Kurt Weill, Maurice Levine, Roger Bean, Maurice Levine, Lotte Lenya, Louis Armstrong, Jack Gilford, Turk Murphy - Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill / Levine, Lenya, Armstrong, Gilford, et al
Facts
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Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill / Levine, Lenya, Armstrong, Gilford, et al
Music Price: $11.98 As of Nov 22 15:02 EST (details)
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| Artist(s) | Kurt Weill, Maurice Levine, Roger Bean, Maurice Levine, Lotte Lenya, Louis Armstrong, Jack Gilford and Turk Murphy |
| Studio | Sony |
| Release Date | June 29, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 074646064726 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 15:02 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording remastered |
About Kurt Weill, Maurice Levine, Roger Bean, Maurice Levine, Lotte Lenya, Louis Armstrong, Jack Gilford, Turk Murphy - Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill / Levine, Lenya, Armstrong, Gilford, et al
The voice of Lotte Lenya--filled with a bittersweet tone, slight imperfections, and that unmistakable accent--is something you either love or hate. But decades later, the former wife of Kurt Weill still has a voice we can't forget. Simply put, nothing compares to Lenya. This reissue gathers her English-language September Song and Other American Theater Songs album from 1958 (for the first time here, heard in its stereo version) as well as her tunes from 1957's Cabaret; "Song of a German Mother" from the Broadway show Brecht on Brecht; and even a collaboration with Louis Armstrong on "Mack the Knife." These recordings were the cornerstone of Lenya's American career, and even with pop orchestration--"Saga of Jenny," "Green Up Time," "Speak Low"--these are infectious numbers. Like the previously released Sony Masterworks reissue of Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill's Seven Deadly Sins, this is simply a great package. The sound quality is excellent and the eight-minute-long session outtake from "Mack the Knife" with Armstrong is truly fascinating. --Jason Verlinde Amazon.com essential recording
Tracks
- September Song
- It Never Was You
- The Saga of Jenny
- Foolish Heart
- Speak Low
- Sing Me Not a Ballad
- Lonely House
- A Boy Like You
- Green-Up Time
- Trouble Man
- Stay Well
- Lost in the Stars
- Song of Ruth
- The Solomon Song - Lotte Lenya, Blitzstein, Marc
- Song - Lotte Lenya, Dessau, Paul
- Song of a German Mother - Lotte Lenya, Eisler, Hanns
- So What - Lotte Lenya, Kander, John
- What Would You Do? - Lotte Lenya, Kander, John
- It Couldn't Please Me More (A Pineapple) - Lotte Lenya, Kander, John
- Married - Lotte Lenya, Kander, John
- Moritat Vom Mackie Messer
- Mack the Knife - Lotte Lenya, Blitzstein, Marc
- Mack the Knife - Lotte Lenya, Blitzstein, Marc
Similar CDs
| Lotte Lenya sings Kurt Weill's The Seven Deadly Sins & Berlin Theatre Songs | September Songs: The Music of Kurt Weill | The Threepenny Opera | Stratas Sings Weill | Ute Lemper Sings Kurt Weill |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Lost in the Stars |
Hearing her for the first time can be startling: coarse, cigarette-stained. Bleak, heartless. Or painfully vulnerable. The bitter-sweet "It Never Was You" is true love. Practically screaming in "Trouble Man." Rollicking in "So What!"
And as others have mentioned, toward the end hearing Louis Armstrong COACHING Lenya on "Mack the Knife," which she and Weill created--and Lenya taking laughing graciously along.
The is required listening, just as "Seven Deadly Sins and Berlin Theatre Songs." I envy the person who meets Lenya the first time. Unique. Phenomenal. Incomparable. July 4, 2008
| Weill and Lenya and Armstrong, oh my! Buy It!! |
Lenya is the quintessential Weill interpreter, as she was a performer on the Berlin stage in the late 1920s and many of Weill's German songs were specifically written to be performed by Lenya. (Ironically, Lotte Lenya is best known today as the actress playing Rosa Klebb in the second James Bond film, `From Russia With Love'. I guess she needed some cigarette money.) So, even though these English songs may not have been written with Lenya in mind, Ms. Lenya should know better than anyone else the kind of interpretation Weill expected from his music.
It is facinating to compare Lenya's singing these songs with that of other major Weill interpreters, especially our best contemporary Weill specialist, Ute Lemper. While Lemper gives us powerful readings, Lenya seems to have an inside track on some of the more gentle sentiments such as those we hear in `September Song', `Speak Low', `Lost in the Stars', and `Sing Me Not a Ballad'.
If nothing else about this album gets you excited, then wait for the finale, which is a duet on Weill's most famous song, `Mack the Knife', sung in English in a duet with Lenya and Louie Armstrong, backed by Armstrong's All-Stars and his own trumpet performance. The great irony of this encounter is on the very last track, where Armstrong is giving advice to Lenya on how to perform her husband's song which she has probably been singing for 30 years.
If you like Kurt Weill's songs or you simply like a wide variety of female vocalists, then this album is for you.
October 5, 2005
| One of the essentials. |
| Singers don't sound like this anymore |
| Remember Lotte Lenya from James Bond!!! |
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