- Audio CD
- Number of Discs: 1
- ASIN: B000GG4KTU
- Other Editions: Audio CD | LP Record
- Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #64,728 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
Product Details
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| 1. It Could Happen to You |
| 2. Isn’t This A Lovely Day |
| 3. How Insensitive |
| 4. Exactly Like You |
| 5. From This Moment On |
| 6. I was Doing All Right |
| 7. Little Girl Blue |
| 8. Day In Day Out |
| 9. Willow Weep For Me |
| 10. Come Dance With Me |
| 11. You Can Depend On Me |
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Most helpful customer reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Classy execution.,
By
This review is from: From This Moment On (Audio CD)
Diana Krall's big strengths when she first emerged were a musicality about lyrics that savoured the weight of every syllable, an instrumentalist's timing and ideas (though her piano-playing isn't up to her singing, it's been a crucial complement to it) and a delicate intimacy that made every member of an audience feel they were getting her personal attention.Success has swelled the budgets, and risked overwhelming her fragile eloquence and jazz instincts. But though this set drops into the dinner-jazz and easy-listening boxes, there's enough subtle orchestral arrangement and sharp horn soloing to engage the big-band buffs, plenty of Krall at her smokiest, and three crisp tracks just for quartet. A breezy version of" Day In and Day Out" gets a lively Count Basie treatment, piano tinkling over chugging guitar. Diana Krall affection for lyrics add new turns to "Exactly Like You" and "I Was Doing Alright", and her oddly frank, confiding whisper makes "Little Girl Blue" the best thing on the album. An eerie brass fanfare (suggesting the approach of Gil Evans' and Miles Davis's Porgy and Bess) turns out to be the overture to "Willow Weep for Me" - a beautiful arrangement imparting a mysterious and faintly sinister quality to the song. "From This Moment On" is full of classy execution, but it's familiar territory for Krall and her fans.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Joyous celebration of life.,
By music4yourears (London-New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: From This Moment On (Audio CD)
It was the 2004 album 'The Girl In The Room' that showcased Krall's own songwriting talents, inspired by her own collection of records and artists she admired such as Tom Waits and Joni Mitchell and highlighting the melancholic side of life and its complex ambiguities.This proved to be one of the critical successes of the year and a surprise at that. Krall returns to more familiar territory this time with a collection of standards, enlisting once again the talents of Jeff Hamilton and Jeff Clayton as part of her regular trio (and adding their big band) and the contemplative guitar licks of Anthony Wilson, son of orchestral maestro Gerald. The melancholy of the previous album has dissipated to be replaced by a joyous celebration of life. This is reflected in tunes such as 'Isn't This A Lovely Day' and 'Come Dance With Me', while 'Exactly Like You' is given a mid-tempo latin feel. On the reflective side Jobim's 'How Sensitive' receives a Claus Ogerman-style arrangement. In general the trio playing is near flawless and the Basie-esque big band swings to good effect. A recording guaranteed to appeal to audiophiles of jazz sensibility. While awaiting more challenging and eclectic musical explorations from Diana Krall in the future, for the present this will do just fine.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Enchanting.,
By
This review is from: From This Moment On (Audio CD)
Diana Krall's big strengths when she first emerged were a musicality about lyrics that savoured the weight of every syllable, an instrumentalist's timing and ideas (though her piano-playing isn't up to her singing, it's been a crucial complement to it) and a delicate intimacy that made every member of an audience feel they were getting her personal attention.Success has swelled the budgets, and risked overwhelming her fragile eloquence and jazz instincts. But though this set drops into the dinner-jazz and easy-listening boxes, there's enough subtle orchestral arrangement and sharp horn soloing to engage the big-band buffs, plenty of Krall at her smokiest, and three crisp tracks just for quartet. A breezy version of" Day In and Day Out" gets a lively Count Basie treatment, piano tinkling over chugging guitar. Diana Krall affection for lyrics add new turns to "Exactly Like You" and "I Was Doing Alright", and her oddly frank, confiding whisper makes "Little Girl Blue" the best thing on the album. An eerie brass fanfare (suggesting the approach of Gil Evans' and Miles Davis's Porgy and Bess) turns out to be the overture to "Willow Weep for Me" - a beautiful arrangement imparting a mysterious and faintly sinister quality to the song. "From This Moment On" is full of classy execution, but it's familiar territory for Krall and her fans.
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