Home   >   Music   >   Bette Midler - Some People's Lives...
Bette Midler - Some People's Lives
Click photo to enlarge

Bette Midler - Some People's Lives

Facts

Some People's Lives
Music Price: $5.98
As of Dec 1 12:13 EST (details)

Buy from Amazon.co.ukBuy from Amazon.co.uk
Artist(s)Bette Midler
StudioRhino Flashback
Release DateSeptember 30, 2008
UPC Code812279901458
Buy this item$5.98 at Amazon.com
As of Dec 1 12:13 EST (details)
1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours,
 

About Bette Midler - Some People's Lives

Great collection at a great price. Product Description

Tracks

  1. One More Round - Bette Midler, Harper, Jessica
  2. Some People's Lives - Bette Midler, Ian, Janis
  3. Miss Otis Regrets - Bette Midler, Porter, Cole
  4. Spring Can Really Hang You up the Most - Bette Midler, Landesman, Fran
  5. Night and Day - Bette Midler, Seeman, Roxanne
  6. The Girl Is on to You - Bette Midler, Johnstone, Jude
  7. From a Distance - Bette Midler, Gold, Julie
  8. Moonlight Dancing - Bette Midler, Warren, Diane
  9. Since You Stayed Here - Bette Midler, Larson, Peter
  10. All of a Sudden - Bette Midler, Archangel, Nathalie
  11. The Gift of Love - Bette Midler, Steinberg, Billy

Similar CDs

BeachesBette of RosesFor The Boys: Music From The Motion PictureBetteThe Divine Miss M
BeachesBette of RosesFor The Boys: Music From The Motion PictureBetteThe Divine Miss M

 

User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (23 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteCan easily be the best album from Bette Midler!Quote
Outstanding album; Great songs and great performances by Bette Midler; I believe it will go down history as a true classic.
June 12, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteSome people's lives - Bette MidlerQuote
A very good, but not commonly known album of Bette Midler. Certainly comparable in quality with The Rose. October 21, 2007

rating: 4 QuoteMidler The RoadQuote
There was an almost palpable sense of disappointment among Bette Midler hipper fans when she (inevitably) moved further and further away from her ironic/iconic Miss M persona and became (on record at least) another sometimes-sensitive-sometimes-maudlin balladeer. It's understandable really: campiness bespeaks irony bespeaks a keen critical intelligence behind the glitz and the sentiment. If you read some of the early reviews, you'd get the impression that her spot on Andrews Sisters take-offs and sincere (but too frenzied) girl group covers were ultimately to be taken as being somehow subversive, that her full frontal embrace of the tacky was some kind of musical expression of a tart Pop Art sensibility.

And maybe it was, but keep in mind: camp's embrace of the tacky, the vulgar and the schlocky has a conservative side as well. And over time, that sentimental attachment to to "trash with flash" can easily evolve into plain ole "trash"itself. By the time Bette was recording numbers like "Wind Beneath My Wings" and "From A Distance," the hipsters had already fled in droves. One writer even called the latter tune--despite its pacifistic overtones--"background music for the Gulf War." How did that come about? You could probably write a dissertation on the topic. But it had--at least in part--to do with the fact that the song did not outrightly condemn warfare but rather found it all, well, very unfortunate.

A line like "I can't comprehend, what all this fighting's for" (other versions have it as "what all this war is for") can be taken in various ways. Certainly, it could be interpreted as your basic, "war is senseless" statement. But I'm sure there were those who put a quite different spin on it, i.e. "I can't comprehend what this fighting's for--but there MUST be a good reason." And both interpretations allow for the addendum, "Of course, it's all a damn shame."

Of course, only songwriter Julie Gold knows what was really intended. The whole tune is plenty ambiguous, and much of it may have even been intentional. Do things only look beautiful and peaceful FROM A DISTANCE because we're really not seeing things clearly (overlooking the guns, war and disease as if they did NOT exist)? Or is transcending or overcoming all that really the secret "hope of every man," and ultimately possible. And is it disconcerting or somehow encouraging to be told that God IS watching us--but "from a distance? Is the song skeptical? Hopeful? Or a little of both?

If any singer could have captured the ambiguity it would have been Bette Midler--the younger, edgier Bette Midler anyway. By 1990, Midler was not about irony so much anymore, although she could be as tart tongued and (acceptably) outrageous as ever in live performance. And on this record, a bit of her old sharpness shines through on a classic number like Cole Porter's "Miss Otis Regrets," but that was still something an old joke by the last decade of the 20th century.

But I began this review by suggesting that some critics--and a good number of fans too--had actually misinterpreted what the divine one was up to from the outset. Actually, Bette was always about putting on a great show, and that was about it. Sure her embrace of all kinds of styles and genres had its ironic side, but it was probably a mistake to stress the implicit criticism involved in such an ultimately gentle spoof. Camp is first and formost loving embrace and celebraton of the vulgarities and excesses of popular culture. In Bette Midler's case, it was more an embrace than a critique of same. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

A middle aged mom by the time of this recording, Bette was not out to turn the music world on its head. Another reviewer intriguingly related a track like "Moonlight Dancing" to the earlier "Do You Wanna Dance?" although that reviewer plainly didn't care for the newer song. I happen to like the gentle Caribbean feel to that number and some of the others on the record ("One More Time Girls"), although I would agree that there's little on this record as sublimely seductive--or as truly imaginative--as "Do Ya Wanna Dance," a snaky, slow tempo recasting of a rock'n'roll standard. Nor does she attempt to sneak in anything as arty as a Brecht/Weill number as she was wont to do in the early days. It's not totlly unfair to note that, in some ways, she IS treading water here.

On the other hand, Midler's readings of classic ballads really did improve over the years. Perhaps it was precisely because she was no longer worried about coming off hip and knowing (while simultaneously being sincere and heartfelt--no mean feat to pull off, as those first records demonstrate). When she tackles a number like "He Was Too Good To Me," she takes it seriously. And she doesn't OVERinterpret. It's actually quite lovely. And Janis Ian's title song is delivered with simple sincerity and real dignity.

By the 90s, Bette Midler's audience knew they what they could expect: a little sentiment, a little sass, a few send-ups, but nothing truly over the top. And Midler knew how to deliver all that. It must have been something of a relief for her in fact to not have to worry so much about the approval of hip tastemakers.




August 8, 2007

rating: 5 QuoteClassic BetteQuote
Bette is by far one of my favorite singers. Tina Turner, Cher, and Bette have defined what it means to be not only a singer, but to also have a stage performance.

This CD is really well done. By favorite song is "He Was Too Good To Me/Since You Stayed Here." July 7, 2007

rating: 4 QuoteThe Serious Side Of BetteQuote
Bette Midler has such a wonderfully peaceful voice. Her sound is unique. Some of the songs on this cd are thought provoking and may be a little heavy if you are trying to stay light hearted. I find it to be one of her more serious cd's but still wonderfully Bette. May 13, 2007

More reviews at Amazon.com ...