Original Soundtrack - Mona Lisa Smile

4




Album Details

Title: Mona Lisa Smile
Artist: Original Soundtrack
Release Date: 11/25/2003
Re-Released On: 12/5/2003
Label: Epic , Sony Music Distribution
Album Type(s): soundtrack
UPCs: 5099751503620, 827969073728
Genre: Soundtrack
Style: Soundtracks
Total Copies: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Mona Lisa :: Seal
  2. You Belong to Me :: Tori Amos
  3. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered :: Celine Dion
  4. The Heart of Every Girl :: Elton John
  5. Santa Baby :: Macy Gray
  6. Murder He Says :: Tori Amos
  7. Besame Mucho :: Chris Isaak
  8. Secret Love :: Mandy Moore
  9. What'll I Do :: Alison Krauss
  10. Istanbul (Not Constantinople) :: Trevor Horn Orchestra
  11. Sh Boom (Life Could Be a Dream) :: Trevor Horn Orchestra
  12. I'm Beginning to See the Light :: Kelly Rowland
  13. I've Got the World on a String :: Lisa Stansfield
  14. Smile :: Barbra Streisand
  15. Suite :: Rachel Portman

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDEpic 90737
2003CDSony Music Distribution5150362

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

The soundtrack to Mike Newell's Mona Lisa Smile, a Dead Poets' Society-like film set at a women's college in the '50s, features a wide array of contemporary artists covering standards from that decade. The soundtrack takes the utmost care to sound like an artifact from the early '50s, which is refreshing and frustrating in equal measure. Seal's "Mona Lisa" and Macy Gray's "Santa Baby" come so close to sounding like the versions popularized by Nat King Cole and Eartha Kitt, respectively, that it almost seems pointless to have recorded the new renditions in the first place. Yet these songs are better than Tori Amos' overly theatrical readings of "You Belong to Me" and "Murder He Says," which go beyond amusingly quirky to annoyingly quirky. Likewise, the Trevor Horn Orchestra's "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" and "Sh Boom," as well as Elton John's "The Heart of Every Girl" (the album's only original song) are a little too cutesy for their own good. Mona Lisa Smile's best moments come from performers who don't try to emulate icons from the past or treat the songs like jokes: Chris Isaak's "Besame Mucho" is just as swoony as the versions that made it a standard during the '50s, but doesn't imitate any particular rendition; similarly, Kelly Rowland's "I'm Beginning to See the Light" is playfully flirty enough to sound like it could've been a hit in that era without trying too hard to emulate the styles of the time. Celine Dion's "Bewitched" may be the album's single best track, a lovely fusion of her own style and the vocal pop stylings of the film's era. Dion's sister diva Barbra Streisand doesn't fare quite as well with her version of "Smile"; her voice sounds as good as ever, but the song's languid pacing and the gooey strings make it sound syrupy instead of affecting. Even though the soundtrack is occasionally contrived, Mona Lisa Smile still has enough charming moments to appeal to fans of the film as well as fans of the artists on the soundtrack. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Barbra StreisandProducer
Dan GautreauPro-Tools
Dave ReitzasEngineer, Mixing
David Daoud ColemanArt Direction
Denise LuisoExecutive in Charge of Music
Elaine Goldsmith-ThomasSoundtrack Executive Producer
Glen BrumanSoundtrack Executive Producer
Humberto GaticaVocal Engineer
Jeremy LubbockArranger, Conductor
Lia VollackSoundtrack Executive Producer
Randall PosterSoundtrack Executive Producer
Robert OrtonEngineer
Trevor HornLeader, Producer, Compilation Producer
Vlado MellerMastering

Member Reviews

Scott C. (scotso) wrote on 4/16/2008...

some really stellar versions, of old classics.