Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Dawn Upshaw's vocals have graced a heap of recordings, none of them quite like this collection of Vernon Duke's songs. Duke, composer of such musicals as Cabin in the Sky, which has a rousing full soundtrack from the 1943 film production, wrote variously sugary and Gershwin-esque pop songs along with some "serious" music. Upshaw breezes through the pop and Gershwin-colored items, offering them a level of vocal clarity that's rarely matched. The arrangements are lovely, and with lyrics by Ogden Nash, Ira Gershwin, and Howard Dietz, the songs are apt for Upshaw's sly spin on pop vocals. Sure, Upshaw's sung Rodgers and Hart and some Gershwin, but she's also done great classical recitals, like those around Samuel Barber's Knoxville: Summer of 1915. So the playful rundowns of Duke's poppier material might only hint at Upshaw's full range (as evidenced by Gorecki's Symphony No. 3 and her collection of Debussy songs), but they're fun and colorful. Indeed the excerpt from Duke's 1942 "Five Victorian Songs" is nicely more complex. And if you're wondering where to hear Upshaw singing in a decidedly more adventurous context, dig into the Arditti String Quartet's second Schoenberg collection and the Kronos Quartet's Night Prayers. --Andrew Bartlett
Dawn Upshaw Sings Vernon Duke, Music, Dawn Upshaw, Vernon Duke, Fred Hersch, John Pizzarelli, Drew Gress, Tom Rainey, Eric Stern, John Manasse, Richard Rodney Bennett, Classical, Classical Artists, Classical Music, Classical Vocals, Show Tunes
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Dawn Upshaw Sings Vernon Duke
Dawn Upshaw , Drew Gress , Tom Rainey , Eric Stern , John Manasse , and Richard Rodney Bennett Manufacturer: Nonesuch ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000HYCF Release Date: 1999-01-19 |
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Amazon.com
Dawn Upshaw's vocals have graced a heap of recordings, none of them quite like this collection of Vernon Duke's songs. Duke, composer of such musicals as Cabin in the Sky, which has a rousing full soundtrack from the 1943 film production, wrote variously sugary and Gershwin-esque pop songs along with some "serious" music. Upshaw breezes through the pop and Gershwin-colored items, offering them a level of vocal clarity that's rarely matched. The arrangements are lovely, and with lyrics by Ogden Nash, Ira Gershwin, and Howard Dietz, the songs are apt for Upshaw's sly spin on pop vocals. Sure, Upshaw's sung Rodgers and Hart and some Gershwin, but she's also done great classical recitals, like those around Samuel Barber's Knoxville: Summer of 1915. So the playful rundowns of Duke's poppier material might only hint at Upshaw's full range (as evidenced by Gorecki's Symphony No. 3 and her collection of Debussy songs), but they're fun and colorful. Indeed the excerpt from Duke's 1942 "Five Victorian Songs" is nicely more complex. And if you're wondering where to hear Upshaw singing in a decidedly more adventurous context, dig into the Arditti String Quartet's second Schoenberg collection and the Kronos Quartet's Night Prayers. --Andrew BartlettCustomer Reviews:
Delightful.......2004-12-29
a pleasure to listen to.......2001-08-05
Album of beautiful rarities.......2000-12-06
A very enjoyable listen........1999-03-11
Upshaw Astounds Again: Brings Duke to Life, and Back to Life.......1999-02-19
In interviews, Dawn Upshaw has said her sound on this album focuses on getting back to "the message" the song conveys, losing the obsession with physiology and mechanical precision. She sings on the consonants; she hits some explosive notes; she slides around. And the effect is wonderful. Sometimes even enthralling, as in "Water Under the Bridge", as her voice and the music and the words all merge into a shimmery liquid, or "Remember or Forget", whose lovely orchestration presents, with its alpine range of emotional expression, a challenge Dawn gracefully surmounts.
Vernon Duke gives Dawn's voice a chance for expression in a way few "popular" pieces can. Some of the easiest to relate to, like "Round About", contain sections of vocal skips that would raise the hairs of a Lotte Lenya; Dawn gives "Swattin' the Fly" the difficult, intense patience it needs to be effective. It's no accident that few songs besides "Autumn in New York" and "April in Paris"--the only Duke works remembered today--stay in one key for long or have hummable melodies. (Not too hummable, in fact.)
Again: if there was any doubt that Dawn is the most deservedly successful of the classical-to-popular transplants, this album lays it to rest. She moves in this uncharted territory infinitely more surely than Kiri Te Kanawa trying to sing standard Gershwin fare even with fifty years of interpretation to fall back on. This album, with its surface attractions and deep-felt rewards, may be the biggest resuscitation of an unjustly underperformed work since Sorrowful Songs.
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