Sarah Brightman - La Luna (Live in Concert)

DVD : Sarah Brightman - La Luna (Live in Concert)

Sarah Brightman - La Luna (Live in Concert)

starring: Gillian McDonagh, Matthew Scrivener (II), Josh Groban, Gunther Laudahn, Brett Morgan
directed by: Bruce Gowers



 : Sarah Brightman - La Luna (Live in Concert)
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0724347789496
Format: Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Live, NTSC
Label: Angel Records
Manufacturer: Angel Records
Number Of Discs: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Angel Records
Release Date: 2001-06-05
Studio: Angel Records
Theatrical Release Date: 2001-03-13



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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The best concert of Sarah Brightman
Sarah Brightman - La Luna (Live in Concert)

I think this is the best concert of Sarah Brightman, a very magic stage and effects. Very beautifull when Sarah fly. Very recomendable



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - La Luna
What can I say about Sarah Brightman? Has she ever sang a bad song? She has a very soft speaking voice, but when she sings she can hit the highest of octaves and her smile can melt even the hardest of hearts.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - La Luna Concert
I have enjoyed Sarah Brightman's voice since Phantom of the Opera.I really appreciated watching and listening at the same time with the La Luna Concert. The lady is talented in my estimation and I enjoyed all of her selections from that concert. She put on a very entertaining program that held my attention. One could get very picky and take exception with different aspects of the program, but why? None of those technicalities take away from her ability to sing and entertain. I look forward to more of her programs.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Pleasant Voice, Pleasant Concert
Of the several DVDs I have watched of Brightman's I think this one has the best collection of songs. In all there 26 songs giving up an hour-and-a-half of her singing. The visuals are okay, but I've seen better (her Las Vegas disc, for example). I thought the production was excellent, although there is a lot blue in here. That's the dominant color. However, I bought this for her voice, not worrying about the visuals.

This concert offered a few songs I hadn't heard her do before, and ones I really liked such as "He Doesn't See Me" and her version of the Simon & Garfunkel tune, "Scarborough Fair." It was good to see another great singer, Josh Groban, join her for a number, too.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - voice and imagery
At its gentlest and most natural, Sarah Brightman's voice is the lullaby of sunlight through a canopy of leaves. Her low tones are as meditative as wind through a dark stone passage, and her highest trills are a rousing swim through a cold river. And she knows that such a voice is best presented through imagery. There are almost no clichés we've come to expect at concerts. Interaction with the audience is kept to a minimum; and she doesn't introduce the musicians or anyone else performing with her aside from duet partner Josh Groban. Instead, she assumes images of mystical female icons: Aphrodite in "Who Wants to Live Forever," a music-box doll in "Figlio Perduto," the Virgin Mary in "Nessun Dorma" and "Deliver Me," and a vamp in "Music of the Night." Only twice does she seem human: during "Moon River," sung close to the audience; and in her duet with Josh (the affectionate embrace she gives the baby-faced baritone at the end of the song is endearing).
The song selection is very satisfying. I was impressed with how Sarah turned Queen's "Who Wants to Live Forever" into something epic. Her rendition of "Nessun Dorma" has breathed new life into the aria as a stirring piece for a soprano. I also enjoyed the reversal of roles she effected in "Music of the Night": it is now the diva seducing the maestro, and not the other way around.
My only negative comment is that in certain songs, the lyrics are neither on a par nor in harmony with Sarah's voice or the show's mysticism. "Deliver Me," which she sings like a heaven-bound Mary above a rotating globe, has such casual lines such as `I know you're the one to pull me through.' She comes on stage after the third interlude looking like a dryad, only to sing of `cartwheels on the floor' and `drinks' in "A Whiter Shade of Pale." Such a voice, and such a production, deserves more poetic lyrics.
But it is easy to ignore this. Just listen to this voice, and watch this spirited performer lose herself in her meditations.



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Sarah Brightman - La Luna (Live in Concert)

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