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PLACIDO DOMINGO: SONGS
One of the greatest tenors of our times presents his first pop album in over twenty years and his first recording since signing exclusively to Sony Classical in 2011: an album of great songs and popular melodies.
The new release contains Domingo’s first recordings of many pop classics, plus more songs already beloved by his fans. For this eagerly awaited new release, the legendary singer invited other great artists and new talents to accompany him on over half of the tracks, like Broadway sensation Megan Hilty (they sing an Italian/English duet version of duet My Heart Will Go On/Il Mio Cuore Va from ‘Titanic’) and young French hit-maker Zaz (they perform the Jacques Brel classic Chanson des vieux amants). “If I rest, I rust”, says the singer, and at 71 years young, he’s proving the truth of that statement now more than ever.
The repertoire, in four languages, is chosen from over 70 years of the world’s most popular melodies. It goes from the sensuous Mexican 1940s classic Bésame mucho (‘Kiss Me Again and Again’, here arranged as a duet with star trumpeter Chris Botti) to Shania Twain’s 1990s hit From This Moment On, performed with Susan Boyle. Boyle shot to world-wide fame after appearing on a British TV talent show. “She was like an angel in that competition,” says Domingo. “I knew I had to sing with such a beautiful voice.”
Domingo has recorded only a handful of the tracks previously. As well as Bésame mucho, he returns to Frank Sinatra’s hit Time After Time (here a duet with jazz singer Harry Connick Jr.), Canción para una reina (Song for a Queen), and Un uomo tra la folla (A Man in the Crowd). The two latter were written specially for the tenor.
Film plays an important role on the disc. Domingo duets with Welsh mezzo Katherine Jenkins on Come What May from the film ‘Moulin Rouge’ (in which he had a memorable cameo role). Other songs include Eternally from the Charlie Chaplin film ‘Limelight’, Parla più piano from ‘The Godfather’, and the beautifully melancholy Sous le ciel de Paris (Under the Paris Sky) with Josh Groban. The tenor, who was born in Spain and educated in Mexico, reflects the Latin aspect of his heritage with the famous bossa nova Girl from Ipanema, and the Spanish-language hit Celos (Jealousy).
Particularly close to his heart is the duet with his son Placido Domingo Jr, What a Wonderful World. “It contains the line ‘I hear babies cry’ and I was thinking about my own children and grandchildren when singing it,” he says.
Domingo, who has 136 operatic roles in his repertoire as both tenor and baritone, and who has a parallel career as an operatic conductor too, confesses that this album has nevertheless been one of his greatest challenges. “These songs have been made famous by Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong... and yet anyone at home can sing them in the shower too. People think pop songs are easy. But to come to the public, and make them special - that’s incredibly exciting. I’m delighted with the beautiful collection we’ve created.”
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