DarkRoomSite - Epic Rock, Piano, Guitar, Xylophone Instruments |
|
|
 |  | |  |
| Roberto Alagna - The Christmas Album | 
enlarge
| Creators: Adolphe Adam, Roberto Alagna, Leroy Anderson, Irving Berlin, Gheorghe Dima, Franz Xaver Gruber, John Henry, Jr. Hopkins, William James Kirkpatrick, Henri Martinet, Adolph Arthur ("harpo") Marx, James Pierpont, Franz Schubert, Christmas Traditional, John Francis Wade, Chris Winter, Robin Smith, Hugh Burns, London Symphony Orchestra Label: EMI Classics Category: Music
List Price: $16.98 Buy New: $5.97 You Save: $11.01 (65%)
Buy New/Used from $5.97
Avg. Customer Rating:   (4 reviews) Sales Rank: 156162
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 724355701725 EAN: 0724355701725 ASIN: B00004YA0N
Release Date: November 21, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Tracks:
| | Gentil Pere Noel | | | Adeste Fideles (O Come, All Ye Faithful) | | | Christmas Medley: We Wish You A Merry Christmas/In Dulci Jubilo/I Saw Three Ships/We Three Kings - The Choir Of St. John's/The New London Children's Choir/The Longon Oratory School Chor/Smithills... | | | Petit Papa Noel | | | Silent Night! | | | O! Ce Veste Minunata! | | | Il Est Ne, Le Divin Enfant | | | Away In A Manger | | | Ave Maria | | | Sleigh Ride Medley: Jingle Bells/Deck The Halls/Sleigh Ride | | | Minuit, Chretiens! (Cantique De Noel/O Holy Night) | | | O Tannenbaum | | | The First Nowell | | | The Love Of A Child | | | Guardian Angels | | | Mille Cherubini In Coro | | | God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen | | | White Christmas |
|
| Customer Reviews:
  Wonderful December 15, 2007
If you want to hear a great Christmas Album this is it!!!! Popular Christmas... not sacred songs!! I like it A lot!! It's sound to easy to hear!!! And he's great!!!
  fantastic May 26, 2006 I am a big fan of opera and know Alagna's drawbacks as most do,but this is wonderful.The best christmas album i have ever heard.classical styling for o holy night and adeste fideles.a lighter sound for "for the love of a child" and white christmas.nice renditions of first noel and o tannebaum.Glorious Silent night in french english and german.A sensationally emotional Ave Maria not over burdened by forcing the voice.Gaurdian angels up there with Lanza's version.Best of all french classic Petit Papa Noel,stunning!!!
  Alagna is too good for this 'crossover' Christmas album March 18, 2001 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
I was hoping that Roberto Alagna, who is not only one of the finest lyric tenors of our time, but also one of the most intelligent and adventurous, would record a traditionally 'classical' Christmas album. This would be perhaps something along the lines of his 'Sacred Songs' CD, including many rarities instead of the same old carols everybody knows. Instead, we get the 'crossover' style Christmas album that has become popular with far too many opera singers. Alagna admittedly does include SOME carols outside the standard repertory, but not enough to be that interesting. Actually, I'm giving this disc 3 stars, not just 3, largely because Alagna's singing is (almost) enough to make up for its other deficiencies.In making this Christmas album, Alagna wanted a mix of classical and pop styles, similar to the old 'Hollywood' albums like those made by his idols Mario Lanza and French tenor Tino Rossi. The disc is a mixture of languages and cultures as well as musical styles. Alagna was born in France to Sicilian parents, and these two languages and Italian are his native tongues. Thanks to his marriage to the extraordinary Romanian soprano Angela Gheorghiu, he is now fluent in that language as well. His English is always clear and understandable, if heavily accented. His German still needs some work, but is by no means bad. Most of the selections are given multilingual renditions. In 'Silent Night' for example, the first verse is sung in French, the second in German, and the third in English, there are bits of Italian in 'Jingle Bells' and most of the French or Latin carols are repeated in English (a pity about the awful translation for 'Ave Maria'). It's a pity he includes no carols in Sicilian. My biggest problem with this album is the incredibly overdone and often too loud pop style arrangements (mostly by conductor Robin Smith), complete with not one but three children's choirs. The worst 'victim' of the arrangements is 'In dulce jubilo', turning a simple, angelic tune into a headbanger. Often while I was listening I wished that had been simply Alagna and his guitar, especially for his own composition 'Gentil Pere Noel', a simple, catchy, up-and-down-the-scale melody similar to 'Joy to the World' .The one song entirely free from this overdone style, and for this reason the best track on the CD, is the gorgeous, haunting Romanian carol, 'O ce veste minunata'. It is sung by Alagna softly and sweetly with complete simplicity and honesty, backed only by a very discreet choir which actually accompanies him instead of trying to overwhelming him. The documentation doesn't help much either. There are some cheerful notes from both Alagna and producer Jeff Jarratt, as well as lots of pictures of the very handsome tenor. But it is unforgivable that there are no texts or translations, only very brief notes about the origins about the various carols and an occasional synopsis. Translations may not be necessary for the familiar carols which he sings at least partially in English, but no matter how good his diction is, they ARE necessary for those selections entirely in other languages. Certainly we should have been given the words to 'Gentil Pere Noel'. And how many people outside Romania know 'O ce veste minunata', which isn't even given a synopsis? However, little of what is wrong with this disc is Alagna's fault. He obviously had a ball recording it - one can hear him grinning throughout virtually every track and his enthusiasm is infectious. He also has an almost childlike sincerity that is perfect for this repertory. A few picky moments aside, he's in very good voice, and he gets ample opportunity to show off some very impressive tenor high notes. Besides the aforementioned 'O ce veste minunata', there are a few other selections on the disc that are absolutely wonderful. First is a delightful medley of 'Jingle Bells', 'Deck The Halls' and 'Sleigh Ride', where Alagna, unlike the Three Tenors on THEIR Christmas album, actually knows what the word 'yoohoo' means. 'Guardian Angels' (written by Harpo Marx!) is to my ears a very JEWISH melody reminiscent of 'Kol Nidre', sung by Alagna with almost cantorial intensity. Indeed, he very nearly left me in tears! I also liked his heroic rendition of 'Adeste Fideles' . Alagna was a cabaret singer in his teens, and thus can sing overtly pop material more idiomatically than most opera singers. I was a bit taken aback by his John Denver-esque beginning of 'The Love of A Child' (not inappropriate as it sounds much like Denver's 'Annie's Song'), but the song grew on me as his true voice began to ring out. 'Petit Papa Noel' could have used another take due to a couple of iffy high notes, but he sings it as if to a child he loves - indeed, he HAS often sung it to his daughter as a lullaby. The one major misstep Alagna makes is with 'White Christmas', where he is obviously trying to imitate Bing Crosby and not doing a very good job of it. Note to certain critics - THIS is what Alagna sounds like when he croons. It is NOT what he sounds like when he sings an operatic pianissimo. Thank heaven. It took multiple hearings for me to like this disc as much as I did, and I suspect that many listeners, including opera lovers who otherwise admire Alagna, will not want to play it more than once.There is material with him coming out that I am FAR more interested in, notably a superb CD of French arias, a bel canto CD, and a complete Tosca with Gheorghiu. Still, Alagna (unlike a certain other gentleman) shows here what even pop material sounds like with a REAL voice, and hopefully he can get pop fans listening to it to graduate to real opera.
  An Alagna That We Have No Heard December 3, 2000 1 out of 6 found this review helpful
Well let's start with Alagna's darkened voice. I think Roberto may be developing Carreras-Itis. This is cartainly a different sounding Roberto Alagna that I have ever heard. His middle is muddy and his top doesn't ring like in the past. I like the selection of songs including a song he wrote for this album. Not all the arrangements are tradtional (some even being on the ridiculous side) and maybe this makes his efforts a little tainted. In the liner notes Roberto comments on his approach to some of the songs. He admits he tries to sound like a pop singer (i.e. White Christmas-what a butcher job). On other songs he was a tenor. Even that doesn't add up to much. Tenor fans and Alagna fans will be very disappointed with his singing. I was. This album will let him iclude himself as one of the elading tenors in the post Domingo/Pavarotti/ and Carreras era. His Sacred Aria album is much better than this one.
|
|
|
 Powered by Associate-O-Matic
|  | |
|