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A Wonderful World

A Wonderful World
Artists: Tony Bennett, K.d. Lang
Label: Sony
Category: Music

List Price: $11.98
Buy New: $10.99
You Save: $0.99 (8%)



Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 71 reviews
Sales Rank: 3175

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.5

MPN: 86734
UPC: 696998673427
EAN: 0696998673427
ASIN: B00006LFGF

Release Date: November 5, 2002
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Exactly Like You
  • La Vie En Rose
  • I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
  • You Can Depend On Me
  • What A Wonderful World
  • That's My Home
  • A Kiss To Build A Dream On
  • I Wonder
  • Dream A Little Dream Of Me
  • You Can't Lose A Broken Heart
  • That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day)
  • If We Never Meet Again

Similar Items:

  • Watershed
  • Hymns of the 49th Parallel
  • Shadowland
  • Live by Request
  • Playin' with My Friends: Bennett Sings the Blues

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Never mind the project's odd couple, "He's got a girlfriend; so does she" marketing shuck. This is a musical love affair in all its splendor. Produced by the seemingly chameleonic producer T Bone Burnett (who previously revived traditional bluegrass with spectacular success on O Brother, Where Art Thou?), the septuagenarian legend and his unlikely contemporary foil affectionately court a dozen songs from the Louis Armstrong repertoire with the warmth and natural grace that have been a deceptively effortless Bennett trademark for 50-plus years. The pair kick proceedings off with a playful, irony-free "Exactly Like You," then perform a tender vocal waltz across both the ages and the masterful, sympathetic orchestrations of the late Peter Matz, one of Bennett's longtime collaborators. But it's on the more melancholy performances, like "If We Never Meet Again," "I'm Confessin'," and the Armstrong perennials "Wonderful World" and "Lucky Old Sun," that the pair tap into something akin to timeless musical telepathy. Her own talents hardly in need of burnishing, lang invests the project with some gratifying new smokiness and is rewarded with a postgraduate course in saloon singing for the ages. It's an album that begs the best kind of question: When do we get an encore? --Jerry McCulley


Customer Reviews:   Read 66 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Wonderful   September 30, 2008
Pat Sanders
I love the duet concept records and I am a big k.d. Lang fan and when I heard this record was coming out I was very excited. A wonderful combination of voices singing classics, and the title track makes this record perfect. I was not a big Tony Bennett fan beforehand, but became one because of this.


5 out of 5 stars The Music Stays With Us   June 16, 2008
Stephanie DePue (Carolina Beach, NC USA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

"A Wonderful World,"(2002), a collection of duets by Tony Bennett and K.D. Lang, to songs inspired by the legendary New Orleans trumpeter Louis Armstrong, included "What a Wonderful World," "Exactly Like You," and "You Can Depend on Me." It was produced by the near-legendary T Bone Burnett, and includes trumpet work by Scott Hamilton. Of course, in 2002, the New York-born crooner was 76 years old; and his voice was not what it once was: but still, the embers of it, with its liquidity, smoothness, intonation and phrasing are enough to cast his light upon the world. Critic Howard Garwood wrote of him, "He has the face you'd want on your neighborhood bar owner - seamed, rumpled, and infinitely kind.... It's the face of a man who has seen life and triumphed, and who proclaims his joy of living through one of the best sets of pipes in the business."

And as for K.D. Lang's voice, 2002 found it still in top form. It's a thing of unearthly, silken beauty, a voice that comes along only once in a generation: in her case, from Alberta, Canada. I remember seeing her once on late night television, early in her career, wearing the silliest cowgirl outfit and hopping up and down, and wishing I could tell her that with her voice, she didn't need to hop, she could leave that to Herman's Hermits. Of course, I couldn't, but she seems to have figured it out, anyway.

The title song, as done by this pair, boasts all the colors of the rainbow. And some of the quieter ballads are still waters running deep, indeed. Just listen, to say, "La Vie En Rose," or "If We Never Meet Again."

I am lucky enough to have seen this pair present this repertory in person, at New York's Radio City Music Hall, in the most striking of circumstances, to wit: late September, 2001, about two weeks after the 9/11 destruction of the World Trade Center, and so much of downtown Manhattan. I already had my ticket, and anxiously watched the paper to see if they would keep the date: they did, and so did I. So did most of the ticket holders, I believe: there were empty seats, but not that many. Took ages to get through security, of course. You can believe that emotions ran high in that theater, on stage and in the audience: you could describe it as a love-in. And as for the music that came from that stage - it was simply blessed, and unforgettable. Lucky for all of us, the music, so evanescent in live performance, stays with us on this cd.



2 out of 5 stars Tony, it's over....   May 31, 2008
Pete K (NJ USA)
Listening to Bennett on this CD is like listening to post-1965 Sinatra. They're both just faking it, but, due to their iconic status, they get away with it. On this CD, Lang just plain carries Tony, which is the only reason I gave it 2 stars.

Take a pass on this one and the 'Duets' album; age has caught up with Bennett. Instead, give a listen to 'Fifty Years: The Artistry of Tony Bennett'. Hearing his early material will make the deterioration in Bennett's voice quite obvious and make you wonder if it's really the same vocalist.

Time marches on and it's cruel what it has done to Bennett's range, but, thankfully, the great work of his early and middle years is still around....



3 out of 5 stars not as good as expected   March 22, 2008
K. Cochran (Asheville NC)
I ordered this CD thinking it would be as good as the 49th Parallel Cd of hers-it is not-I was disappointed-did not care for Tony Bennett that much-


5 out of 5 stars What an absolute pleasure   January 23, 2008
M. Barnard (South Africa)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The voices of Tony and KD go so well together. What an absolute pleasure to listen to the songs on this CD!

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