 |
Tony Bennett - Duets: An American Classic
|
Music CD Cover Artist: Tony Bennett Edition: Music CD CD Release Date: 2006-09-26 Music Label: Sony
|
| Used | punhana
 | Used, verygood FACTORY SEALED! NEVER OPENED, NEVER PLAYED! Hole punch thru the back cover. Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $1.99 | | | Used | doolicity
 | Used, verygood Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $2.27 | | | Used | trade-up
 | Used, verygood Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $2.27 | | | Used | suzie12books | Used, verygood Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $2.27 | | | Used | buybackspittsburgh
 | Used, verygood Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $2.42 | | | Used | bakuninbooks
 | Used, mint Hole on barcode/artwork. New. Domestic orders ship First Class with tracking information. All international orders ship Airmail. Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $2.85 | | | Used | nw-emerald-city-books | Used, good Used - Good Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $2.85 | | | Used | buybacks161
 | Used, verygood Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $3.00 | | | Used | sueterrybooks
 | Used, good XLIBRARY w/stickers(nonremovable). CD has mild wear. We have listened to the full program & found no problems. All inserts in good case (some scuffs on case). Usual stickers & marker notations on CD & case. We ship every postal business day. (ahavon1108) 828768097922 Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $3.03 | | | Used | bubble77
 | Used, verygood Usually ships in 1-2 business days | $3.25 | |
A-to-z Safe Buying Guarantee Protection
Your purchase is protected by the A-to-z Safe Buying Guarantee.
Amazon.com automatically transfers your payment to the merchant so you'll never
need to pay a merchant directly. Amazon.com A-to-z Safe Buying Guarantee covers both
the delivery of your item and its condition upon receipt.
Free Music Notes for Duets: An American Classic AlbumFree Music Review: Stellar Duet Partners Offer Vocal Diversity As Bennett Stays True to His Classic Erudite Self Hit: 5 StarsThere are several top-selling singers who mine the Great American Songbook without having an innate understanding of its musical context. The results can consequently amount to contrived posturing as much as singing. Tony Bennett is not one of them as he so completely understands what music works with his sturdy, mellifluous voice that he makes almost everyone else featured on this disc sound vocally compatible even if several are out of their comfort zones. What makes this a better listen than Frank Sinatra's similar efforts in the early nineties is that Bennett recorded all the duets in person with his partners and has figured out how to retro-fit their musical sensibilities with his own. Intriguingly, industry veteran Phil Ramone produced both the Sinatra and Bennett projects.
Things start energetically with a big-band arrangement of "Lullaby of Broadway". The Dixie Chicks' Natalie Maines sings with surprising aplomb but only on the first verse, and as a group, they spend the rest of the track mimicking the Andrews Sisters with their WWII-era girl-group background vocals. The cheery "Put on a Happy Face" from "Bye, Bye Birdie" has the normally taciturn James Taylor sounding very Gene Kelly-like and bantering quite easily with Bennett. A melancholy tone seeps into "Because of You", Bennett's first major hit in 1951, with Chris Botti's sad-eyed trumpet and a sonorous K.D. Lang sounding most assured given her previous experience as his partner.
A surprisingly confident Bono extracts the usual gruffness from his arena-rock voice and dexterously matches with Bennett on a sauntering version of "I Wanna Be Around". Elton John provides an unforced swing on the brief "Rags to Riches", while Elvis Costello loosens up considerably with the jazzy arrangement and Hope-Crosby-style bantering of "Are You Havin' Fun Yet?". A smoky-voiced Billy Joel is the ideal partner for the reflective "The Good Life" which soars with their intertwining voices, just as Sting is for a highly dramatic, Weill-style rendition of "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" featuring some nice guitar work. As Bennett's youngest partner, John Legend provides energy to spare on an Ella-style "Sing You Sinners", though I wish there was more scatting during the interlude.
The comparatively weaker tracks just miss the mark by mere inches, not miles. As expected, Celine Dion overdoes her part on "If I Ruled the World", and a slightly Latin-tinged "The Shadow of Your Smile" has a lush sound save for Columbian rock singer Juanes' somewhat tinny tone. Stevie Wonder sounds a tad resistant to Bennett's nightclub-style arrangement of his own composition, "For Once In My Life" since he still applies his familiar melisma. Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart" looks to drop its country roots for a more generic treatment until Tim McGraw starts to dip his notes like Williams. And one of the most beautiful love songs on the disc, Ray Noble's "The Very Thought of You", has Bennett sounding velvety smooth in a swooning arrangement but Paul McCartney comparatively stiff with his phrasing a bit off.
The best tracks produce the magic you expect from Bennett when coupled with partners with perfectly complementary styles. Crooner Michael Bublé shows a great affinity for "Just in Time", while the jazzy sass of "The Best Is Yet to Come" benefits considerably from Diana Krall's dusky voice. George Michael makes a welcome return to the pop mainstream on the silky smooth "How Do You Keep the Music From Playing?". Not too surprisingly, the best duet is the lushly orchestrated "Smile" with Bennett and Barbra Streisand alternating verses as if on gossamer wings. Along with Pinchas Zukerman's masterful violin, they make stunning magic together, and the praise they sing to each other at the end seems most justified. Bennett includes a valedictory "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" by himself, beautiful as always and a subtly ironic choice for a duets album.
|
 |
|
|
|