Let It Be Roberta: Roberta Flack Sings the Beatles Roberta Flack

NEW FROM BN.COM
  • $15.99 List price
    $12.58 Online Price
    (You Save 21%)
  • skip to cart

SPEND $25, GET FREE SHIPPING

Pick Me Up

Want to reserve & pick up at your local store?

  • Enter your zip

CD

Average Customer Rating:

( Be the first to review )

  • Release Date: 02/07/2012
  • Sales Rank: 3,359
  • Label: 429 Records
  • UPC: 795041785220

Customers who bought this also bought

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Let It Be Roberta: Roberta Flack Sings the Beatles

Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

Let It Be Roberta: Roberta Flack Sings the Beatles

1LISTENIn My Life 4:09
2LISTENHey Jude 3:11
3LISTENWe Can Work It Out 4:02
4LISTENLet It Be 4:15
5LISTENOh Darling 4:38
6LISTENI Should Have Known Better 3:14
7LISTENThe Long & Winding Road 4:08
8LISTENCome Together 4:39
9LISTENIsn't It a Pity 3:41
10LISTENIf I Fell 3:24
11LISTENAnd I Love Him 3:50
12LISTENHere, There, and Everywhere 6:16

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Beatles' song catalog is one of the best-known and revered bodies of work in the whole of modern music, and the depth, variety, and timelessness of the songs this once-in-a-lifetime band produced make that catalog both a marvel and a treasure. Everyone knows these songs, and everyone knows them in the original Beatles versions. Those versions are there, shining in stone, and even when they show up in remixes like in the recent LOVE mashup, the original recordings echo unshakably in the mind. Roberta Flack knows this. On Let It Be Roberta: Roberta Flack Sings the Beatles, she tackles 12 of the group's songs -- 11 written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney and one written by George Harrison -- and she knows full well that she's dealing with the ghosts of the original versions. She knows, and she addresses it by reconfiguring the 12 songs she's chosen to sing into fascinating new shapes and arrangements, not exactly escaping the original versions, but giving them a fresh new direction by jazzy shifts in the melodies, and pinning them to inventive and very contemporary rhythms and recording techniques. Flack doesn't treat songs like "In My Life," "We Can Work It Out," and "I Should Have Known Better" like they're made of museum glass, and because of it, she stretches them into interesting new corners. Not everything works -- Flack singing "Come Together" could never have been a good idea -- but what does work, and that's most of what's here, brings these Beatles songs delightfully into the 21st century. Even though the ghosts of the original versions still echo here, they support rather than derail what Flack does with them. Steve Leggett, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Customer Rating:
Be the first to write a review!