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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of Streisand's finest!, December 28, 1999
This review is from: Songbird (Audio CD)
This album remains one of the most under-rated Streisand albums to date. It is filled with Streisand gems- despite some of the silly lyrics. However, many times previous Streisand has taken our minds off the lyrics to a point where we only concentrate on her voice. An example of this is on "Superman". The lyrics are ridiculous, yet her charisma is what keeps it going. I can easily compare this to it's 1999 counterpart, A LOVE LIKE OURS. If SONGBIRD could have been re-named, it would have been A BREAK-UP LIKE OURS, being that the album mainly focuses on a break-up, and surviving a heartbreak. Some of the highlights include: "A Man I Loved"-which showcases Streisand at her best, belting on a blusy, torch song...the ending will remind you of "He Touched Me"- gorgeous! The powerful, "I Don't Break Easily", the hearbreaking "You Don't Bring Me Flowers", and the fast, fun disco track, "Love Breakdown". However, the title track towers above all of them. "Songbird" is one of the most deeply personal songs Streisand has ever recorded, for she lets us see into her world. The song is a reflection of Streisand- not this huge, powerful legend, but a vunerable girl searching for inspiration. All in all, it remains one of Streisand's best albums to date! Highly reccomended!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful, timeless album of songs., May 27, 1999
This review is from: Songbird (Audio CD)
This album came out in May 1978, and... all these years later it is still a beautiful, very close-to-the-heart album of love songs by our greatest-ever singer of songs. I'll always treasure this album. Maybe it's due in part because I was in the midst of my "first love" with someone wonderful and beautiful and I remember sitting and listening to "Tomorrow" and "Honey Can I Put On Your Clothes" and "Stay Away" and feeling so happy, relating the songs to my special love; and then later when the relationship took a different turn I found myself more listening to "A Man I Loved" and "One More Night" and "Songbird," and relating to the sadness Barbra sings of so heartbreakingly in those songs... But in any case, this a great collection of songs that stands on its own. Barbra has always been a singer of memories in all our lives, happy and sad memories, but I don't think she's ever done so so completely as she did here-- and so satisfyingly. This is a wonderful album. Thank you, Barbra, for the memories, of all kinds.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Underrated set from the singer I love, July 17, 2005
This review is from: Songbird (Audio CD)
There are plenty of great moments on Barbra's follow-up to the smash STREISAND SUPERMAN album. Once again produced by Garry Klein, it's somewhat surprising that SONGBIRD barely missed the Top Ten (stalling at a still very respectable #12), but it quickly went Platinum anyway. Most critics (and even some fans) were pretty harsh on this album, and the general opinion seems to be that it is one of Streisand's weakest efforts. Time has been good to SONGBIRD, however, and in some ways the album plays better now than it did when first released. It may lack the dazzling eclecticism of STREISAND SUPERMAN, but it does offer a slate of solidly constructed pop songs that amazingly remain undated.
The disc opens with a surprisingly effective rendition of the ANNIE theme "Tomorrow," which substitutes the attempted-showstopper bombast of the original with an irresistibly jazzy arrangement and restrained vocals. The thrilling pop/torch song "A Man I Loved" and the lovely MOR ballad "I Don't Break Easily" feature two of Streisand's most spine-tingling vocals. Both sound like hits that could have been, and either one would have been an ideal follow-up single to Streisand's previous smash "My Heart Belongs to Me." The disco-ish "Love Breakdown" is undeniable highlight that combines seventies' soul with a bit of Motown, and Streisand's charismatic performance makes one wish she would record up-tempo material more often. Also making an impression are the sensual cuts "Deep In the Night" and "Honey Can I Put On Your Clothes," the latter of which is so sexy that you won't realize how silly the whole song is until it's long over.
Impressively, there's even more to like on the record. The mid-tempo number "Stay Away" and the emotive ballad "One More Night" are both anchored by solid hooks, while Barbra received her eighth Grammy nomination as "Best Pop Female Vocal Performance" for her solo rendition of "You Don't Bring Me Flowers." Interestingly, not long after the album was released, a DJ from Louisville, Kentucky created a mock-duet by splicing Barbra's rendition of the song with Neil Diamond's solo recording, which caused a sensation when it was played on the radio. Columbia caught wind of the situation, and sent Streisand and Diamond into the studio to quickly record the definitive duet version of "You Don't Bring Me Flowers, which hit #1 on the Hot 100 later in the year.
Best of all, however, is the closing title song, a restrained ballad that is given an incredibly moving sub-text from Barbra's vulnerable and understated performance. Probably the best track on the album, it was the only single released and it cracked the Top 25 on the pop chart and hit #1 on the adult contemporary chart. Overall, SONGBIRD is a very solid pop album, and it remains a mystery why it has been panned so often over the years. True, it is often on the slight side and does not offer any thing truly new or even remotely revolutionary, but it's almost a complete certainty that this was not Streisand or Klein's intention. The album succeeds where a pop album should - it is always pleasant and tuneful, and it completely puts most pop albums of today to absolute shame. One of Streisand's most underrated efforts.
NOTE: Also in 1978, Barbra scored another hit with the awkwardly-titled "Love Theme from `The Eyes Of Laura Mars' (Prisoner)," which peaked at #21 on the Hot 200. The song was written and recorded for the somewhat ill-fated Jon Peters' thriller THE EYES OF LAURA MARS, starring Faye Dunaway and Tommy Lee Jones, and it is the only time Barbra recorded a theme song for a movie that she did not appear in. "Prisoner" is booming rock-ballad that features an commanding performance from Streisand, however the over-the-top single sounds much more dated now than her other late-seventies hits.
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