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Colored Lights: The Broadway Album

Colored Lights: The Broadway Album

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Artists: Debbie Gibson, Jule Styne, Charles Strouse, Michael John Lachiusa, Peter Allen, Claude-michel Schoenberg, John Harold Kander, George Gershwin, Richard Rodgers, William Finn, Ron Abel, John Krovoza, Ruth Bruegger, Steve Orich
Label: Varese Sarabande
Category: Music

List Price: $16.98
Buy New: $13.97
You Save: $3.01 (18%)



New (9) Used (9) from $4.89

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 34 reviews
Sales Rank: 160019

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 030206219524
EAN: 0030206219524
ASIN: B0000DJYNR

Release Date: November 4, 2003
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Let Me Entertain You
  • Blame it On the Summer Night
  • Raise the Roof!
  • I'd Rather Leave While I'm in Love
  • On My Own
  • Colored Lights
  • I'm the Greatest Star
  • Who Are You Now?
  • They All Laughed
  • Sex
  • Maybe This Time
  • I Enjoy Being a Girl - Debbie Gibson, Rodgers
  • Anytime (I Am There)

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Customer Reviews:   Read 29 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars MISTAKE IN THE CREDITS   June 23, 2008
Take her or leave her, i give her credit for going broadway, and then spreading these tunes, by these diverse group of artists, out into the stratosphere.
now, to my point: CAN SOMEBODY GET THESE SONG CREDITS RIGHT? RAISE THE ROOF IS FROM THE OFF-BROADWAY 'WILD PARTY' BY ANDREW LIPPA, NOT THE BROADWAY VERSION BY MICHAEL JOHN LACHIUSA.
I don't mind LaChiusa getting royalty money whatever the case, I am a fan of his version of the full length poem, not much of Lippa's, but people. Somebody get this righ and corrected.



3 out of 5 stars Deborah sings Broadway   November 13, 2007
As the title indicates, yes, Deborah Gibson did record an album of Broadway material; however, she wrote the song "Sex," which is from Skirts, a musical that Deborah is a composer and lyricist on. While Deborah was promoting this album as "bridging pop and Broadway," in the end, it's ultimately a Broadway recording. There's very little in the way of a "pop" sound on the album.

My favorite songs on the disc are: "Anytime (I Am There)" (from Elegies: A Song Cycle), "Raise the Roof!" (from The Wild Party), "They All Laughed" (from Shall We Dance?), "Sex," and "I'd Rather Leave While I'm in Love" (from The Boy From Oz). Personally, I would have loved to see Deborah promote "Raise the Roof!" as a single, and have issued a disc with some remixes of the song (everytime I hear "Raise The Roof!," I feel like it's screaming to have some dance mixes done of it).

Even though Colored Lights has a Broadway sound to it, it's not a bad album. However, it may not be an enjoyable listen for people who don't have much appreciation for musical theater.



2 out of 5 stars What's happened to Debbie?   April 15, 2005
 7 out of 11 found this review helpful

I am not a staunch Gibson fan like most of the drooling 5-star reviews here. But I loved her in the 80's and think her to be a talented singer-songwriter who puts modern pop moppets to shame. I thought it was awesome when she broke into Broadway and made a steady career of it.
Then I heard 'Colored Lights'.
I ask, Debbie!(sorry, DEBORAH), what has happened to you??
Like others here, I applaud her choice to include lesser-known songs. But in doing so, it really behoves her to SELL them as great songs, not rework them for her own interpretation. I felt like I was listening not to the pure-toned, crystal voice of our favourite teen idol, but someone doing a bad impersonation of her. There is hardly a single line she sings which isn't punctured by bad ennunciation, poor phrasing or a lack of respect for the intent of the composers.
There were no gravelly growls(meant to sound sexy, no doubt, but too overdone to succeed), breathy sighs, uneven tone, lacklustre dynamics, excessive scooping, wavery pitch and lack of top range in the Debbie Gibson I remember. But her voice on this album is such a mere shadow of its youthful self that she resorts to these irritating vocal bandaids to get through the song. Any track that had a 'big finish' invariably caused her to run out of steam long before she got there. A belter, Deb is not.
(and I know what I'm talking about, I'm a trained singer myself. If Deborah has a singing teacher, he/she should be shot).

This album was a huge disappointment for me. I love Broadway, but Deb fails terribly to give these songs the great renditions they deserve.
I should add, I have never had the fortune to see Deb sing live, so for all I know, maybe she COULD have done these songs justice had she avoided the pop slant. But this album shows neither the songs nor any talent she still has to advantage at all.

Listen to some Idina Menzel if you want a pop-feel voice that can also out-Belt them all.



5 out of 5 stars A Taste of Broadway   October 13, 2004
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

I've been a fan of her since God only knows. I know she's not just talented but she is very passionate of (her) music. Knowing that she moved herself into broadways, it's rather of a challenge for me to listen to the songs especially when I'm too familiar with her pop genre. But after a while, I'm used to it coz Debbie is still Debbie to me. She's not afraid of re-arranging the original song to her style, at least she knows what she's doing and again she's proven it. My most favourite track is "Colored Lights", it's light, cheerful, somewhat witty and, in a way, brings up my imagination of seeing her (and the casts) on stage performing the song. All in all, Debbie still has a class and style for us to share.


1 out of 5 stars OUCH!   August 23, 2004
 9 out of 17 found this review helpful

Deborah Gibson is a talented rock star. With a good musical director, she has proved herself to be a wonderful musical theatre performer. This album, however, is a very uneasy marriage of the two genres. She sings every showtune on the album as if it's a pop tune with horrendous bubble gum arrangements. I have seen Miss Gibson in two musicals and have heard her sing showtunes live on other occasions- she knows how to sing showtunes. On this album, however, she's trying to pander to her pop audience and in the process, she created an album that fails as a pop album and as a showtune album. I can only hope that Miss Gibson finds a better musical director the next time she decides to record showtunes.

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