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Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook

Bette Midler  Main Performer

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Track
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1 Fever Cooley/Davenport 3:38
2 Alright, Okay, You Win Wyche/Watts 2:48
3 I Love Being Here with You Loesser/Lee/Schluge 2:46
4 Happiness Is a Thing Called Joe [From "Cabin in the Sky"] Harburg/Arlen 4:54
5 Is That All There Is? Leiber/Stoller 4:26
6 I'm a Woman Leiber/Stoller 2:28
7 He's a Tramp [From Lady and the Tramp (1955)] Burke/Lee 2:39
8 The Folks Who Live on the Hill Hammerstein/Kern 3:07
9 Big Spender [From Sweet Charity] Coleman/Fields 2:18
10 Mr. Wonderful [From Mr. Wonderful] Weiss/Holofeener/Bo 4:32
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Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook

Dual Disc [DualDisc]

Label: Columbia

Category: Pop/Rock

Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook

UPC: 827969775820

Release Date: 10/25/2005

Original Release Date: 10/25/2005

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Fever, Alright, Okay, You Win, I Love Being Here with You, Happiness Is a Thing Called Joe [From "Cabin in the Sky"], Is That All There Is?, I'm a Woman, He's a Tramp [From Lady and the Tramp (1955)], The Folks Who Live on the Hill, Big Spender [From Sweet Charity], Mr. Wonderful [From Mr. Wonderful]]
Contributors:

John Bush

Bette Midler's first songbook album focused on songs popularized by Rosemary Clooney, and it became a surprising hit after being latched onto by vocal fans as well as adult contemporary audiences. Befitting her image, the record wasn't a reverent tribute; Midler and musical partner Barry Manilow modernized the arrangements of Clooney's bigger hits, recasting "Come On-A My House" as a swing/hip-hop number and reimagining "This Ole House" as a bluegrass song. Midler's 2005 tribute to Peggy Lee is a more conservative affair, perhaps due to Lee's larger status in the realm of American song as compared to Clooney. That's not to say it's a disappointment; in fact, it's a talented, affectionate record that may not add much to the cause but is a solid tribute. Certainly Lee's image as the bemused, world-wise, sometimes sensual siren fits well with Midler's, and both have exhibited an excellent rhythmic sense. And the material helps Midler flaunt as only she knows how, from "Fever" to "Big Spender" to "I'm a Woman." While all of these contribute nothing more or less than Lee's versions, Midler does noticeably improve "Is That All There Is?," one of the most eccentric songs in Lee's repertoire. Her studied boredom in the verses is good enough, but when she reaches the uninhibited chorus, she reveals a marvel of catlike glee. The arrangements, most of them by Manilow, are very good, although they reveal a close knowledge of the originals that contributes to the reverence on display. ~ John Bush, Rovi

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