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| | Moonlight Bay: Songs as Is Songs as Was | | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Albany Records | | Release Date : | | 1999-02-09 | | Store Price : | | $17.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $17.98 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. On the Road to Mandalay 2. Moonlight Bay 3. Hello Ma Baby 4. Billy 5. Schoo Days 6. Mirandy 7. Poor Butterfly 8. Nobody's Lookin But de Owl an' de Moon 9. Asleep in the Deep 10. Beale Street Blues 11. Life's a Funny Proposition After All 12. I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles 13. Can't You Heah Me Callin', Caroline? 14. I Might Be Your Once-In-A-While 15. Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl 16. Man That Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo 17. Some Little Bug Is Going to Find You 18. Daisy Bell 19. Just A-Wearyin' for You 20. Little Annie Rooney 21. Widow Nolan's Goat 22. Forty-Five Minutes from Broadway 23. My Gal Sal 24. Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh!
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Turn Back the Calendar: Charming Stage & Parlor Songs Submitted on: 2009-05-08 |
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Mezzo-soprano Joan Morris and pianist William Bolcom have made a specialty of "period" songs. The 1974 Grammy-nominated AFTER THE BALL may well be their best known recording, but my own preference is for the 1999 MOONLIGHT BAY, SONGS AS IS AND SONGS AS WAS. While I continue to find Morris' voice a bit overstudied, it has a freer quality on this particular release, and I find the selections somewhat more pleasing.
The earliest selection is from 1881, and the time span ends at 1919 with several selections. Many of the songs are drawn from popular musical plays of the period--George M. Cohan is well-represented--and more than a few were famous on the Vaudeville circuit; all, however, were extremely popular in the front parlor, where parties of the day frequently drew expert pianists and singers to the piano. Particularly popular were a type of song commonly called "coon songs"--songs which were performed in the African-American dialect of the time, with "Hello, Ma Baby" a classic of its kind. While such songs are considered well beyond the pale by modern standards, Morris and her pianist husband William Bolcom perform them with such expertese that is possible to hear them with innocent ears and appreciate (if not actually approve) their charm.
I must confess a great personal dislike of the song "The Road to Mandalay," an overly-dramatic piece drawn from a poem by Rudyard Kipling, but this aside I find a host of almost forgotten yet still familar tunes, ranging from such tavern favorites as "Heaven Will Protect The Working Girl" and "My Gal Sal" to the elegant "Poor Butterfly" and the nostalgic "Little Annie Rooney" and "School Days." I must confess my own favorite is the 1892 "Daisy Bell," which is better known as "A Bicycle Built for Two." But regardless of the title, each piece is beautifully performed.
The combination of a single voice and single piano, particularly when both are so formal in nature and when each selection is stylistically similar--well, it becomes somewhat wearing when heard at length. Charming as the recording is, it is perhaps best heard in small doses. Even so, recommended.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer |
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A great addition Submitted on: 2005-08-19 |
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| Joan Morris and her husband, composer William Bolcom, take another trip back to the early days of Broadway musicals and earlier. In the same groove as their earlier albums, After the Ball and Vaudeville. A great addition to your collection if you love this kind of music, performed the way it was meant to be heard. |
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Joan Morris and William Bolcom return to their roots Submitted on: 1999-03-13 |
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| Back in 1974, mezzo-soprano Joan Morris, and her husband, William Bolcom, recorded "After the Ball," a collection of turn-of-the-century popular songs, some of which hadn't been recorded since the early part of the century, if ever. Now, after bringing their talents to the music of Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hart, and most recently, Vincent Youmans, they return to the turn of the century with this delightful collection. Note: no compromises were made with the original turn-of-the-century lyrics; this CD is not for those obsessed with "political correctness." But then, those obsessed with political correctness generally don't have much taste, anyway. |
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