Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Sarah Brightman Pictures
Artist:
Sarah Brightman
Origin:
United Kingdom, Berkhamsted - Hertfordshire - EnglandUnited Kingdom
Born date:
August 14, 1960
Sarah Brightman Album: «La Luna»
Sarah Brightman Album: «La Luna» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.4 of 5)
  • Title:La Luna
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
  • Label:
  • UPC:
Customers rating
Track listing
Review - Product Description
Asian special edition of the Broadway diva's hit 2000 album includes one hidden bonus track, 'Moon River' & a bonus Region 3 NTSC DVD featuring 'A Whiter Shade Of Pale' & highlights from the 'La Luna' concert. Standard jewelcase & slimline jewelcase house
Review - Amazon.com
Superstar crossover vocalist Sarah Brightman greets the new millennium with an even surer, bolder sense of her unique musical niche than that evident from 1999's Eden. Like Eden, La Luna is a concept album only in a vaguely free-associative sense. The selection of material here touches on images of the moon that reinforce its ambiguity as a force known to draw together "the lunatic, the lover, and the poet" (Brightman's photo shoots for the album do seem to suggest a sort of Titania-like figure out of a New Age Midsummer Night's Dream). And it's a stylistic as well as thematic voyage, coursing from such contemporary sounds as synth pop (on "This Love") through vintage jazz standards (Billie Holiday's atmospheric and haunting "Gloomy Sunday") to high opera for the title track (a version of the sublime "Song of the Moon" from Dvorák's fairy-tale opera Rusalka), and drawing elsewhere on the gorgeously sinuous melodies of Bach, Handel, and Rachmaninov--one song, "Figlio Perduto," even adapts the slow movement of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony. Throughout, producer Frank Peterson swathes Brightman's shiny small voice in luxuriant fabrics of sound. Detractors will lament the resulting sameness of tone--no matter what the style involved--but Brightman's focus on spinning an ethereal spell never gets eclipsed. This domestic release includes three tracks not available on the import version and has a special treat hidden in the final track as a bonus. --Thomas May
Customer review
56 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
- Angel from the moon

Congrats Sarah! I've been taken to the moon & back. The long awaited Brightman disc has arrived. The songs are ranging from her amazing classical renditions to her angelic versions of pop hits. Sarah is dreamy & laid back in her new cd "La Luna".Don't let the idea of Sarah brightman singing cover versions spoil your likes for her.

The first track "La Lune" brings the hair up on my neck just by listening to the keyboard intro. The 2nd track, "Winter in july", is one of Sarah's "pop married to classic" tracks. The lyrics are heartfelt & reflect her feelings about life. "Scarborough fair" is light and dreamy and "A whiter shade of pale" is operatic and revisited "à la Sarah". Beethoven's "Figlio Perduto" is my 2nd fav. track, I love how Sarah rearranged it to fit her voice. "How Fair this place" is pretty, but too short. The tracks continue into one another, like a multi-mood story of music. I find that tracks like "Here with me" and "Hijo De La Luna" are different tunes all together because "Hijo De La Luna" has a ballroom sound to it, with Spanish lyrics. It is sung à la Kate Bush. "Here with me" is more rock or "Dive-ish". "Gloomy Sunday" tones down the pace resulting in a bluesey, rainy-day track. Keeping with the moon theme, the title track "La Luna", is absolutely amazing. Sarah builds suspense in every breath of this track. Her voice soars as the song reaches its climax, wowing me every time. Unfortunately, the orchestra slightly drowns Sarah out at the end. The disc also features a hidden track. It is a breathy, up close & personal version of "Moon River". Sarah knows how to catch the attention of her fans.

The photos in "La Luna" are breath-taking, right down to the album cover.I dig the space-age lettering of her name on the cover. In comparison, Eden took on a heavier classical flavour, as so with "Time to say good-bye". Nevertheless, "La Luna" balances Sarah's career between "Dive" back in '93 to the present. Don't consider her slowing down even though the thought of a greatest hits double set sounds quite interesting.

I've had the golden opportunity to see Sarah in Montreal at the Molson Center on september 18 for her "La Luna" tour. Describe it, you say, Well, I have one word......EXTRAORDINARY! To hear her is one thing, but to see this woman perform was simply amazing. Definitely worth the money! Sing on Sarah! Hers is definitely one of the glorious voices.

Customer review
32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
- Soft, Sensual and Powerful!

When listening to music I want to feel its power. I made the mistake of listening first to the title track La Luna on Sarah BrightmanÕs new cd. Is it just me, or does she continue to get better with each new adventure? Although the other songs are also wonderful, IÕm still having a problem even getting to them.

At a time when pop, hip hop and rap singers are promoting themselves as divas, Sarah Brightman not so quietly lets her voice speak for itself. SheÕs a diva all right... and not just because of her exhilarating arias. She continues to be an inspiration to my own work.

If you like SarahÕs near perfect timing, pronunciation, range and power, youÕll love this cd.

Cliff Hollenbeck

Customer review
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
- Return to Eden with a little more Theme Thrown In

Sarah Brightman's newest CD offers more of the same ecclectic approach to combining opera and pop music side by side with electronic music as well as orchestras. The result is haunting and deeply personal. LA LUNA is not a departure for Sarah, but rather a continuation of the style she honed by the time EDEN was released. Prior to that album she had TIME TO SAY GOODBYE (a largely classical album save the cover of Queen's "Who Wants to Live Forever) and DIVE (almost entirely quirky pop). EDEN marked the first album to combine the two genres -- she did classical pieces, covers done classically, and pop tunes sung in the same style with choirs and various instruments. LA LUNA finds Sarah doing everything from Handel and Beethoven, even the folk song "Scarborough Fair", and a cover of "Here With Me" which was written and performed by DIDO on her 1999 release. So Sarah covers several centuries, and makes it sound seamless. Is it better than EDEN? Yes and no. Yes, the material is much more even (EDEN went from "Dust in the Wind" into a classical aria). Here the elements transition smoothely. But EDEN was a rare blend of the dramatic, and LA LUNA does not always offer you the highs and lows of that previous release. But it's a solid piece of work. If you are a fan...you'll love this. If you're new to Sarah...it's a great album. So all in all...it's a spell worth casting! Stand out track for me is "He Doesn't See Me", but from all I've seen everybody will pick their personal favorite.

Customer review
27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
- The Moon Is High. . .

I love the intro and how it blends so perfectly into the trip-hoppy Winter In July, which happens to be my favorite song, beside La Luna of course. Her voice is so angelic and sweet that you can't help but invision an angel as you listen. This is truly a beautiful work of art. By having a strange fascination with the moon I was shocked to see the subject being that. It only heightened my anticipation as I waited impatiently for this incredible cd to come out. I bought it the day it was released and have been enthralled ever since. My first introduction to Sarah was by Eden, and just as I thought that there was no way that she could possibly conquer something better than that, what do you know, she does! (At least in my opinion.)

She's working with one of the greatest producers, Frank Peterson, (former member of Enigma), and with the ongoing process of reinventing herself you can't help but love her style of music, no matter what that style might be. One second she's singing New Age (Scarborough Fair), the next a soft, tranquil tune (He Doesn't See Me), surprising you with jazz (Gloomy Sunday), and then warming your heart with more highpitched ballads such as Figlio Perduto, How Fair This Place, and La Luna. This cd is definitely not as operatic as Eden and Time To Say Goodbye, but it moreso ventures onto the pop criteria, in a mellow sort of way.

Trust me. Once you own La Luna you'll soon be thanking me. (Hopefully!)

I hope this review helped. Did it?

Customer review
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
- Sarah Brightman Outdoeses herself

Sarah Brightman's new album La Luna, even outdoeses EDen. It is a spectacular album that combines pop. classical and jazz. truly remarkable. What else could you expect from her. This album is reccomended to all!