
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
.
Grateful - The Songs of John Bucchino
|
||
John Bucchino has been the saviour of many a cabaret
singer. His lush melodies and clever, psychologically astute lyrics remain relatively
unknown and can be counted on to grace any set and impress even the most jaded audience.
Bucchino is not only a fine interpreter of his own work but also a talented accompanist as
he proves here, where he sits in as pianist for a number of the great and good of the
cabaret world who offer their takes on 16 of his songs.
The album gets off to a slightly shaky start with a somewhat lugubrious
interpretation of Bucchino's signature number, "Grateful," which fails to
eclipse numerous earlier attempts including those of Barbara Cook, Amanda McBroom and
David Campbell. Judy Collins' "Sweet Dreams" is beautifully sung but misses some
of the worldly pathos of Cook's version. A husky but zestful Liza Minnelli has fun with
Billy Stritch on "That Smile" but things really get under way with Daisy
Prince's "It Feels Like Home." Bucchino's accompaniment is an object lesson in
the art and Prince's delicately sincere and pitch-perfect interpretation comes close to
the incomparable Nancy LaMott's.
Bucchino's range as a writer astonishes. "Temporary" (sung by
Lois Page), is an attempt to explain to a child the pain - and comfort - of life's
impermanence. It is followed by Patti LuPone's utterly uncomplicated paean to
"Dancing" ('...with the wind in my hair'). Amanda McBroom is
shrewdly understated on "The Song With Violins" as a woman who just can't give
up on a man who must surely be a no-hoper. Ann Hampton Callaway glides elegantly through
"In A Restaurant By The Sea" as she ruminates on the way a whole relationship
can be contained within a single glance. The most unusual song on the album is "Sepia
Life." Consummate storyteller Andrea Marcovicci beautifully enunciates the first (of
many?) act(s?) of marital infidelity.
Performed as well as they are here, Bucchino's melodies offer
considerable rewards to listener and performer alike. Literate, compassionate, astute and
intelligent, his lyrics reveal more of
themselves with repeated listenings. Any fan of that increasingly rare animal, the
well-crafted song, should invest in this collection of dexterously constructed little
gems.
- Mark Jennett