Showing posts with label Chita Rivera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chita Rivera. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2015

Chita Rivera - And Now I Swing

Styles: Jazz, Stage & Screen
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:38
Size: 86,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:37)  1. I Won't Dance/Let Me Sing
(4:24)  2. Nowadays
(2:55)  3. Where Am I Going
(2:57)  4. Sweet Happy Life/Mas Que Nada
(3:52)  5. Love and Love Alone
(4:31)  6. Carousel
(4:20)  7. Not Exactly Paris
(2:51)  8. I Don't Remember You
(2:53)  9. More Than You Know
(2:53) 10. Circle of Friends
(3:20) 11. A Nightingale Sang in Berkely Square

As multi-talented Broadway stars go, Chita Rivera has always been a dancer first, then an actress and singer, which may help explain why her recorded output in a career dating back to the 1950s consists largely of appearances on original Broadway cast albums. She did make one solo album, And Now I Sing, for a tiny record label in the 1960s, so this second effort, called And Now I Swing, is something of a long-awaited sequel. The 76-year-old, who continues to tread the boards, often in a one-woman show performed in theaters and nightclubs, contends in a sleeve note that the album "reveals another side of my personality," and is her version of the sort of album Rosemary Clooney or Mel Tormé used to make. Along with the album title, one thus might expect a vocal jazz recording, but that isn't quite the case. Rivera has commissioned new arrangements of the songs, some of them done by Michael Croiter, the co-founder of the startup record company called Yellow Sound Label, and those charts, played by a small band, certainly are intended more for the cabaret than the stage. 

But there's still a lot of show music here, much of it written by the songwriting team of John Kander and Fred Ebb, in whose shows Chicago, The Rink, and Kiss of the Spider Woman Rivera has appeared on Broadway, not to mention "Where Am I Going," a song from Sweet Charity, in which she toured. Rivera is an expressive singer with a limited range who shows her age here and there, but she puts across the songs well, especially those that have more rhythm. She is really at home when the rhythm turns Latin, as it does in the second part of the medley "Sweet Happy Life/Mas Que Nada" and the gentle samba "More Than You Know." Kander and Ebb's "Love and Love Alone" is a largely unheard and highly characteristic ballad for them from The Visit, one of the shows they were working on when Ebb died and which Rivera has worked on since. It allows her to look forward as well as backward on an album that requires her to stand still and sing for once. ~ William Ruhlmann  http://www.allmusic.com/album/and-now-i-swing-mw0000826624

Monday, October 14, 2013

Chita Rivera - Chita! And Now I Sing!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 65:56
Size: 151.0 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:33] 1. Ten Cents A Dance
[3:11] 2. The Lady's In Love With You
[3:19] 3. Love, Look Away
[2:35] 4. An Occasional Man
[3:33] 5. Moanin' Low
[2:11] 6. Get Me To The Church On Time
[3:08] 7. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[3:24] 8. In Other Words
[2:41] 9. Small Fry
[2:51] 10. Old Devil Moon
[3:28] 11. Something I Dreamed Last Night
[2:28] 12. Let's Put Out The Lights And Go To Sleep
[2:05] 13. I Hear Music
[2:49] 14. You're Mine You
[2:43] 15. Hit The Road To Dreamland
[2:31] 16. The Nearness Of You
[1:57] 17. Easy To Remember
[2:19] 18. There Is Nothing To Say But Goodbye
[2:40] 19. Moon River
[2:15] 20. Isn't It Romantic
[2:49] 21. Falling In Love Again
[4:21] 22. It's Always You
[2:55] 23. Lonesome Road

Digitally remastered two-fer containing a pair of albums from the Tony Award winning actress and performer: Chita! (1962) and And Now I Sing! (1963). Presented in glorious stereo sound, these remastered recordings make their debut on CD. Both albums present an eclectic mix of showtunes and standards alongside more obscure material handpicked for the sessions. `Chita!' was recorded in London in October 1961 when Rivera was wowing audiences in the West End production of `Bye Bye Birdie'. The album features lavish orchestrations by renowned arranger Alyn Ainsworth while `And Now I Sing!' is a more intimate collection, recorded in New York with Latin producer and arranger Joe Cain. These early 1960s albums clearly demonstrate that Chita Rivera is as versatile a performer in the recording studio as on the Broadway and London stage.

Chita! And Now I Sing!