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Charlotte Church
CD DetailsComposer: Danny Beckerman Composer: Gioachino Rossini Composer: Jacques Offenbach Composer: Giacomo Puccini Composer: George Frederick Handel Composer: John Hughes Composer: Stephen [Composer] Adams Composer: Jean-Paul-Gilles Martini Composer: George Gershwin Composer: Charles Gounod Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Composer: Irish Traditional Composer: Antonin Dvorak Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach Composer: Thomas [2] [Composer] Moore Composer: Welsh Traditional Composer: Johannes Brahms Conductor: Sîan Edwards Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra Performer: Charlotte Church Edition: Music CD CD Release Date: 1999-11-16 Music Label: Sony Soundtracks: - Just Wave Hello
- La Pastorella
- Barcarolle
- O Mio Babbino Caro
- Lascia Ch'io Pianga
- Guide Me, Oh Thou Great Redeemer
- The Holy City
- Plaisir D'Amour
- Summertime
- The Jewel Song
- Tell Me What Love Is
- She Moved Through The Fair
- Songs My Mother Taught Me
- If Thou Art Near
- The Last Rose of Summer
- Men of Harlech
- Lullaby
Music reviews of Charlotte ChurchMusic Review: More comments Rating: 3 Stars
It is funny how the Charlotte Church phenomenon has spawned a never ending debate at this site!After listening to this album I have a few comments to make, technical and otherwise (I am a singer myself and a great fan of sopranos so like to think I know a bit about what I'm talking about!). I strongly recommend this CD for people who do not have an appreciation for classical music. As a reviewer below mentioned, Charlotte certainly cannot be classified as an 'opera singer' (because she's never sung an operatic role in her life!) but she does belong in a category of her own. She has a pure voice that delights people unfamiliar with soprano voices and will hopefully lead them to experiment with more classical. The songs are beautiful that she sings, classics in the true sense of the word. However, I have noticed that the majority of people who think this album is "heaven sent" are not fans of classical music. In fact, most of them profess not to have liked classical at all before Charlotte came around. This is good in one sense: Charlotte has made a realm of music formerly reserved for a minority of people accessable to a larger majority. However, we must also note that these people who have never spent any time listening to sopranos or opera can not possibly be qualified to judge the quality of Charlotte's voice. Here's the mean (although realistic) part of this review, coming from a person who spends 90% of her day engaged in this incredible art form: Charlotte does not have a spectacular technique, and if you know something of what great voices are supposed to sound like, I think you will be disappointed. She has absolutely no sense of how an art song or an aria is supposed to sound (understandably of course, she is only in her early teens) and thus, if you were to compare her versions to those of seasoned singers you would see the startling difference. Technically speaking, her intonation is poor, and her support of high notes is shakey. Her attack of high notes is always extreme. Not once on this album did she succeed in building to a crescendo using soft tones as well as loud ones, and I never heard her produce a soft "angelic" tone in the high range, only loud overly belted out ones that have a tendency to become sharp. Her runs in the coloratura pieces are unclean, and she has no sense of vocal colour. I found her timbre surprisingly ordinary and this habit she has of swallowing her tongue to produce a 'dark' tone quality is not at all healthy (I know---I tried it for years and ended up having to take a break from singing to recover and come up with a safer and more natural vocal approach). Every song on this album sounds exactly the same, because she attacks all her notes in an identical manner. Marguerite from Gounod's Faust is not supposed to sound the same as Lauretta from Gianni Schicchi, and these characters should certainly not sound the same as Cherubino from Figaro! A poster below remarked that sopranos frequently sounds angry or sad, and thus unpleasant to the majority when they sing these songs. Well, he/she is right. These arias, particularly the Puccini and Gounod pieces, are highly dramatic songs written to be sung by an a singer of high calibre. They are not happy songs in the least (well, Marguerite's is, but the story turns rough very fast so even the light happy jewel song must be sung with a sense of foreboding doom) and if Charlotte makes them sound happy (which I believe she does) she is doing a serious disservice to the music. The only thing that makes a singer different from an instrumentalist is the fact that music written for singers has WORDS. It has drama, tragedy, comedy, etc. Charlotte doesn't seem to have any idea of the words she is singing, even in the pieces that have been translated (most unprofessional, by the way) into English. But all these criticisms are understandable. Charlotte is very young and I have never heard a singer of her age who is able to tackle the Jewel song or O mio babbino caro in a way that makes them worth listening to. Besides being damaging for the voice at such a young age, these songs require more than a pretty voice and the ability to execute high notes to make them sound good. If you have any knowledge of the history of opera, you will understand that when Monteverdi and the others decided to write down what opera should involve, they did not make space for people like Charlotte. Opera is an art that has extremely defined boundaries that are the product of time and space (history, in other words). Simply said, if you do not follow the rules, you are not a good opera singer. So while Charlotte has a pretty voice that is obviously appealing to a lot of people, the fact that she labels herself an "opera singer" is utterly preposterous. As I said earlier, she is something else. Appealing to some and not to others. I actually feel that perhaps my critique of her vocal technique was unjust simply because she is so young and obviously could not possibly achieve such control over her instrument. However, I feel they might also illustrate that if you are expecting to discover an operatic soprano in this recording, you are going to be very disappointed. If you are expecting to be charmed by a pretty voice and a celebrity personality, or know very little of classical music, you will probably enjoy this recording. I do find it offensive that Charlotte describes herself as an opera singer, however. Opera is about drama and performance, at the heart of which lies the aria. The aria is a climax that involves, for the audience, a final outburst of emotion. Composers were, for the most part, not very creative in this respect. Nearly all arias involve a climax of basic human emotions: anger or pain. Sometimes love, but then, at the root of the love there is almost always angst and pain :) Like it or not, an opera singer must have a voice that is "angry" sounding, or what many people here have described as "unpleasant." If you don't like such voices, that's perfectly fine, maybe Charlotte is an alternative for people who do not like opera. But please do not make the mistake of thinking you like opera simply because you like Charlotte Church.
More Charlotte Church free music reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Description of Charlotte ChurchAll products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed. To judge by the impassioned responses to her debut album Voice of an Angel, Charlotte Church has already set extraordinary expectations for any follow-up. After all, the vocal phenomenon from Cardiff, Wales, took up a place in The Guinness Book of Records as the youngest artist ever--at the tender age of 12--to have an album attaining No. 1 status on the classical charts. This self-titled second release will continue to delight the highly gifted singer's legions of fans, and also contains some surprises for them. Church here tries out classical repertory with Puccini's "O mio babbino caro" and the "Jewel Song"--her pure and high-flying voice showing an amazing agility. There is great warmth in a couple of sacred songs, as well as the traditional Irish "She Moved Through the Fair." Church's vocal color--almost like a boy soprano at times--brings something unique to Gershwin's "Summertime," while the first track--Danny Beckerman's Hallmark-ish "Just Wave Hello"--seems destined to become part of the music you can't avoid associating with the turn of the millennium. --Sarah Chin
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