Rating:
Genre:
Vocal Music
Release Date: 01/29/2008
Sarah Brightman took five years between 2003's pop exotica outing
Harem and
Symphony. The over-the-top gothic excess in the artwork here seems like a cousin to
Meat Loaf's
Bat Out of Hell II, so much so that it feels like legendary theatrical rock excess king
Jim Steinman -- a former associate of
Brightman's longtime producer
Frank Peterson (who wrote or co-wrote five of these tunes) -- is haunting the recording. Despite the big duet presences here --
Andrea Bocelli (again) on
"Canto della Terra," tenor
Alessandro Safina on
"Sarai Qui," vocalist and actor
Fernando Lima, and
Kiss'
Paul Stanley -- there are relatively few moments of real inspiration amidst the obvious kitsch.
Symphony is trademark
Brightman. It sits dead center at the crossroads of
classical crossover,
pop, and
musical theater. Despite the star power on board, this is exactly what
EMI wanted from her. The reprise of her first duet appearance with
Bocelli is a firm showcase for both voices, and
"Sarai Qui" with
Safina is among best things here -- even if the arrangements threaten to do in all that vocal power. As for
"Pasión," Lima's voice, with all of its high tenor acrobatics, is as lilting as her light soprano. It may work in the theater, or in the movies, but it doesn't here.
"I Will Be with You (Where the Lost Ones Go)," with
Stanley, is a bit of a campy cheat.
Brightman originally recorded this for the
Pokeman soundtrack with
Chris Thompson of
Manfred Mann.
Stanley's vocal chops just don't equate with the former. With acoustic guitars all but drowned in strings, the emotional punch of the original is lost.
Brightman simply soars, and if her ice queen vocal isn't believable emotionally, it contains enough drama to keep it from falling into the abyss.
Peterson and
Carsten Heusmann's cool sound and synth loops on
"Gothika" set up the meld of bombastic electric guitars and
the London Symphony Orchestra in
"Fleurs du Mal." It's full of sweeping textures where a lone clarinet sweeps in before the woodwinds on the third verse; strings shift, swoop, and soar; and a choir comes hammering down on the refrain like thunder trying to bury
Brightman in her full but false fragility act. The title track begins as one of the most overblown things on the set, but in comparison to others, it is one of the simplest, breeziest melodies here. There is one genuine surprise: a cover of
"Sanvean," written by
Lisa Gerrard and
Andrew Claxton.
Brightman allows
Gerrard's words (the English title amounts to "I Am Your Shadow") to haunt her, imbuing them with a classically delivered discipline that showcases the otherworldly and sorrowful melody in the piece. And if there were any radio programmers with brains, they'd choose either the classically tinged and passionate
Cordel/
LaBionda/
Brightman number
"Storia d'Amore" or the relatively straight-ahead melancholy pop/rock anthem
"Let It Rain" as a single. The latter may be more standard radio fare, but the former would grab the attention of anyone who heard it. The album's nine-plus-minute closer,
"Running," is a virtual multi-part suite disguised as a single song. There is an operatic intro that becomes fist-in-the-air uplifting
rock & roll bombast in the first half -- it even includes an electric guitar solo, enormous drums, and a choir hammering home the refrain with
Brightman before it moves back toward
opera, then silence, then more orchestral and vocal drama. This track reeks of
Steinman -- and his lyrics would have been far better than what is here.
Symphony is stronger than
Harem, yet not as adventurous as
Luna, and is more self-indulgent than both.
~Thom Jurek, All Music Guide