and has Broadways greatest treasures like "Memory""People""With One Look""Give my regards Too Broadway" just to name a few of this numerous cd set with over 100 songs. This is a great buy if you like musicals or The music of Broadway
Great Compilation!.......2005-01-17
If you are a fan of the Broadway Musicals, this is a collection that you should purchase. Since I got the 5 disc set I've enjoyed listening to it. The majority of the songs are done by the original singers. The collection is priceless considering that you will have over 100 songs from popular musicals since the beginning of Broadway
Average customer rating:
- some brilliant renditions, but can't quite all mix together
- Cool and Camp
- September Song Music of Kurt Weill
- It's a long time between January and December
- Ain't we Hip?!!?
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September Songs: The Music of Kurt Weill
Manufacturer: Sony
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Similar Items:
- Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill / Levine, Lenya, Armstrong, Gilford, et al
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- Ute Lemper Sings Kurt Weill
- Stratas Sings Weill
ASIN: B0000029WM
Release Date: 1997-08-19 |
Tracks:
- Mack The Knife - Nick Cave
- Ballad Of The Soldier's Wife - P.J. Harvey
- Alabama Song - David Johansen
- Youkali Tango - Teresa Stratas
- Lost In The Stars - Elvis Costello
- Pirate Jenny - Lotte Lenya
- Speak Low - Charlie Haden
- Oh, Heavenly Salvation - The Persuations
- Lonely House - Betty Carter
- Surabaya- Johnny - Teresa Stratas
- Furchte Dich Nicht - Mary Margaret O'Hara
- September Song - Lou Reed
- Mack The Knife - Bertolt Brecht
- What Keeps Mankind Alive? - William S. Burroughs
Customer Reviews:
some brilliant renditions, but can't quite all mix together.......2006-10-19
I like the spirit of this album, which is to let the music of Kurt Weill attach itself to the many worlds it came from. This was classical music that also used elements of popular music at the time, all with a very dark and almost mechanical tone. So it would seem fitting to have exquisite voices like Teresa Stratas rub elbows with darker elements like Nick Cave in this collection. There are also the jazz influences developed by Charlie Haden and Betty Carter.
In all, there are some brilliant interpretations of Weill here. I am a fan of Cave's "Mack the Knife" and David Johansen's "Alabama Song," and how can someone NOT like Lotte Lenya herself on "Pirate Jenny" and the drolling of the immortal William S. Burroughs talking through "What Keeps Mankind Alive?"
But other tracks feel to be just too short of brilliance. I love that Lou Reed tries to turn "September Song" into a kind of rock ballad, almost a VU "It Was a Pretty Good Year," but the rendition seems a little short of energy and falls flat after a while. Elvis Costello, though magnificent as an overall artist, just doesn't bring new life to "Lost in the Stars."
Perhaps the problem in the end that the choices were a little too much of the Top 40 Weill (if there really can be such a term). These are songs that have for a long time been regarded as the best of Weill, and it might have furthered the purpose of his music to find new gems and bring them into the sunlight.
Cool and Camp.......2006-08-24
This is a very biased review- I originally had much of Weill's work on cassette tape- way back in the olden days- before CD's- so I am already very partial to many of the tracks on this CD- I would recommend it not only to Kurt Weill fans, and the fans of the various artists featured, but I would also strongly recommend this to anyone who likes artsy, camp, fun burlesque, Bohemian European stuff. The record, even though performed by contemporary artists still retains much of it's zeitgeist, it evokes the era in which Weill was writing and it rounds out any great eclectic record collection. It's a great musical discovery for fans of all sorts of genres, and EVERYONE should own at least one recorded arrangement of "Mack The Knife". (You know, for parties and stuff!)
September Song Music of Kurt Weill.......2006-08-22
Songs from the film-documentary done by various artists. Excellent choice if you like Mr Weill's music. I saw the film and always wanted the CD. Now I have and I recommend it highly.
It's a long time between January and December.......2004-06-11
Kurt Weill is one of those composers who juggles Jewish angst with Catholic guilt: and possibly vice versa. As a collection, it is nonpareil. Each interpretation becomes a definitive reading of the "song". Lord, it is one of the best assemblies of contemporary artists going. Lou couldn't be better; Ms O'Hara, in fine form, performs her deranged puppet-dance to the X. OK. An unknown. Roping-in, such a postmodern figure as, well, you-know-who, to orate Weill's lyrics is never less than exceptional. An amazing collection. Is there a DVD?
Paul
Ain't we Hip?!!?.......2003-07-23
This is the avant version of these songs, everything done with that Downtown fingers-across-the-blackboard screech. They even got Johanson doing it, which is no less than amazing. The sole exception is the Persuasions' "O Heavenly Salvation", but one song does not an album make.
The mystery here is that there's a perfectly good compilation from the 80s, "Lost in the Stars: the Music of Kurt Weill", featuring many of the same songs--and, if I'm not mistaken some of the same performers. That's the one you want. Too bad it's OP.
Average customer rating:
- Kurt Weill: Re-discovery...
- Incredible Live Album
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Kurt Weill: The Centennial
Kurt Weill , Brock Peters , Carole Cook , Charlotte Rae , Nancy Dussault , Norm Lewis , Peter Becker , Rod McKuen , Shirley Jones , Tim Curry , and Steve Orich
Manufacturer: Lml Music
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ASIN: B00005U8HM
Release Date: 2002-01-08 |
Tracks:
- Act 1: Pirate Jenny - Charlotte Rae
- Act 1: I'm A Stranger Here Myself - Jodi Stevens
- Act 1: Economics - Jane A. Johnston
- Act 1: Is It Him Or Is It Me? - Pam Dawber
- Act 1: Barbara Song - Linda Purl
- Act 1: Lullaby - Kathryn Skatula
- Act 1: That's Him - Nancy Dussault
- Act 1: Don't Look Now - Sharon Lawrence
- Act 1: Apple Jack - Norm Lewis
- Act 1: Speak Low - Sally Kellerman
- Act 1: September Song - Rod McKuen
- Act 1: Ice Cream Sextet - David Holladay
Tracks:
- Act 2: Wouldn't You Like To Be On Broadway? - David Holladay
- Act 2: What Good Would The Moon Be - Melissa Dye
- Act 2: It Never Was You - Hugh Panaro
- Act 2: We'll Go Away Together - Hugh Panaro
- Act 2: Tschaikowsky - Jack Noseworthy
- Act 2: The Saga Of Jenny - Carole Cook
- Act 2: Surabaya Johnny - Tim Curry
- Act 2: My Ship - Shirley Jones
- Act 2: Mack The Knife - Loretta Devine
- Act 2: Lost In The Stars - Brock Peters
Customer Reviews:
Kurt Weill: Re-discovery..........2006-11-10
I am so impressed and pleased to have found this recording on Amazon.com. I am always amazed when I find these seemingly obscure recordings, and thrilled to know they exist. What a wonderful history of our musical world---and what a chance to hear interesting, challenging, and unusual performances from so many well-known people. The songs live on--the composer is 'new' again, and this recording becomes part of history re-discovered. Thank you Amazon.com for your continued professionalism and for having these recordings available.
Incredible Live Album.......2002-02-10
This incredible concert (which i attended) benefitting The Actors' Fund of America, contains some absolute MUST performances for any Broadway collector.
For me, the highlights are HUGH PANARO ("It Never Was You"), NANCY DUSSAULT ("It's Him") and TIM CURRY singing "Surabaya Johnny" in German!
Loretta Divine, Brock Peters, they're all great!
Average customer rating:
- A European modernist embraces Ives
- Great Performances, but the Star of this CD is Charles Ives
- works grow and transform themselves
- a fresh take on sonata no. 2
- It takes a Frenchman to capture an American masterpiece!
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Ives: Concord Sonata; Songs
Pierre-Laurent Aimard , Susan Graham , and Charles Ives
Manufacturer: Warner Classics
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Binding: Audio CD
Ives, Charles
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ASIN: B0001HZ6MO
Release Date: 2004-05-11 |
Tracks:
- The Things Our Fathers Loved
- The Housatonic At Stockbridge
- From The Swimmers
- Memories (A - Very Pleasant, B - Rather Sad
- Ann Street
- Serenity (A Unison Chant)
- 1, 2, 3
- Songs My Mother Taught Me
- The Circus Band
- The Cage
- The Indians
- Like A Sick Eagle
- A Sound Of A Distant Horn
- September
- Soliloquy (Or A Study In 7ths And Other Things)
- A Farewell To Land
- Thoreau
- Emerson
- Hawthorne
- The Alcotts
- Thoreau
Amazon.com
Ives' Second Sonata is one of the toughest, but it holds no fears for Aimard, a noted interpreter of Messiaen, Ligetti, and other moderns who require virtuoso technique and idiomatic expertise. Each of its four movements is titled for New England luminaries: Emerson, Hawthorne, the Alcotts, and Thoreau. The longest, "Emerson," is knotty and energetic, bristling with a minefield of cluster chords. "Hawthorne" is a genial scherzo exhibiting a wider palette, while "The Alcotts" is a lyrical paean to domestic tranquility. "Thoreau" embraces the mysteries of nature, played with intensity by Aimard. There's an abundance of power in his playing, but also ravishing effects like the startling diminuendo in "Thoreau" and the array of marches, hymns, and parlor songs Ives threw into the mix. His terrific "Concord" Sonata is matched by the survey of Ives' inventive songs, 17 of them superbly sung by Susan Graham with Aimard superb as her piano partner. Graham captures every nuance of a mind-boggling variety of idioms, from nostalgia, tenderness, and hilarious miniatures like "Ann Street" and the sendup of opera in "Memories - A," among many other highlights. This one's a must for Ivesians, fans of musical eccentricity, modern music enthusiasts, and anyone in search of musical surprises, which abound on almost every track. --Dan Davis
Customer Reviews:
A European modernist embraces Ives.......2007-01-08
Chalres Ives was 46 when he published his "Concord"Sonata, and as the liner notes tell us, its sprawling shape and diverse styles are the result of gathering a lot of music previously composed (none of it for solo piano) and needing a single dwelling. Ives always had his own ideas about how music is held together or flies apart. He wasn't afraid to have it fly apart, and often his notion of coherence was so private, rooted in personal memories, that an outside listener can't be expected to penetrate the associations.
Aimard goes a long way in erasing the ecdentricity, privacy, and quirkiness of Ives's idiom bydrawing the sonata into the mainstream of European modernism, giving it the same clean, detailed, accurate, and impressionistic style that he might give to other individualists like Ligeti and Messiaen. (It's also nice to have the viola addition to the first movement and the flute in the fourth.) The "Concord" Sonata becomes a virtuosic event in his hands, no longer a purely "American" sport. I do find that listening to this vast work is better in concert, where its appearance is always a special occasion. But one has to be grateful for Aimard's quantum leap in execution compared to earlier recordings.
Ives gathered his huge output of 114 songs into a collection two years after the sonata. Susan Graham picks 15 of them, adding two more that folowed after 1922. These songs ask for a vocal chameleon who can shift instantly from Victorian parlor style to patriotic exuberance, folk song, whimsy, rapt nostaliga, and more. No one to date has been able to encompass this enormous range of expression, but Susan Graham comes as close as any. I would rank her with Jan De Gaetani, Thomas Hampson, and William Sharp among the singers I know who excel in Ives, and above the too-classical, somewhat congested renditions by Marilyn Horne and Jennifer Lamore. Aimard's accompaniment misses the Yankee flavor of the marches and patriotic snatches, but in its modernist way his style is as effective as in the sonata. Highly recommended for lovers of this music.
Great Performances, but the Star of this CD is Charles Ives.......2005-08-10
The uniquely atypical music of Charles Ives continues to mature and embed itself in the minds of larger and larger audiences every year. Practically every major orchestra in this country (and in Europe) now includes at least his symphonies in the standard repertoire. His music is probably as 'American' as any composed, so conjoined with literature and history and folksongs and all manner of Americana. This superb recording takes us one step further in appreciating Ives' gifts: his breathtaking Concord Sonata is coupled with one of the finest selections of his many songs and both sonata and songs are performed with consummate skill by pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard and mezzo soprano Susan Graham.
Aimard's approach to this big piano work is one of direct approach to the complexities of line and mood and in that approach he doesn't allow his own personality to blur Ives' message. Aimard can tackle the impossibly difficult passages and keep them transparent: he can also find the inner quiet beauty as well as any other pianist. The result is a Concord Sonata of majesty and honest simplicity.
Susan Graham has long included Ives' songs in her recitals and that experience shows in her approach to this varied selection. Graham is an immensely intelligent musician, one who can find the meaning of even a brief song in an instant. She is in fine vocal form here, and her collaboration with Aimard completes a presentation that will be difficult to match. This is a fine recording and an excellent entry point for music lovers who may have been wary of Ives' challenges. Relax and enjoy this recital. Grady Harp, August 05
works grow and transform themselves.......2005-04-07
First off this is an Ives cornocopia of songs, all sung here with the reserve that is needed, I've heard too many American art Songs, Copland, Rorem and Ives with that wrongheaded "sing-songin" delivery, it is arrogant if nothing else, and the "cutsy-ness" of it does reach the audience,unless you simply want to be entertained and you checked your brain with your cash at the box office. Straightforward Ives is I think to most effective way of playing his music,that's why I still prefer the Kalish, he brings a gritti-ness to the Concord. Aimard (and all of us) has had time since the Seventies to think and re-think this piece, and there something should be said for the way music grows, transforms itself for different time periods, isn't that why music develops itself it is striongly constituted in the first place, it is well thought through, et cetra, construction all the obvious, Copland's "Piano Variations" is a similar example, the music simply changes with time, well we change, the music is fixed.So I guess there are simply different readings.
Aimard does bring some nice clarity,like to "Hawthorne", the blazing quickness searching until the "forearm" clusters stop the flow, the onward rush of the imagination, words can change the meaning of themselves this quickly which I think is what Ives saw in Hawthorne the writer.
For the "Alcotts" any kind of nostalgia is OK with me,the simple Bb triad timbres capturing the informed naivtivitee of the little home with Bronson Alcott the speaker public man of speaking (there is a difference between public speaking and lecturer,someone who teaches as opposed to simply speaking something Bush II knows quite well.Better simply to speak without saying anything.) This is not here however for Ives loved the Utopian aspect of Danbury existential renderings, the reflections back and forth of the lifeworld, the richness of culture of the complexity of the word,place, song, timbre,all in forms of strength all mixed blending together. Aimard simply brings things out I;ve never heard before, but then that is his approach always to clarify,and that is not always the best approach in Ives where his music does ask questions, his music we have learned should be opaque, and unexplanable,terse yet convoluted; it should not lead you by the nose at each and every moment.And Aimard I;m afraid does want to lead here. I think he thinks the opaqueness will happen by itself, its already in the music, he lets this occur in the fast sections,making it a pure texture,like Debussy, I guess Ives was an existential impressionist with transcendental content.
a fresh take on sonata no. 2.......2004-07-28
I have a slightly different view than with the previous review, as well as the Davis review. If you are a fan of Ives (you probably are if you are interested in this cd), then you may not need to bother with half of this cd. Messo Susan Graham is quite out of touch with the character studies of these wonderful songs. When she isn't yodelling many times louder than she ought to on some high notes to demonstrate her vocal command, she becomes the epitomy of boredom and banality. I imagine Ben Stein could give a more lifelike reading of 'The Circus Band'. The jovial cheer "hear the trombones!" sounds more akin to a yawn on this version. Since when did shear vocal power and sonic richness take such high precedence over interpretive skills? Have you really forgotten Jan de Gaetani's wonderous versions? I feel Graham has done a disservice to this music, and should probably go back to singing French arias which apparently she is quite good at.
The Concord Sonata is definetly the reason you may want to own this disc. Aimard is outstanding as per usual. Emerson does really come alive here, as does Hawthorne with it's dramtic tempo shifts. My main concern lies in the 3rd movement 'the Alcotts'. It is clearly a pastorale movement with a touch of sweet nostalgia. Aimard plays a little too deliberately here- not loose enough with the tempo or lively enough with the rhythms. That really is the only disadvantage. I don't think Aimard played the folk elements strongly enough.
I guess the main question is: if I own the Kalish recording of the Sonata, do I need this one too? Probably again, you are an Ives believer and this version has great insights- why not. Like the Kalish version, this one includes the optional viola line on Emerson and the flute part of Thoreau. They appear better realised with more dramatic impact on the Kalish recording- a minor point. Movement for movement Aimard has the first and seccond, but I prefer 3 and 4 on the Kalish. The 3rd mentioned above, and the fourth seems to have more gravity with Kalish, bringing more of a closure to the tempestuous nature of the work. Aimard shows a more whispy, impressionistic take as he also does at the start of Hawthorne, reminding of Debussy. Not inappropriate stylistically speaking, but definetly a matter of taste. Aimard is a winner and I love what he does for Ligeti and Messiaen. Overall a very successful Ives sonata, and a questionably performed set of songs, well-chosen as they might be. If you are new to Ives this should be enough to get you into further explorations.
It takes a Frenchman to capture an American masterpiece!.......2004-05-19
The "Concord Sonata" of Charles Ives has been described as "the greatest work written by an American." It's a big sprawling, glorious mess of a thing, inspired by the Transcendental writers Emerson, Hawthorne, Alcott and Thoreau. I first heard the ground-breaking version by John Kirkpatrick, and have long cherished the powerful account by Gilbert Kalish (recorded in the '70s). But hearing Pierre-Laurent Aimard play this piece makes me forget all about those earlier recordings. A specialist in Messian and Ligeti, Aimard plays Ives like one to the manner born. Forget any preconceived notions of what it means to be a "French pianist," and let this astonishing performance carry you away. The Alcotts movement has never felt so tender, and the Thoreau movement is likewise exquisitely balanced. Perhaps most enthralling is how he manages to give shape and sense to Emerson, and Hawthorne, the fiendishly hard scherzo, has never had a reading like this. I'd have been content with the sonata, but the disk also holds the gorgeous mezzo Susan Graham singing 17 Ives songs, with Aimard's brilliant accompaniments. A fabulous recording no serious American music collection should be without!
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- Enigimatic Flame!
- perhaps the most sensual of German lieder singers
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Ljuba Welitsch The Complete Columbia Recordings
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ASIN: B0000029V9
Release Date: 1997-06-03 |
Tracks:
- Salome, Op. 54: Final Scene
- Tosca - (Act I): 'Perche chiuso?...Mia gelosa'
- Tosca - (Act II): 'Vissi d'arte'
- Don Giovanni - (Act I): 'Don Ottavio, son morta!...Or sai, chi l'onore'
- Don Giovanni - (Act II): 'Crudele! Ah no, mio ben... Non mi dir, bell'idol mio'
- Die Fledermaus: 'Czardas'
- Der Zigeunerbaron: 'Habet Acht' - (Gypsy Song)
- Four Last Songs: 'Fruhling'
- Four Last Songs: 'September'
- Four Last Songs: 'Beim Schlafengehen'
- Four Last Songs: 'Im Abendrot'
Tracks:
- Op. 43, No. 1: 'Von ewiger Liebe'
- Op 105, No. 1: 'Wie Melodien Zieht Es Mir'
- Op. 84, No. 4: 'Vergebliches Standchen'
- 'Die Mainacht'
- 'Meine Liebe ist grun'
- Op. 2: 'Gretchen Am Spinnrade'
- Op. 43, No. 1: 'Die Junge Nonne'
- Schwanengesang: 'Liebesbotschaft'
- Op. 32: 'Die Forelle'
- Myrthen, Op. 25, No. 1: 'Widmung'
- Liederkreis, Op. 39, No. 5: 'Mondnacht'
- Myrthen, Op. 25, No. 3: 'Der Nussbaum'
- Zigeunerlieder,Op. 103: No. 1
- Zigeunerlieder,Op. 103: No. 2
- Zigeunerlieder,Op. 103: No. 4
- Zigeunerlieder,Op. 103: No. 7
- 'Mne Grustno'
- ''Mel'nik'
- 'Gde ti, zvezdochka?'
- 'Hat Dich Die Liebe Beruhrt'
- 'Valse De Chopin'
- 'Dei Nacht' - Op. 10, No. 3
- 'Cacilie' - Op. 27, No.2
- 'Ich atmet' einen linden Duft'
- 'Blicke Mir Nicht In Die Lieder'
- 'Ich Bin Der Welt Abhanden Gekommen'
- 'Um Mitternacht' - (Incomplete)
Amazon.com
Ljuba Welitsch had a short career, her stardom spanning the mid-1940s to the mid-1950s. Perhaps this is because she gave so much of herself--even on records you feel she's operating on all cylinders. Her most famous role, Salome, is represented here by the closing scene with Fritz Reiner and the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, recorded at the time of her triumphant New York debut. She was also a great Donna Anna, her rendition of the big arias from Don Giovanni full of fire and thrust. Tosca's "Vissi d'arte" is a passionate reading, one of the best on disc. The song disc is more variable but always interesting. A great singer, captured in her prime. -- Dan Davis
Amazon.com
Half of Bulgarian soprano Ljuba Welitsch's Columbia output stems from her salad days at the Met, when her silvery voice cut across the footlights like liquid fire. The 1950 Tosca and Don Giovanni selections, as well as her incomparable Salome Final Scene with the fiery Fritz Reiner at the helm, sound more potent than ever in these 20-bit transfers from original source material. Also memorable are two delicately scaled Joseph Marx lieder and a peerless Strauss Cacille. Sadly, the 1952-3 lieder sessions find Welitsch in dire straits: her voice has acquired a papery edge, with perceptive decline in intonation and breath control. Give Paul Ulanowsky credit, though, for admirably maneuvering through the thankless, Crisco-thick piano "deorchestrations" of Strauss' Four Last Songs. --Jed Distler
Customer Reviews:
Enigimatic Flame!.......2003-11-14
This woman moved me! I felt exitement, finality, pain, passion, victory, sensuousness, and nostalgia of a time unknown to me. The Salome aria is the most convincingly and beautifully sung I have ever heard by far. The thread of sound is never broken. The lieder selections are very lovely and interestingly personal, not at all detached or serious; a joy. Strauss' Four Last Songs done with piano are quite effective as such.
The recorded sound is very impressive; a clean, full-bodied sound. Columbia's mono recordings are absolutely superior.
This soprano seemed to have something very important to say. There is an ever present urgency in her delivery, a haste, and a desperation that clings to the heart. As she sings, she invokes compassion, mystery, fear and joy.
Please hear this woman!
perhaps the most sensual of German lieder singers.......1999-08-22
This collection of Ljuba Welitsch's singing Strauss is an great example of a singer's cultural connection to a composer giving her an almost eerily innate feeling for the music. Welitsch's voice can only be described as sexy, in a pre-war German sort of way, silvery hard and focused in tone combined with a sensuality of expression that is unique. She breathes life and fire into this music in a way that later singers -- even the great Elisabeth Schwarzkopf -- could not.
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- Cheryl Studer's masterly interpretations...
- Superb Strauss and Wagner From Studer, Sinopoli and Dresden
- Why is this not more famous?
- A very deeply felt rendition!
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Strauss: Four Last Songs; Wagner: Prelude & Liebestod
Manufacturer: Polygram Int'l
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Similar Items:
- Strauss: Four Last Songs / Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
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- Wagner: Der Ring des Nibelungen
ASIN: B000001GLT
Release Date: 1994-05-25 |
Tracks:
- Four Last Songs: Fruhling
- Four Last Songs: September
- Four Last Songs: Beim Schlafengehen
- Four Last Songs: Im Abendrot
- Five Poems for Female Voice: Der Engel
- Five Poems for Female Voice: Stehe still!
- Five Poems for Female Voice: Im Treibhaus
- Five Poems for Female Voice: Schmerzen
- Five Poems for Female Voice: Traume
- Tristan & Isolde: Vorspiel zum I. Aufzug
- Tristan & Isolde: Isoldes Liebestod
Customer Reviews:
Cheryl Studer's masterly interpretations..........2002-08-09
This recording of the 4 Last Songs, the Wesendock Lieder and the Isolde Liebestod are unmatched in their expressiveness, phrasing and intelligent interpretations. Studer's work with Sinopoli and the Dresden Staatskapelle is perfect in every respect. I have listened to respective performances by Gundula Janowitz and Jessye Norman, but find that Studer is for me the preferred "voice" in these classics for voice,piano and orchestra.
I have collected many of Cheryl Studer's recordings for many years, and cannot understand why they are not more available.
For example her Schubert recital album (with pianist Irwin Gage) and her "Cheryl Studer in Salzburg", both issued on the Deutsche Grammophon label, display her versatility in the lieder and operatic repertoires.
The most anticipated moment for me when listening to the Strauss is the opening of "Fruhling" with the orchestral prelude followed ever so elegantly by Studer's first notes. Beautiful and strangely calming every time I listen to it. I never tire of her eloquent readings in this material, and I know you too will enjoy this work for many years.
Superb Strauss and Wagner From Studer, Sinopoli and Dresden.......2001-11-24
I'm not surprised that this excellent CD has garnered critical acclaim in publications such as the Grammophone Guide to Classical CDs. Cheryl Studer's intense interpretation of Strauss' "Four Last Songs" is a warm, exciting rendition; perhaps the finest ever recorded. She is ably supported by Sinopoli and the Dresden Staatskapelle. Sinopoli leads the Staatskapelle in a warm, leisurely performance of this work as well as the two orchestral excerpts from Wagner's operatic music. These are replete with vibrant, excellent playing from this great orchestra whose familiarity with both composers' music is second to none. The sound quality is absolutely first rate.
Why is this not more famous?.......2001-11-16
Strauss' Vier Letzte Lieder are works of such mastery the final word can never be said. I find myself collecting as many recordings as my budget will permit, exploring the endless insights and emotional experiences provided by the worlds best sopranos who, it seems, line up to have their say on this music.
This disc has recently become my ninth recording of the Strauss (and I have listened to seven others besides) and third recording of Wagner's Wessendonck Lieder. Studer need not fear - this disc stands glowingly against all comparisons.
The history of the Strauss lieder has been dominated by the still-unsurpassed interpretive insight of Elizabeth Schwarzkopf. Many an argument on the best recording of these songs has revolved around the question of whether her 1953 recording with Ackermann or her 1965 rendition with Szell should take that mantle! At the end of the day, one need not pit one against the other - both are sublime and carry their own authority. Among the Wagnerians (who recall the premiere of the songs by Flagstad), Norman's interpretation with Masur has quickly and rightfully become a classic. In another category again, the most famous exponent of the voice-as-instrument view is the Janowitz/Karajan; although I think this recording is surpassed in this style by the divine Arleen Auger/Previn disc on Telarc.
This Studer disc, however, bodes well against that competition, simply because, more than any of the alternatives, she combines all the strengths of those classics. Her interpretative insight and phrasing is almost as good as Schwarzkopf (only Lucia Popp otherwise comes close), her voice large, lush & Wagnerian like Norman's but honed down to a vocal line as lovely as Arleen Auger's, if not quite as pure. The Dresden Staatskapelle and Sinopoli are equal to the best alternatives, always sympathetic. At 20'52; this is the fastest rendition I own aside from the Schwarzkopf/Ackermann at about 19 & ½ minutes, but Sinopoli chooses balanced & natural tempos, giving the music ample room to breathe, without dragging it out unnecessarily (as I think Masur with Norman at 25 minutes (!) does, similarly the Karajan/Janowitz).
I hope I haven't exhausted all my superlatives on the Strauss, because I need some for the Wessendonck-Lieder! This is the best rendition of these songs I have ever heard - only Jane Eaglen provides me with as much enjoyment as Studer. Which lady's voice is more beautiful? Even Jessye Norman is left in the shade in these songs by Studer's caress of every phrase, careful vocal line, her light and shadow interplay with the Sinopoli and the Staatskapelle.
To make this disc even more extraordinary, Sinopoli takes the Staatskapelle through a transporting Tristan Prelude before Studer does a fine job of the Liebestod to bring the recital to a close. Why is this disc not more famous? Perhaps it has been lost in a catalogue of dozens of recent renditions of the Strauss, but all lovers of this repertoire (and this sublime soprano) should 'discover' this disc - they surely cannot be disappointed.
A very deeply felt rendition!.......1999-08-01
I was introduced to 'Four Last Songs' through this redition of Cheryl Studer. I have come to love the depth and the poetry the content of the songs and have subsequently listened to several other recordings. To me, this is the one which seems to be the simplest and yet the most moving and deeply felt! I would strongly recommend it to anyone who wants an introduction to the music of Richard Strauss.
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The Complete Songs, Vol. 4
Manufacturer: Albany Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Ives, Charles
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- The Complete Songs of Charles Ives, Vol. 3
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- 114 Songs by Charles Ives
ASIN: B0000049MN
Release Date: 1995-08-10 |
Tracks:
- The Innate
- The Collection
- Premonitions
- Grantchester
- Thoreau
- West London
- Serenity
- On The Counter
- Hymn
- August
- September
- December
- Cradle Song
- 'Paracelsus': Excerpt
- Disclosure
- Maple Leaves
- La Fede
- The Indians
- Two Slants: Duty
- Two Slants: Vita
- 'The Incantation': Excerpt
- An Election
- At Sea
- The Last Reader
- The Greatest Man
- The Housatonic At Stockbridge
- Resolution
- Two Little Flowers
- Evening
- Immortality
- Yellow Leaves
- Ann Street
- Peaks
- The White Gulls
- 1, 2, 3
- Majority
- Remembrance
- The One Way
- The Rainbow (So May It Be!)
- The Side Show
- A Sea Dirge
- In The Mornin'
Average customer rating:
- I Love This CD!
- A little sappy but it's pure Jimmy D
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September Song
Jimmy Durante
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ASIN: B00005KIX9
Release Date: 2001-08-14 |
Tracks:
- September Song
- Look Ahead Little Girl
- Count Your Blessings Instead Of Sheep
- When The Circus Leaves Town
- I Believe
- Young At Heart
- Don't Lose Your Sense Of Humor
- You'll Never Walk Alone
- One Room Home
- Blue Bird Of Happiness
Album Description
Most may know Jimmies music through the film 'Sleepless In Seattle' but this is the record that broke it to a world already in love with his comedy act. This 1963 album for Warner Bros. went top 40. Did you know 'The Schnozzola' could actually carry a tune? 10 tracks including, 'September Song', 'Look Ahead Little Girl' & 'Blue Bird Of Happiness'. Standard jewel case. 2001 release.
Customer Reviews:
I Love This CD!.......2007-03-13
If you like this type music I recommend this CD! For hard to find CD'd I have found Amazon the perfect place to shop! I also always qualify for the free shipping and this saves me $ too!
A little sappy but it's pure Jimmy D.......2006-11-06
September Song mixes Jimmy Durante's gravelly voice and the softly dramatic strings so common during Durante's day. The result is pure Durante. If you love his music, you'll know most of these songs, if you're new to Jimmy Durante this is worth a listen.
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Pascal Comelade September Song With Robert Wyatt
Manufacturer: DSA
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
ASIN: B0001MLRD6 |
Product Description
This is a French import of Pascal Comelade with Robert Wyatt's September Song. 1. September Song 2. Signed Curtain 3. Come Prima 4. The Sheik Of Araby 5. 24 Mila Baci 6. Knockin' on Heaven's Door 7. L'Italiano
Customer Reviews:
Great gadzooks!.......2004-03-01
Great songs run through a filter of eccentric genius. Very timeless arrangements, utilizing instruments like xylophones, accordions and squeak toys. Quite lovely and undeniably French.
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Kurt Weill from Berlin to Broadway - a selection
Manufacturer: Pearl
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Kurt Weill: The Centennial
- Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill / Levine, Lenya, Armstrong, Gilford, et al
- Kurt Weill / Songs Volume 2 - A Centennial Anthology
- Kurt Weill / Songs Volume 1 - A Centennial Anthology
- Knickerbocker Holiday
ASIN: B00004WZTK
Release Date: 2000-10-24 |
Tracks:
- The Threepenny Opr: Mack The Knife - Harald Paulsen With Orch
- The Threepenny Opr: Cannon Song - Harald Paulsen With Orch
- The Threepenny Opr: Pirate Jenny - Lotte Lenya With The Lewis Ruth Band/Theo Mackeben
- The Threepenny Opr: Babarasong - Lotte Lenya With The Lewis Ruth Band/Theo Mackeben
- The Threepenny Opr: Lied Von Der Unzulanglichkeit Menslichen Strebens - Bertolt Brecht With Theo Mackeben And His Orch
- Happy End: Mandalay Song - Lewis Ruth Band
- Happy End: Surabaya Johnny - Lotte Lenya With Pno
- Rise And Fall Of The City Of Mahagonny: Moon Of Alabama - Lotte Lenya With The Three Admirals And Orch
- Rise And Fall Of The City Of Mahagonny: Denn Wie Man Sich Bettet - Lotte Lenya With Pno
- Knickerbocker Holiday: September Song - Walter Huston With Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- Knickerbocker Holiday: There's Nowhere To Go But Up - David Brooks With Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- Knickerbocker Holiday: The Scars - Walter Huston With Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- Lady In The Dark: One Life To Live - Gertrude Lawrence With Orch/Leonard Joy
- Lady In The Dark: The Princess Of Pure Delight - Danny Kaye With Orchestra/Maurice Abravanel
- Lady In The Dark: And Other Russians - Danny Kaye With Chor And Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- Lady In The Dark: The Saga Of Jenny - Gertrude Lawrence With Chor And Orch/Leonard Joy
- Lady In The Dark: My Ship - Gertrude Lawrence With Chor And Orch/Leonard Joy
- One Touch Of Venus: I'm A Stranger Here Myself - Mary Martin With The 'One Touch Of Venus' Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- One Touch Of Venus: Westwind - Kenny Baker With The 'One Touch Of Venus' Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- One Touch Of Venus: Foolish Heart - Mary Martin With The 'One Touch Of Venus' Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- One Touch Of Venus: Speak Low - Mary Martin/Kenny Baker With The 'One Touch Of Venus' Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- One Touch Of Venus: That's Him - Mary Martin With The 'One Touch Of Venus' Orch/Maurice Abravanel
- Ulysses Africanus: Lost In The Stars - Walter Huston With Orch/Victor Young
- Ulysses Africanus: Lover Man - Lotte Lenya With Pno
- One Touch Of Venus: Very, Very, Very - Kurt Weill
- One Touch Of Venus: Wooden Wedding - Kurt Weill
- One Touch Of Venus: Jersey Plonk - Kurt Weill
- One Touch Of Venus: The Trouble With Women - Kurt Weill
Music:
- Singer [Import] [Original recording remastered]
- Sings Blossom's Own Treasures [Import]
- Sings-It Could Happen to You
- Smokin' [Import]
- Something to Remember You By
- Speak Beak
- Take Me to the Water
- Take the Box [CD-single] [Explicit Lyrics] [Import]
- The Best of the Pilgrim Travelers, Vol. 1
- The Big Butter & Egg Man
Music
Music