Bocelli has the sort of tenor voice that stops operas. He was born with that and in Italy, that means getting classically trained for a singing career. He is therefore classified as a classical tenor. At the same time though, Bocelli has a flair for doing light pop melodies that Bon Jovi might sing as a power rock ballad or that R. Kelly might do as R&B. And that was just what he did with his first big hit, Con Te Partiro. The soaring love song became a worldwide hit performed with equal enthusiasm by rock acts in chic Paris cafes or cantopop bands in Hong Kong.
Other pop hits followed like the duet version of Con Te Partiro, Time to Say Goodbye with Sarah Brightman and The Prayer with Celine Dion, plus of course, the phenomenally successful Sogno album. While all these were happening though, the world of classical music was asserting its claim on Bocelli. There were the albums Aria, Sacred Arias, Verdi, La Boheme and Verdi Requiem. It was fascinating to listen to Bocelli taking on more and more challenging materials and for a while there, it looked like he had no plans of singing pop music again.
Well, I thought wrong. Cieli di Toscana is here. Two songs in this album E Mi Manchi Tu by Czech composer Zdenek Bartak and Resta Qui by the young Italian songwriter Matteo Musumeci were the first and second prize winners in the Premio Bocelli competition. This was a music tilt for songs written expressly for Bocelli. Both live up to the Bocelli trademark and although pop, retain a kind of grandeur.
The ones showing great chart potential though are Se La Gente Usasse Il Cuore and the albums first cut, the soaring Melodrama. Check out too Si Volto for a mellow, almost folksy Bocelli, L Abitudine, a duet with Helena and LIncontro, which features an introduction poem read by Bono.
Add this to your Christmas wish list.
Anyway, the only new Christmas release I have come across so far is Making Spirits Bright, a production by Lee Ritenour and Bud Harner for Verve which the radio station Joey Rhythms 92.3 has chosen to sponsor. It is a great treat. Mellow and easy with a muted sparkle that warms the heart, the album features some of the greatest jazz artists of our times performing Christmas selections. And they do it beautifully.
For something sweet and deceptively simple, there is Diana Krall singing Jingle Bells. For something rarely and Christmas with an Iberian touch, there is Suite de Nuestra Navidad made up of La Anucniacion and La Peregrinacion composed by Ariel Ramirez and performed here by a group led by Dave Grusin on the piano.
Other cuts are Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas with Ritenour on the guitar; Ill Be Home for Chirstmas sang by Will Downing; The Christmas Song with Joyce Cooling on guitar and vocals; This Christmas with Gerald Albright on sax; Silent Night by Al Jarreau; What Child is This? With guitarist Marc Antoine; God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen with Richard Elliot on sax; The First Noel by David Benoit; Here Comes Santa Claus with Jeff Golub on guitar; and I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus with Joe Sample on the piano.
There are now only 42 days to go until Christmas day.