Jacintha Goes To Hollywood Jacintha

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/18/2007
  • Sales Rank: 53,283
  • Label: GROOVE NOTE RECORDS
  • UPC: 660318104021

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Jacintha Goes To Hollywood

1LISTENOn Days Like These From the Italian Job 5:33
2LISTENRaindrops Keep Falling on My Head [from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance 4:59
3LISTENAlfie From Alfie 4:45
4LISTENWindmills of Your Mind From the Thomas Crown Affair 6:14
5LISTENCalifornia Dreaming From Chung King Express 5:43
6LISTENA Man and a Woman From a Man & A Woman 5:19
7LISTENEasy Living From Chinatown 4:20
8LISTENQue Será Será From the Man Who Knew Too Much 5:12
9LISTENThe Summer Knows from the Summer of 42 5:24

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Let's face it: most people who are not seasoned jazz listeners aren't going to comprehend someone as challenging as the late Betty Carter. The best way to get people who are "jazzophobic" to start listening to vocal jazz is to expose them to artists who are quite accessible but still have taste and integrity -- people like Jacintha, whose Jacintha Goes to Hollywood is a perfect example of a jazz vocal disc that is very easy to absorb even if one isn't a seasoned jazz listener. This 2007 recording finds the Singapore native turning her attention to songs that were heard in well-known films, and her torchy, understated approach serves her well on material ranging from the Mamas & the Papas' "California Dreaming" (a '60s smash that was heard in the 1995 film Chung King Express) to the Doris Day-associated "Que Será Será" (which was used in Alfred Hitchcock's The Man Who Knew Too Much in 1956) to Michel Legrand's "The Summer Knows" (from the 1971 film The Summer of '42). Technically, the title Jacintha Goes to Hollywood is inaccurate, because not all of these songs are identified with Hollywood films; Chung King Express, for example, is a Chinese film, and one of the best things on this album is an English-language performance of the gorgeous theme from the 1966 French film A Man and a Woman (or, as it is known in France, Un Homme et une Femme). Perhaps a better title for this 47-minute CD would have been Jacintha Goes to the Movies. But in the grand scheme of things, that is only a minor point. What matters the most is that Jacintha has delivered a musical tribute to movies that is as memorable as it is rewarding. Alex Henderson, All Music Guide

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