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| Diva: The Singles Collection | 
enlarge | Artist: Sarah Brightman Label: Angel Records Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $8.39 You Save: $10.59 (56%)
New (51) Used (16) from $7.44
Avg. Customer Rating: 48 reviews Sales Rank: 1103
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 73671 UPC: 094637367124 EAN: 0094637367124 ASIN: B000HKDECE
Release Date: October 3, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Phantom of the Opera - Sarah Brightman, Lloyd Webber, Andre | | • | The Music of the Night - Sarah Brightman, Lloyd Webber, Andre | | • | Requiem/Pie Jesu - Sarah Brightman, Lloyd Webber, Andre | | • | Who Wants to Live Forever - Sarah Brightman, May, Brian [1] | | • | Tu Quieres Volver - Sarah Brightman, Baliardo, J. | | • | Just Show Me How to Love You - Sarah Brightman, Bembo, D. Baldan | | • | Deliver Me - Sarah Brightman, Marsh, J. | | • | Nella Fantasia - Sarah Brightman, Morricone, Ennio | | • | Scarborough Fair (Adapted from a Traditional) - Sarah Brightman, Peterson, Frank | | • | A Whiter Shade of Pale - Sarah Brightman, Brooker, Gary | | • | It's a Beautiful Day (Adapted from Puccini) - Sarah Brightman, Peterson, Frank | | • | What You Never Know - Sarah Brightman, Moccio, Stephan | | • | A Question of Honour - Sarah Brightman, Peterson, Frank | | • | Time to Say Goodbye (Con Te Partiro) - Sarah Brightman, Peterson, Frank |
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| Editorial Reviews:
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Sarah Brightman Photos More from Sarah Brightman  Time to Say Goodbye |  Classics |  Eden |  Diva: The Video Collection |  Live from Las Vegas |  La Luna (Live in Concert) |
Album Description Japanese pressing includes two bonus tracks, 'IL MIO CUORE VA' and 'SARAHBANDE'. EMI. 2006.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 43 more reviews...
I've got mixed emotions October 3, 2006 56 out of 71 found this review helpful
Bought mine this morning here in town, thinking it was something far more than I actually expected. Once the CD was finished, I wasn't satisfied. Even after browsing through the creative & original song-credit & image booklet, I'm not fully impressed. As a matter of fact, my 4-star rating should be 3.5. The main photos have been over-desaturated and toyed with. This is a no-no when a new fan wants to get a good idea of what an artist's previous album artwork looked like. So, of course, this spoils the original photos of Sarah, and I wish they hadn't retouched them at all. I'm a computer graphics artist and have never used the same bloody design concept on the entire project. The "Collage" photos are stunning, but of course, are much smaller. These are found at front & back of booklet. I've never seen some of them before and must say, they are gorgeous! The cover art (front of booklet & back of tray card) is gorgeous too. Paper (printing & color) quality is excellent. I was expecting a cheaper quality paper, but this paper is glossy like the US edition of the Harem CD. Here's a few more points as to why this is not a 5-star item:
Track 13 (A question of honour) ends up being the radio edit instead of the album version from the "Fly" CD. That is a major disappointment because fans whom have never heard the album version may or most likely have liked it better. I certainly do. Why put the "Single" edition on this collection of really "normal" songs? I'm clearly unhappy about this.The collection itself consists of lots of my least-favorite Sarah Brightman songs, although I bought it for collecting purposes. Sound quality is excellent, as in any recent Sarah Brightman recording.
Am not really impressed with the "limited time only" bonus video, which you can only access through the Official Sarah Brightman website (by following directions & answering a question). The bonus video is NOT downloadable and the quality is not all that great anyway. The song is a bit camp as well, and I have heard it before on a rare recording I've got. But it doesn't interest me much. I didn't even watch half of the video. Instead, I browsed through the CD booklet again, while only listening to the music from the bonus video. My partner and I agree the bonus video is campy and not very flattering for Sarah, although it was done at the beginning of her career.
Lots of beautiful songs could've & should've been released on the CD, therefore, making it an ultimate collection of most-loved Sarah Brightman hits singles. Unfortunately, it didn't meet all my expectations. As I've already got all these songs on various Sarah albums & compilations, I will not have to play the CD. It's only been in my discman once, just to see for sure whether or not track 13 was the radio (single edit) or not.Captain Nemo and Eden are two songs which should've been on this collection. I was disappointed when i saw the short list of tracks. Very easily, this collection could've been on 2 discs with so many super tracks, no? The really good tracks which this CD has (1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 11 and 14) are pretty and showcase Sarah's fantastic range. Personally, I adore track 8. Nella Fantasia has always been one of my favorite "newer" songs from Sarah. She beautiully brought it to life by adding such tender lyrics. Deliver me is deadly with the gospel choir. Have always loved this one. Pie Jesu is subtle and early in Sarah's career. Her voice was so pure & innocent back then, yet powerful enough to remember as a highlight track throughout her career.
Tracklist & Time: 01- Phantom of the Opera - 4:36 02- Music of the Night - 5:24 03- Pie Jesu - 3:56 04- Who Wants to Live Forever - 3:54 05- Tu Quieres Volver - 3:47 06- Just Show Me How to Love You - 3:58 07- Deliver Me 08- Nella Fantasia - 3:38 09- Scarborough Fair - 4:10 10- Whiter Shade of Pale - 3:38 11- It's a Beautiful Day - 3:56 12- What You Never Know - 3:24 13- A Question of Honour (Radio Edit) - 5:17 14- Time to Say Goodbye - 4:04
Other infos: - Booklet is 20 pages - Disc is gold with black roses graphics (where did we see gold Sarah Brightman discs before? - Inside of tray card features a negative version of a Harem CD photo - Photography: Simon Fowler, Ellen Von Unwerth, Esther Haase, Chiara Ferrau, Siew May Chin - Design & Art Direction: Stylorouge - Senior Director of Product Management: Tara Chiari
By buying this CD, you do support Sarah Brightman. I do recommend you buy it as a gift for new Sarah fans (your friends & family). Diehard fans will want this one, to add to their collections. It will go up in my library with the other Sarah Brightman music. I'm not sorry I bought it, but am happy to have something else from her in the meantime, while waiting for the next album to come out
Adoring the diva October 11, 2006 42 out of 48 found this review helpful
Sarah Brightman has changed as much as her music has, going from Broadway singer to the ultimate Christine Daae, and then to an astounding pop diva.
That said, people who have her other albums really shouldn't bother with "Diva: The Singles Collection," because they will already have this music. However, this is an outstanding place for newcomers -- who may be overwhelmed by the quantity of Brightman's music -- to get acquainted with both her best pop tunes and her earlier work on Broadway.
It opens with two of her best musical numbers, both from her starmaking turn as Christine. First the dark, dramatic "Phantom of the Opera" ("In sleep he sang to me/in dreams he came...") and the sensual "Music of the Night," which has her sweet voice accompanied by an orchestral sweep of strings and gentle brass.
Then the tone switches to "Pie Jesu," a traditional hymn that is raised to almost ecstatic levels by Brightman's soaring voice, and then again to her gentle classical-pop tunes like the soaring "Who Wants to Live Forever?" the childlike "Tu Quieres Volver," and the bittersweet, fragile "What You Never Know." There are brief forays into her electronic pop past, and some traditional tunes and covers of oldie acid tributes.
But there are also some real lungbusters on this album as well, where Brightman shows that her voice is not just sweet, but powerful. She soars through the swelling strings of "Just Show Me How to Love You" and the wonder-filled "Deliver Me," before wrapping things up with (unsurprisingly) the Andrew Bocelli duet "Time to Say Goodbye."
What can be criticized about the songs? Nothing, really -- these songs are all about Brightman at her best. The main flaw with "Diva" is perhaps that it should have been a double album, since some of her best and most prominent songs are missing. Where's the title tracks of "La Luna or "Eden," for example? Or her cover of Dido's "Here With Me"?
That said, the songs are pretty much all strong. The more rockin' style of "Question of Honour" makes it stick out like a sore thumb, but the others are delicate spins of classical instrumentation and operatic pop tunes. Some of the songs are covers -- Puccini, Procol Harum, and folk songs among them -- but Brightman fits into them very well.
I guess that's the advantage of having a magnificent voice. Brightman can do the grandstanding vocals from "Phantom of the Opera" well enough, but she excels at the sweet vocals of pop songs, and the soaring arias. What's remarkable is that her voice sounds as good in the recent songs as it does in the older ones.
"Diva: The Singles Collection" is not for longtime fans. Instead, it's a solid instroduction to people who haven't heard Brightman before, but want to hear the "angel of music" for themselves.
If you're interested in Sarah--This is the one to get! October 5, 2006 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
Whether you're a newcomer to Sarah or a bona-fide Saraholic, this is one compilation that really gives an excellent representation of the body of her work. Don't be fooled any of her ALW releases or the European Import of "The Best of 1990-2000": this album is the one to get if you're new to Sarah.
This collection covers the periods of her massive success in musical theatre with two selections from the global phenomenon "The Phantom of the Opera" as well as the stunning "Pie Jesu" piece. Selections from her breaththrouh album 'Time To Say Goodbye' are present, from her classical-crossover pioneering global hit in the title track to the two stirring covers offered in "Just Show Me How To Love You" and "Tu Quieres Volver". The more ambient, lush sound of 'Eden' is represented by the exquisite "Deliver Me", which, from Sarah's original adaptive genesis, has grown to be one of the most-performed pieces in the classical-crossover repertoire. Samples from 'La Luna' include the timeless, uplifting "A Whiter Shade of Pale," which is one of her most enduring classics, and lastly, her masterpiece 'Harem' is represented by "It's A Beautiful Day" (which is a crossover explosion, crossing a wonderful dance groove with the vocal from Puccini's "Un Bel Di" aria from his opera 'Madama Butterfy') and the moving "Free." Rounding the collection out is "A Question of Honour", one of her signature pieces and one of the first-ever successful crossover records, it crosses the "La Wally" aria with a dynamic, beat-driven mid-section, before returning again to Sarah's archaic operatic vocals.
The voice is clear as ever, the songs as pure as they were on release, and this collection is without a doubt the best offering available of a comprehensive look at the periods of Sarah's career. The tracklisting flows so smoothly it almost stands as an album itself, and in addition to stunning new artwork for the inlay, there are several collages that feauture beautiful photography, some of which has never been seen before.
While some may say this compilation leaves out masterpieces like "Harem" or "Captain Nemo" (or even her pioneer disco hit "I Lost My Heart To A Starship Trooper"), this pros outweigh the cons. This is a seamless, stirring, and satisfying collection of the best of Sarah Brightman, and is as enjoyable for the seasoned fan as for the interested newcomer.
Also available is the accompanying spectacular DVD, 'Sarah Brightman - Diva: The Video Collection.'
Satisfy your curiosity and pick up this collection from the "Angel of Music" to hear some of the best of a career that has crossed nearly three decades, torn down barriers, defied standards (and surpassed them), and taken music in general to new heights since 1978. This is Sarah Brightman, the original and only Voice of an Angel.
The Diva Hath Spoken October 4, 2006 17 out of 18 found this review helpful
Slipping quietly onto store shelves, "Diva:The Singles Collection" is a great companion piece to previous release "Classics". Sarah Brightman's talent has gone largely unignored by pop radio; however, her ethereal voice has gained her a huge following ( she sells out arenas...so somebody's gotta be listening!) worldwide. "The Singles Collection" is just that, a sort of "Greatest Hits/Best of/Most Loved" Brightman classics. Starting with "The Phantom of the Opera" and straight through till "Time To Say Goodbye", the songs here are a well appointed batch for those new to Sarah Brightman. Of course die-hards will always cry foul--some major "singles"--"Harem" and "Eden" come to mind but are missing off the track list. But never fear, the songs here are amazing.
Simply Sensational November 5, 2006 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
Sarah Brightman's name became synonymous with Andrew Lloyd Webber as his one-time wife and muse two decades ago, but it was her voice that made her a star and would have made her a star with or without Webber. Yes, she became famous for singing his tunes early on, but it was her talent and undying love for her art that made her the biggest-selling soprano of all time. With such masterpiece albums as Eden, La Luna, Harem, Requiem, Surrender and Timeless/Time To Say Goodbye under her belt, this collection is compiled of the greatest songs from those and one Lloyd Webber cast album, Phantom Of The Opera. Brightman already has a devoted following, and if you play this CD for anyone who is not familiar with the superiority of Sarah's vocals, you are sure to add that many more to her fanbase. It's hard to say where to begin on this collection because all fourteen tracks are proven winners. Whether it's the splendiferous opening track of "Phantom Of The Opera," which features her duet partner Steve Harley, to the sensational, spine-tingling closer of "Time To Say Goodbye (Con Te Partiro)," complimented by Andrea Bocelli, there's nothing not to like on this magnificent CD with its carefully chosen tracks. In between the opening and closing tracks, we are treated to phenomenal selections that include "Just Show Me How To Love You," "Deliver Me," "What You Never Know" and her gorgeous interpretations on such contemporary American fare as Simon & Garfunkel's "Scarborough Fair" to Procol Harem's 1967 masterpiece "A Whiter Shade Of Pale." Her Italian is perfection on "Nella Fantasia" while her unique interpretation of Queen's "Who Wants To Live Forever" will knock you out. If you already are familiar with these tracks and want to savor them on one splendid disc with gorgeous liner notes and photographs, this one's for you. If you're a visionary and would like to take this magnificent journey one step further, I suggest the DVD companion that contains 20 performances, which include the aforementioned plus superb performances like "Ave Maria," "Anytime, Anywhere," "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again" and several more. To hear Sarah Brightman is diva divine. To see and hear Sarah Brightman is simply supreme.
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