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Guilty Pleasures

Barbra Streisand  Main Performer

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Track
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1 Come Tomorrow Gibb/Gibb/Gibb 5:01
2 Stranger in a Strange Land Gibb/Gibb/Gibb 4:50
3 Hideaway Gibb/Gibb 4:14
4 It's Up to You Gibb/Gibb 3:32
5 Night of My Life Gibb/Gibb 3:59
6 Above the Law Gibb/Gibb/Streisand 4:27
7 Without Your Love Gibb/Gibb 3:48
8 All the Children Gibb/Gibb/Gibb 5:14
9 Golden Dawn Gibb/Gibb/Gibb 4:40
10 (Our Love) Don't Throw It All Away Gibb/Weaver 4:01
11 Letting Go Gibb/Bitzer 3:53
12 Come Tomorrow [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb/Gibb  
13 Stranger in a Strange Land [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb/Gibb  
14 Hideaway [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb  
15 It's Up to You [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb  
16 Night of My Life [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb  
17 Above the Law [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb/Streisand  
18 Without Your Love [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb  
19 All the Children [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb/Gibb  
20 Golden Dawn [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Gibb/Gibb  
21 (Our Love) Don't Throw It All Away [PCM Stereo] Weaver/Gibb  
22 Letting Go [PCM Stereo] Gibb/Bitzer  
23 Above the Law [DVD] Streisand/Gibb/Gibb  
24 Hideaway [DVD] Gibb/Gibb  
25 Stranger in a Strange Land [DVD] Gibb/Gibb/Gibb  
26 Letting Go [DVD] Bitzer/Gibb  
27 Bonus Material [DVD][*]    
  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
Guilty Pleasures

Dual Disc [DualDisc]

Label: Columbia

Category: Pop/Rock

Guilty Pleasures

UPC: 827969499726

Release Date: 09/20/2005

Original Release Date: 09/20/2005

Number of Discs: 2

Tracks: [Come Tomorrow, Stranger in a Strange Land, Hideaway, It's Up to You, Night of My Life, Above the Law, Without Your Love, All the Children, Golden Dawn, (Our Love) Don't Throw It All Away, Letting Go, Come Tomorrow [PCM Stereo], Stranger in a Strange Land [PCM Stereo], Hideaway [PCM Stereo], It's Up to You [PCM Stereo], Night of My Life [PCM Stereo], Above the Law [PCM Stereo], Without Your Love [PCM Stereo], All the Children [PCM Stereo], Golden Dawn [PCM Stereo], (Our Love) Don't Throw It All Away [PCM Stereo], Letting Go [PCM Stereo], Above the Law [DVD], Hideaway [DVD], Stranger in a Strange Land [DVD], Letting Go [DVD], Bonus Material [DVD][*]]
Contributors:

Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Guilty Pleasures isn't simply the belated sequel to Guilty, Barbra Steisand's 1980 collaboration with Barry Gibb. It's the best mainstream pop album she's made since that multi-platinum, chart-topping hit. Of course, the competition isn't exactly stiff -- her pop albums since then have been deliberately safe, overly calculated adult contemporary affairs that only made records of standards like 1985's The Broadway Album shine all the brighter -- and it, like its predecessor, is a bit of an anomaly in Streisand's catalog, since it shares more musical similarities with Barry Gibb's work than Barbra's own, yet there's no denying that this is the most satisfying straight-up pop album she's cut since Guilty. In fact, apart from the crystal-clear, overly clean digital production that immediately pegs it as a 2005 release, Guilty Pleasures could be taken as a bunch of outtakes from the 1980 album. Gibb, who wrote (along with a handful of other collaborators) and produced (along with John Merchant) the entire album, along with playing guitar and providing backup vocals, not only doesn't attempt to update his signature sound, but proudly sticks to unfashionable pop styles like the early-'80s anthemic soft rock of "Stranger in a Strange Land," the mellow Latin-tinged "Hideaway," and the disco of "Night of My Life." Yet instead of sounding like the work of a duo stuck in the past, Guilty Pleasures sounds as if Gibb has constructed a set of 11 songs that play to his strengths as a pop craftsman and Streisand's strengths as an interpreter. This may be firmly within both of their comfort zones, but despite the record's decidedly low-key vibe, neither Barry nor Barbra sound lazy, nor do they sound like they have something to prove, as if they're consciously trying to live up to the standard their first collaboration set. They sound relaxed and quietly assured, which makes this album far more charming than it might initially appear to be. Not everything works -- some of the ballads toward the end of the record are a little too hazy and samey to catch hold -- but most of the album holds its own with Guilty, which means this is not only a pleasant surprise, but one of Barbra's best straight-up mainstream pop records, and an album that surely lives up to its title. [Guilty Pleasures was also released as a DualDisc, containing the entire album on CD on one side and a DVD on the other side. The DVD does not contain 5.1 Surround mixes -- the album is only presented in PCM stereo -- but it has an exclusive interview with Barbra and Barry, plus music videos for "Stranger in a Strange Land," "Hideaway," "Above the Law," and "Letting Go."] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

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