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Wonder In The World
Kelli O'Hara
Wonder In The World
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1

Kelli O'Hara, Wonder in the World

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Kelli O'Hara
Title: Wonder In The World
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Ghostlight
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 5/6/2008
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Traditional Jazz & Ragtime, Vocal Jazz, Oldies, Vocal Pop, Traditional Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 791558330922

Synopsis

Album Description
Kelli O'Hara, Wonder in the World

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CD Reviews

Range and Depth in a Strong Debut
Ms. Mazeppa | Chicago, IL | 05/08/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"First, there are no crappy Disney musical power ballads on this CD. I cannot thank Kelli O'Hara enough for that. This review goes from four stars to five for that. That's how grateful I am: It is the fifth star of gratitude.



I was going to give four stars because of a couple of less impressive song choices. Most notable is the old nearly-novelty-song pop hit, "Spooky". I can only assume she recorded this song for deeply personal reasons. Reasons that are lost on me. Similarly, on the first listen, the first track ("The Sun Went Out") was a bit of a disappointment--a mediocre pop song. I couldn't imagine why she chose it. So I googled the composer and, of course! he's her husband. So there ya go. Who knows? Maybe the guys who wrote "Spooky" are her uncles. To be fair, I should say, the tracks I didn't warm up to on the first listen have been growing on me. Except "Spooky".



Even so. No derivative Disney schmaltz here. So five stars it is.



Now anyone familiar with Kelli O'Hara knows about her commanding vocal range. What you'll find in this recording are more dimensions of range. Range in her talents: (Turns out she can write songs as well as perform them.) Range in her taste: To be sure, this is a real variety of music. The down side of that is that those who were hoping for a snootful of a particular version of Kelli O'Hara will only hear it on a couple of tracks. The up side is that those of us who wouldn't be as likely to buy a Kelli O'Hara pop recording will find out that she performs pop pretty well. Now for me, I would have been ga-ga over a whole album of Rogers and Hammerstein covers like the one she did of "I Have Dreamed" from The King and I. When I listen to that, I start getting the feeling that finally--finally--someone is here to take up the mantle once held by Mary Martin as America's foremost interpreter of Rogers and Hammerstein. (But then, I've really had a thing for Rogers and Hammerstein lately. I'm getting old.) O'Hara has a refined sense of how to navigate a Richard Rogers' melody line.



The title track, one of three written by Harry Connick, Jr., has a heavy dollop of Richard Rogers styling to it as well. Connick is omnipresent on this recording. He sings "Wonder in the World" in duet with O'Hara. And he provided the arrangements and orchestrations. For the most part, his arrangements are subtle and interesting. His orchestrations are, at turns, spare and remote (as with a poignant cover of Billy Joel's "And So it Goes"). And they are alternately lush and concentrated (as with O'Hara's own charming "I Love You The World"). Importantly, present though he is, Connick never overtakes O'Hara. He supports her skillfully and with obvious respect for her talent. She was lucky to have him.



O'Hara wrote two of the songs on this new recording. To my relief, they're good: Inventive melodies and fine lyrics on both of them. Both songs also have quite a bit of narrative drive in them that point to her immersion in musical theater. Not to mention a strong likely influence from the fairly genius Adam Guettel. (She also does a lovely version of Guettel's "Fable" from The Light in the Piazza. Even though Victoria Clark kind of owns that song.)



Most every song on this recording has something very special about it. Listening to "And I Love You So" is such a pure experience, it's like being in church. (Good church, I mean. Not scary church.) "All You Get is Me" is surprisingly earthy and sexy. "Slowly" is a sweet and hot samba that she sings with clarity and muscle that's rare in a true soprano. It reminds me of Christine Andreas, and that's a very good thing. "All the Way" shows off her ability to interpret a song (though I wish she had more of that focus on some earlier tracks). And then there's "Spooky"... but we shall never speak of it again.



This is a really fine debut recording, and I'm glad to strongly recommend it. I'm glad she recorded at least one Rogers and Hammerstein song. I'm glad she found a creative partner in Harry Connick, Jr. But mostly, of course, I'm just so glad she found fourteen songs that have nothing at all to do with a blank-eyed Disney princess of any stripe.



"
A lovely album from a rising star
Lostgirl | 05/22/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"In the past five years, Kelli O'Hara as emerged as one of the most talented stars of musical theater suggesting that we might finally be seeing a soprano heir to the thrones of Barbara Cook and Julie Andrews. After creating a few roles in musicals ranging from the brilliant and underrated (My Life With Albertine), to the dire (Dracula) Kelli's poignant portrayal of Clara Johnson in The Light in the Piazza made her a rising star and subsequent roles in The Pajama Game, South Pacific, and My Fair Lady, confirmed that status. I've been waiting for Kelli O'Hara's solo album since she announced that it was in the works back when she was doing The Pajama Game. Actually I've been hoping for it ever since I heard The Light in the Piazza OBCR. So does it live up to expectations? Yes and no. When it was announced that Harry Connick Jr. would be the producer I was worried that he would sort of take over and make it his project. That fear was unfounded. Yes, Kelli sings three of his songs, but she also includes one song penned by her husband, Greg Naughton ("The Sun Went Out"), one from her breakthrough musical ("Fable" from Piazza), one that her father requested ("I Have Dreamed"), two she wrote herself, as well as several covers. Of the Harry Connick Jr. songs, the title song "Wonder in the World" (which they sing as a duet) is the best. It's a pop ballad that has sort of a musical theater flavor. Another highlight is Kelli's original song "I Love You The World" as well as a cover of "And So It Goes". Kelli's rendition of Piazza's "Fable" isn't the same as the version Victoria Clark owned onstage. Rather it's a new arrangement by Connick Jr, that according to Kelli is how Clara (her character in the show) might hear the song: it's a pretty, soothing, lullaby. It lacks the raw emotion of the stage version but it's in keeping with the mellow feel of the album. Ditto for Kelli's other musical theater covers. It's disappointing that she chose not to use her gorgeous head voice more on songs like "I Have Dreamed" and "Make Someone Happy" but that may have lent an intensity that wasn't appropriate to an album that has more of an easy listening feel. Overall this is a lovely album that I enjoy listening to. It leaves me wanting more which I guess can be seen as both positive and negative. We hear her jazzy, mellow, pop sound on this album. Hopefully on her next she'll let us see another side of herself. Just a side note: the CD booklet (I use the term loosely) comes with the cover art, some song info, and another picture of Kelli. Considering Kelli is a beautiful woman more photos would have been nice. Considering Kelli involved a lot of people close to her in this album, liner notes wouldn't have been amiss. Seeing how the album features several original songs, lyrics would have been nice. That's a relatively minor quibble though. The music is the important thing to me."