Жанр: Vocal, Pop, Jazz
Носитель: SACD
Год издания: 2002
Издатель: Columbia / Sony
Номер по каталогу: CS 86734
Аудиокодек: DSD64 2.0, DST64 5.1
Тип рипа: image (iso)
Продолжительность: 00:43:50
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Образ снят с помощью: Sony PlayStation 3 и утилиты sacd-ripper version 0.21
Релизёр:
Треклист:
01.Exactly Like You 03:19
02.La Vie En Rose 03:23
03.I’m Confessin’ (That I Love You) 04:46
04.You Can Depend On Me 03:00
05.What A Wonderful World 03:23
06.That’s My Home 03:05
07.A Kiss To Build A Dream On 03:25
08.I Wonder 03:48
09.Dream A Little Dream Of Me 03:52
10.You Can’t Lose A Broken Heart 03:14
11.That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day) 04:36
12.If We Never Meet Again 03:50
A Wonderful World
A Wonderful World is an album by Tony Bennett and k.d. lang, released in 2002. It later won the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album. In the United States, the album achieved gold record status and it reached top 40 in the UK.
All Music Review
Tony Bennett has sung with k.d. lang previously, notably on his MTV Unplugged album, and the two have meshed well together, largely because of lang’s willingness to sublimate herself to Bennett’s approach. The same thing can be said of the two on this full-length duet album (which also contains solos — Bennett is heard alone on “That’s My Dream,” lang on “A Kiss to Build a Dream On” and “That Lucky Old Sun [Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day]“). It isn’t just that lang joins in on material more suitable to Bennett’s style than to hers. This is an album on which the musicians are the members of Bennett’s backup group (plus strings), recorded in Bennett’s studio. But one never gets the sense that lang is restricted by the approach. She is sufficiently versatile, or chameleon-like, to sound like she’s enjoying herself, just as she did earlier in her career when she was working with producer Owen Bradley in Nashville and singing traditional country. At 76, Bennett sings with an easy, casual style, never seeming to work very hard for his effects, and lang, in her vocal prime, deliberately complements him, though she never seems quite as comfortable. Although there is no indication other than an uncredited painting (by Bennett, of course) inside the CD booklet, this is a tribute album to Louis Armstrong, who recorded these songs over the course of his long career. That doesn’t mean that there’s a trumpet to be heard anywhere on the disc or that either of the singers tries to re-create any aspect of Armstrong’s vocal style. It simply provides an organizing principle that the listener can notice or not. (Well, it’s hard not to notice during the title song, with Bennett’s references to “Satchmo” and “Pops.”) Like Armstrong, Bennett and lang are trying to make the music sound effortless and unstudied, and to a large extent they succeed.