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Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs from the Stage

Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs from the Stage

Current price: $14.99
CartBuy Online
Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs from the Stage

Barnes and Noble

Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs from the Stage

Current price: $14.99
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Size: OS

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If at first glance you don't quite realize
Susan Boyle
's fourth album,
Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs from the Stage
, has a concept, it could be due to how
Boyle
so often draws from the songbook of the Great White Way. Here, she tackles songs from many different eras of Broadway, stretching all the way back to
Harold Arlen
's "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" and going all the way up to "This Is the Moment" from 1997's Jekyll & Hyde. Along the way,
ABBA
's "The Winner Takes it All" gets grandfathered in due to its inclusion on Mama Mia,
Donny Osmond
appears not once but twice,
Michael Crawford
-- the Phantom himself -- comes in to duet on "The Music of the Night," one of three
Andrew Lloyd-Webber
songs here. The style of music may be familiar for
, but the sound is slightly different, thanks in part to the singer switching from her longtime producer
Steve Mac
to
Richard "Biff" Stannard
, an X-Factor producer who retains
's stateliness while dialing back on the somnolence. Which isn't to say
Standing Ovation
is a rollicking little party album -- far from it.
never strays from her show-stopping-ballad wheelhouse, but the combination of a producer with a lighter touch and a focused concept help make
her easiest album to enjoy. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
If at first glance you don't quite realize
Susan Boyle
's fourth album,
Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs from the Stage
, has a concept, it could be due to how
Boyle
so often draws from the songbook of the Great White Way. Here, she tackles songs from many different eras of Broadway, stretching all the way back to
Harold Arlen
's "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" and going all the way up to "This Is the Moment" from 1997's Jekyll & Hyde. Along the way,
ABBA
's "The Winner Takes it All" gets grandfathered in due to its inclusion on Mama Mia,
Donny Osmond
appears not once but twice,
Michael Crawford
-- the Phantom himself -- comes in to duet on "The Music of the Night," one of three
Andrew Lloyd-Webber
songs here. The style of music may be familiar for
, but the sound is slightly different, thanks in part to the singer switching from her longtime producer
Steve Mac
to
Richard "Biff" Stannard
, an X-Factor producer who retains
's stateliness while dialing back on the somnolence. Which isn't to say
Standing Ovation
is a rollicking little party album -- far from it.
never strays from her show-stopping-ballad wheelhouse, but the combination of a producer with a lighter touch and a focused concept help make
her easiest album to enjoy. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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