Tonight At 8: 30
Download links and information about Tonight At 8: 30 by Carol Lawrence. This album was released in 1960 and it belongs to Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 31:06 minutes.
Artist: | Carol Lawrence |
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Release date: | 1960 |
Genre: | Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack |
Tracks: | 12 |
Duration: | 31:06 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Something's Coming | 2:47 |
2. | Sleepin' Bee | 3:03 |
3. | It's Good to Be Alive | 1:53 |
4. | Isn't It a Pity | 3:16 |
5. | Warm All Over | 2:23 |
6. | Do It Again | 2:57 |
7. | Tonight | 2:11 |
8. | You'll Never Get Away from Me | 2:34 |
9. | This Is All Very New to Me | 2:14 |
10. | Lazy Afternoon | 2:29 |
11. | It Never Was You | 2:47 |
12. | Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home | 2:32 |
Details
[Edit]Actress/singer Carol Lawrence played the part of Maria, the Juliet character in the updated, musicalized treatment of Romeo and Juliet that was West Side Story. Her debut solo album's title, Tonight at 8:30, signals that it is a collection of musical theater songs, and at the start, she takes the opportunity to take for her own a song she did not get to sing in West Side Story, "Something's Coming." At the beginning of the LP's second side, she sings one she did get to do in the show, "Tonight." Here, however, she is not singing as Maria, but as herself, employing her throbbing contralto in a more formal manner than when she was trying to embody the young Puerto Rican girl Maria. Elsewhere, she picks songs not so much for their familiarity as for their appropriateness to her vocal approach. Songs like "Sleepin' Bee" (from House of Flowers), "Do It Again" (from The French Doll), "You'll Never Get Away from Me" (from Gypsy), "It Never Was You" (from Knickerbocker Holiday), and "Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home" (from St. Louis Woman) may be at least semi-standards, especially to musical theater fans, but other quality selections such as "It's Good to Be Alive" (from New Girl in Town) and "This Is All Very New to Me" (from Plain and Fancy) may be unfamiliar to many. Lawrence uses all of them to express feeling and character. The album would work as an audition piece for her in getting new roles on Broadway, and it may revive interest in some songs that have been unjustly overlooked.