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Michael Feinstein - Pure Imagination (1992) [Vocal Jazz]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Michael Feinstein - Pure Imagination (1992) [Vocal Jazz]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 30 Dec 2019, 17:54


Artist: Michael Feinstein
Album: Pure Imagination
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Label: Elektra
Released: 1992
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
  1. Pure Imagination (4:01)
  2. Swinging on a Star (2:26)
  3. The Teddy Bears' Picnic (3:20)
  4. Because We're Kids (2:01)
  5. Ferdinand the Bull (3:45)
  6. Not Much of a Dog (4:15)
  7. Lydia, the Tattooed Lady (3:11)
  8. The Dressing Song (2:25)
  9. The Ugly Bug Ball (3:01)
  10. When You Wish Upon a Star (2:13)
  11. The Mole People (2:46)
  12. "Alice in Wonderland" Medley: Alice in Wonderland/I'm Late/The Unbirthday Song (7:21)
  13. Aren't You Glad You're You (2:35)
  14. I Like Old People (1:26)
  15. Ten Feet Off the Ground (3:31)
  16. Be Kind to Your Parents (2:13)
  17. The Jitterbug (2:10)
  18. Johnny Fedora and Alice Blue Bonnet (5:03)
  19. Angels on Your Pillow (2:33)

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Michael Feinstein, the musical archivist turned cabaret entertainer, delivers the kind of children's album that might have been expected of him with Pure Imagination, scouring through piles of sheet music to come up with songs dating from the 1930s to the 1980s, mostly taken from stage and movie musicals. Animals and insects make frequent appearances, of course, including teddy bears, a peaceful bull, "Not Much of a Dog," ugly bugs, and "The Jitterbug" (a song written for but cut from The Wizard of Oz), not to mention some unusual humans including "Lydia, the Tattooed Lady" and "The Mole People." The latter song is another one nearly lost in the archives, written "for exploitation" for the 1956 low-budget sci-fi flick The Mole People, which is to say that it wasn't really used in the film, but intended to help promote it. If it did, then it misled audiences to expect a comedy. Typically, Feinstein enlists the aging songwriters Ray Evans and Jay Livingston to contribute to the chorus, which goes, "Chomp-a-diddy." That's a refrain children will enjoy singing along to, and there are other places on the disc that invite participation. But this is a varied collection also including some songs that might be better appreciated by parents.
Review by William Ruhlmann

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