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6 Reviews
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not at All Vile Weill,
By "lsteveny" (Manhattan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 (Audio CD)
The ever versatile HK Gruber has done it again digging up these gorgeous dance arrangements for Weill's music--proving, if anything, Weill's versatility. Anyone familiar with the Capriccio historical Weill recordings will be aware of the long tradition of dance bands taking Weill's music as the lead for dance music or pop music incarnations (all the way up through the more obvious appropriations familiar to Americans: Mack the Knife and September Song). Hardly MUZAK arrangements (listen to the delicate violin in track 17's "What Good Would the Moon Be" to hear what I mean), this generous helping of 19 songs offers a chance to see Weill through a delightfully different but entirely compatible lens. Max Raabe provides the ideal vocal compliment on 8 of the tracks, his tenor floating effortlessly into his head voice suggesting a "period" sound reminiscent of Bing Crosby. The import title for this disc is "Charming Weill," and that modest adjective expresses the least of its virtues.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Max Raabe at his Best,
By Marcus Aurelius (PA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 (Audio CD)
I love Max Raabe at his quirkiest, but it's also great to hear him play music that inspires him. Raabe's interpretation of Weill is simply awesome. I'm certain Kurt would melt if he could hear this recording.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
SAIL ON, KURT!,
By
This review is from: Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 (Audio CD)
I wouldn't take offence here oh, Weill purists! These reconstructions are charming and harmonically reverent to their originals, more than could be said for many versions of the Weill Songbook through the decades, including Lou Reed's friendly `adaptation' of the September Song's chord progression and melodic line!
Shoenberg and Webern expressed their disdain of Weill's music; curiously, Arnold had also disclosed a secret wish of having his own audiences walk back home "whistling his tunes", oh, don't ask why... You can certainly whistle, hum and sway your partner now, as the transatlantic's bouncy dancehall sails on just as Kurt, Lotte and the lot of them did when escaping the lethal hounds of early 30s Berlin.... the-next-little-dollar bound.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Kurt Weill for the dance.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 (Audio CD)
Well,this time you can pick up your partner and start dancing. I have been addicted to Weill's music for many years. Composer with a classical background, pupil of Busoni and friend of Shoenberg composing light music with symphonic touch played here by an accomplished Palast Orchestra directed by H.K. Gruber who also arranged most of the music is a treasure for all K. Weill's lovers.
The voice of Max Raabe which is so suited to music of 20s and 30s is of course an extra attraction to the disc. I have no hesitation to recommend it. Joe Neustatl.
5.0 out of 5 stars
kurt weill at his best,
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This review is from: Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 (Audio CD)
the atmosphere is all there.The cabarets in Berlin between the wars,even the singer's voice seems to come from some time tunnel!The selection is great, and I have been listening this one all the time.
5 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
ELEVATOR MUSIC,
By MOVIE MAVEN (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 (Audio CD)
This is a very strange CD: why would anyone want to take the quirky rhythms and melodies of the great Kurt Weill and "tame" them into dance arrangements? Certainly one has listened to (& even perhaps admired) dance arrangements of composers from Victor Herbert to Cole Porter to Jerry Herman, but these are all, if you will, main stream composers-- men whose music sounds good in original Broadway or Hollywood arrangements and just as good (or almost as good) as played by a dance band...think "Begin The Beguine" as done by Fred Astaire on film or "Begin The Beguine" done by Jo Stafford with the Paul Weston Orchestra.But Weill was an innovator: a man who can still be listened to experiencing the thrill of something fresh and new. One immediately thinks of his collaborations with Bertolt Brecht in Germany: "Threepenny Opera" and "The Rise & Fall Of The City of Mahagonny" or "The Seven Deadly Sins", etc. his American opera, "Street Scene" with Langston Hughes or his American musical plays: "One Touch of Venus" with Ogden Nash or "Love Life" with Alan Jay Lerner, etc. The songs on this CD all deserve great recordings from the "Alabama Song" to "September Song" but they turn into a kind of flattened elevator music instead of having fresh interpretations or even more traditional ones. What happens is that the longing in "What Good Would the Moon Be" and the romance of "Speak Low" and the raucousness of "Bilbao Song" are all much too similar and much too easy. It's a little weird to think of husbands whispering to their wives," Listen, honey, they're playing 'As You Make Your Bed' from "Mahagonny".........let's fox trot!" |
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Kurt Weill: Life, Love, & Laughter--Dance Arrangements, 1927-50 by Kurt Weill (Audio CD - 2001)
$8.99 $7.90
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