Search - Tony Bennett :: Life Is Beautiful

Life Is Beautiful
Tony Bennett
Life Is Beautiful
Genres: Jazz, Special Interest, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Reissue of classic 1975 release available from Concord Records. Decades later, it sounds fresher than many of his late '60s/early '70s attempts to be contemporary. Features a 12-minute bonus medley of Cole Porter songs....  more »

     
1

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Tony Bennett
Title: Life Is Beautiful
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Concord Records
Release Date: 6/10/2003
Genres: Jazz, Special Interest, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Vocal Jazz, Nostalgia, Easy Listening, Oldies, Vocal Pop, Classic Vocalists, Traditional Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 013431219521

Synopsis

Album Description
Reissue of classic 1975 release available from Concord Records. Decades later, it sounds fresher than many of his late '60s/early '70s attempts to be contemporary. Features a 12-minute bonus medley of Cole Porter songs. 2003.

Similarly Requested CDs

 

CD Reviews

LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL WITH TONY'S SINGING!
Giovanni | Chicago, IL | 10/24/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The problem with Tony Bennett's recordings is Tony himself owns
the rights to them all, and until he decides for them to be released,
we eager Bennett fans will just have to wait. While we thoroughly
enjoy seeing Tony still doing the wonderful new recordings he's given
us over the last decade or so (the Here's To The Ladies album alone
has given me more enjoyment than any ten CD's in my collection) it's
recordings like these, (and the early to late 60's Columbia LPs) that
we desire, the stuff that MADE Tony the icon he is today. This album was
made during Tony's short-lived tenure away from the Columbia fray where
he did all those wonderful albums. Originally on the IMPROV label of Bennett's
own devising, Tony brought long time arranger/conductor Torrie Zito along
for the ride when he did LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL, a collection of seldom covered
beauties mixed in with a few evergreens, by some of the best composers ever.
(Ellington, Berlin, Rodgers & Hart, and Porter, to name a few)
There isn't a bad song in the bunch here, and how could there be,
with the best male exponent of any song at the microphone? From the beginning,
LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL, written by Tony's old neighbor in California, Fred Astaire (and
Tommy Wolf) is an exclamation of the simple pleasures in life and love. Someone
once said life is a flower, love is honey. If that's true, Bennett makes the case of being
the bee during this quaint number. ALL MINE, with its latin -tinged torchiness, should
have been a standard by now. It possesses all the qualities needed; strong message,
infectious melody and haunting refrain, all executed by Tony flawlessly. BRIDGES,
written entirely by longtime Bennett friend and associate Gene Lees, shows Gene's
perfect qualities as a writer (he'd penned lyrics to such classics like the timeless
Esta Tarde Vi Llover (Yesterday I Heard The Rain) for Tony years earlier) Tony
finishes the song off with a nice high note. The Duke Ellington masterpiece, REFLECTIONS,
finds Tony in a wistful mood and Zito's orchestration dreamily sends the song along
and tells the story beautifully. THIS FUNNY WORLD, written by the immortal team of
Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, tells the bitter truth all too well; Tony's sentimental reading
here is sure to break your heart. One of Tony's favorite songs to sing was included here;
the magnificent LOST IN THE STARS by Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson. Tony
had been singing this one since his early days at Columbia, but perhaps after all those
years he finally realized the definitive performance in this very touching version.
There's a few swingers to off-set the lovely aformentioned ballads; EXPERIMENT by Cole Porter,
is a short and to the point song but well worth the listen, as anything by Porter is.
Tony's version of AS TIME GOES BY brings a big band orchestration with it, and Zito's
charts are particularly imaginitive here, with Tony swinging his way all through the song.
But the anchor is what makes this ship really sail, meaning the last song of the album,
(as it was released back in the 70's, anyway) THERE'LL BE SOME CHANGES MADE.
Originally a big band number back in the 40's, Tony revisits and updates this one with
Torrie Zito in their finest hour. An absolute lights-out performance with a great tag on the
ending. Not to be missed. A nice touch was adding the Cole Porter medley as a bonus track
here (even though it's incomplete; the original had Tony starting and ending with WHAT IS
THIS THING CALLED LOVE?; here he only starts with it and the medley ends with GET OUT OF TOWN,
but no complaints here!) Bennett fans will be glad to see this one released in this complete
manner, as so many of these songs have been smattered across various bootlegs of poor
quality over the years. And until we can get more of those 60's Columbia LPs out on CD,
this will have to tide us over. Not a bad deal after all."