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2004 marks the release of Janet's 4th CD and her second music tour of Japan. They regularly perform at local historic venues in Los Angeles and in northern CA.
The title and evocative cover of the CD is a play on images and words from the original 1930's George White Scandals variety show and follies. They ably represent the CD's saucy thematic contents as the band delivers their own musical follies show complete with naughty comic tunes, Burlesque patter, hot dance hall numbers and some sweet and soulful songs to round things out. The first six titles can give you an idea of what's going on here: "Hollywood Party, Good Little Bad Little You, You Keep Me Living in Sin, How Could Red Riding Hood? My Bluebirds Are Singing The Blues, Don't Take That Blackbottom Away."
The CD features inspired performances by Parlor Boy notables: Ian Whitcomb (of 1960's pop fame), Tom Marion and Robert Armstrong (of Robert Crumb's Cheap Suit Serenaders), 91 year old Bob Mitchell (of Bob Mitchell's Boys Choir, featured in over 110 movies) and Dan Levinson horn player for Leon Redbone. It's produced by Robert Loveless of the innovative groups: Scenic, 17 Pygmies and Savage Republic.
This is Janet's 4th CD release and as in her former releases, great care has been taken to produce a quality package with exquisite design well representative of its red-hot jazz musical contents.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wild Abandon,
This review is from: Janet Klein's Scandals: 'Living In Sin' (Audio CD)
Yes! You will dance round the kitchen floor in wild abandon when you play this one! This is a truly great showcase for pure joy, energy and enthusiastic musicality. The best I've heard of its type, and I listen to as much as I can. Janet Klein's lilting vocals can reduce one to tears in an instance, whether from laughter or sentimentality. And what can be written about Ian Whitcomb (Janet's No 1 Parlor Boy) that hasn't already been written? He is the jewel in Queen Janet's crown. Don't miss this one or you'll deprive yourself of a little piece of Happiness Heaven.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Janet Klein and her Parlor Boys slyly serenade,
By
This review is from: Janet Klein's Scandals: 'Living In Sin' (Audio CD)
Janet Klein's Scandals or Living in Sin is the perfect introduction for the unitiated into the mysteries of the ukulele diva/chanteuse and her ultra-hip retro band The Parlor Boys. A critical fave in the L.A. literary/art/music scene -- Klein is accomplished in several media -- the band plays naughty songs from early in the previous century, and does so with suave aplomb. I noted the prior reviewer's unfavorable review of the work on this cd. I, however, found the songs to be more of an homage than a facsimile. From Hollywood Party (everything you might imagine), the almost giddy rendition of Baby O' Mine to Ballin' the Jack, that timeless song to which countless kids in tap classes learned the old shuffle ball change, Klein interprets songs in her own way. Klein does not, nor should she, mimic the work of others on Scandals, the Betty Boop quality to her voice is in reality her natural voice, as one who has attended her concerts and interviewed her can attest. Trust me, this CD is a Real Keeper.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Oh, Janet! You're Perfectly Swell!,
By
This review is from: Janet Klein's Scandals: 'Living In Sin' (Audio CD)
Indulging my fondness for music of days gone by, I took a chance on Ms Klein's "Living in Sin". I'm ever so glad I did. The collection captures the sense and sound of the 20's and 30's, and yet is as immediate as a clean shave. Wonderful and playful, and packaged in beautiful artwork that invokes the yesteryear of the source material. Every track is a gem, and I was particularly delighted to find Ms Klein had covered "Everyone Says, I Love You", which I knew from Horsefeathers, the Marx Bros movie.
If you're tempted, get it. (Confidential to Miss Klein: Please cover Ada Jones's "The Yama Yama Man", circa 1907, soon!)
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