This is billed as a live recording of Sarah Brightman, and at some level no doubt it is one. There are photos of Brightman under the footlights, and an accompanying DVD contains more details about the elaborate production that goes into a show of this kind. The final product, however, is nearly as much a result of studio work as with any of Brightman's studio releases. The end of each track captures a segment of audience applause, enthusiastic enough, and it is instructive that toward the end Brightman thanks the audience for its patience. Plainly not all was spontaneous. The live situation barely affects the features of Brightman's voice that have made her so successful, so distinctive, and so reviled in certain quarters. Indeed, she comes through in its full strangeness here, where there are limits on the subtlety of the instrumental accompaniment, which tends to alternate between hushed tones and full-on bombast. Like Brightman or not, her singing is far from monotonous. She's something like the female vocalists from ABBA, but with the advantage of vocal training, and if you step back from her voice and listen to it objectively, unimpeded by either fandom or animus, what you hear are weird sounds that just about nobody else could make. Listen to the opening track, Andrew Lloyd Webber's Pie Jesu, noting the almost crowing sound Brightman makes in her upper register on the lines beginning with 'Qui tollis,' and then again at the final little flourish. It's not a sound that would be pleasant on its own, but in the electronic environment within which Brightman works, even in a live situation, it stands out in the listener's mind. Brightman's choice of material is canny. It's noteworthy here for its pan-European base-covering -- Brightman sings in several languages, often within the course of the same number -- and its corresponding lack of influence from American pop. Brightman had a hand in several numbers, and her producer Frank Peterson shaped several others. This is Europop at its splashiest and most elaborate, inflected in a classical direction, and few people do that better or more distinctively than Sarah Brightman, 'live' or not.
Oct 17, 2016 Sarah Brightman Diva Rare In 1. 1, she made her West End musical theatre debut in Cats and met composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, whom she married.
Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 03:56 | ||
2 | Sarah Brightman / Martin Himmelsbach / Klaus Hirschburger / Matthias Meissner / Frank Peterson / Thomas Schwarz | 04:46 | |
3 | Grant Black / Sarah Brightman / Stefanie Kloss / Stefanie 'Pony' Kloß / Andreas 'Nowi' Nowak / Andreas Nowak / Johannes 'Hannes' Stolle / Johannes Stolle / Thomas 'Ratte' Stolle / Thomas Stolle | 05:00 | |
4 | 04:03 | ||
5 | Lucio Quarantotto / Francesco Sartori | 04:21 | |
6 | 04:10 | ||
7 | Sarah Brightman / Chiara Ferrau / Pietro Mascagni / Frank Peterson | 04:40 | |
8 | 04:48 | ||
9 | Michelangelo La Bionda / Sarah Brightman / Phil Cordell | 04:20 | |
10 | 05:33 | ||
11 | Sarah Brightman / Klaus Hirschburger / Frank Peterson | 06:20 | |
12 | Carsten Heusmann / Klaus Hirschburger / Frank Peterson | 04:36 | |
13 | Charles Hart / Richard Stilgoe / Andrew Lloyd Webber | 04:36 | |
14 | Frank Peterson / Lucio Quarantotto / Francesco Sartori | 04:35 | |
15 | 03:32 |