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Andrew Lloyd Webber: DIVAS » Various Artists

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  • Format: CD
  • Label: Decca Broadway 000599002
  • Released: 2006-09-26
  • Barcode: 602498754160
  • Buy from: Buy from CDUniverse.com Buy from Amazon

  • Added by: severus_potter
  • Tracks: 1. Memory [Cats] -- Elaine Paige
    2. The Music of the Night [The Phantom of the Opera] -- Katherine Jenkins
    3. Take That Look Off Your Face [Song and Dance] -- Denise Van Outen
    4. All I Ask of You [The Phantom of the Opera] -- Shirley Bassey
    5. Love Changes Everything [Aspects of Love] -- Sarah Brightman
    6. With One Look [Sunset Boulevard] -- Glenn Close
    7. Learn To Be Lonely [The Phantom of the Opera] -- Minnie Driver
    8. The Perfect Year [Sunset Boulevard] -- Dina Carroll
    9. I Don't Know How To Love Him [Jesus Christ Superstar] -- Yvonne Elliman
    10. Whistle Down the Wind [Whistle Down the Wind] -- Tina Arena
    11. Don't Cry For Me Argentina [Evita] -- Julie Covington
    12. As If We Never Said Goodbye [Sunset Boulevard] -- Petula Clark
    13. Tire Tracks And Broken Hearts [Sunset Boulevard] -- Bonnie Tyler
    14. Tell Me On A Sunday [Song and Dance] -- Marti Webb
    15. Another Suitcase In Another Hall [Evita] -- Barbara Dickson
    16. The Heart Is Slow To Learn -- Kiri Te Kanawa
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Posted 2008-02-19 09:40:46:
Amazon.com: This compilation of previously released material gathers the best-known tunes sung by women in Andrew Lloyd Webber's repertoire. Do all the singers here count as divas? A surprisingly high number certainly does. A few offer both outsize personality and outsize pipes: Betty Buckley ("Memory"), Patti LuPone ("Buenos Aires"), Barbra Streisand ("As If We Never Said Goodbye"). Some don't have as much name recognition but still offer blistering readings of famous songs (Yvonne Elliman's vintage version of "I Don't Know How to Love Him," from Jesus Christ Superstar). Others go for nuance, like Marti Webb and her lovely "Tell Me on a Sunday" or Barbara Dickson's "Another Suitcase in Another Hall." And then there are the ones who pull through on sheer bravado: Madonna and her vibrato-laden "Don't Cry for Me Argentina," Glenn Close's harsh "With One Look"--both of them making you long for La LuPone. (In which universe Minnie Driver counts as a diva is anybody's guess.) The overall track selection offers a fairly standard overview of Sir Andrew's career, though it does include Kiri Te Kanawa's "The Heart Is Slow to Learn," from the aborted sequel to Phantom. --Elisabeth Vincentelli > 2 Comments

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