Edith Piaf - Platinum Collection (2007)
Artist: Edith Piaf
Title: Platinum Collection
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: EMI
Genre: Pop, Chanson
Quality: APE (image+.cue,log,scans) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 02:22:15
Total Size: 624 Mb / 371 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Platinum Collection
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: EMI
Genre: Pop, Chanson
Quality: APE (image+.cue,log,scans) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 02:22:15
Total Size: 624 Mb / 371 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD 1
01. La Vie en Rose
02. L' Accordeoniste
03. Je Sais Comment
04. Mon Dieu
05. Toi Tu l'Entends Pas
06. Exodus
07. Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien
08. Les Trois Cloches
09. L' Homme au Piano
10. La Foule
11. A Quoi Ca Sert l'Amour?
12. Le Droit d'Aimer
13. Les Amants de Paris
14. Pour Moi Toute Seule
15. Le Chevalier de Paris
16. Milord
17. C'est un Gars
18. Bravo Pour le Clown!
19. Les Amants de Venise
20. Johnny Tu N'Es Pas un Ange
21. Un Etranger
22. C'est а Hambourg
23. Je Hais Les Dimanches
CD 2
01. C'est l'Amour
02. La Goualante du Pauvre Jean
03. T'Es Beau Tu Sais
04. Les Croix
05. Cri du Coeur
06. Padam Padam
07. C'est un Homme Terrible
08. Hymne а l'Amour
09. Mea Culpa
10. Je Me Souviens d'Une Chanson
11. Et Pourtant
12. Le "Ca Ira"
14. Mon Manege а Moi
15. Mariage
16. Notre Dame de Paris
17. Monsieur et Madame
18. Un Refrain Courait dans La Rue
19. Misericorde
20. Toi Qui Sais
21. Une Dame
22. C'est Merveilleux
23. Sous le Ciel de Paris
Released in 2007, EMI's Edith Piaf Platinum Collection presents 45 well-chosen recordings that typify this melodramatic singer's stylized modus and manner. Textures and moods range from friendly and affable ("C'est Merveilleux" and "Je Hais les Dimanches") through perkily theatrical ("La Foule" and "Bravo Pour le Clown!") and epically dramatic ("Exodus," "Les Croix," "Mea Culpa," as well as the beautiful and profoundly moving "Les Trois Cloches") to that bracing extreme, Piaf's amazing Hitchcockian emotional clyster, "Mariage." Here the spectre of matrimony fuels a musical narrative that begins on clouds of whimsicality, gradually mutates under veils of moribund misgivings, and ends with Piaf sounding for all the world as though she is delivering the climactic verses from atop the scaffold with wildly overwrought instrumentation and the maddeningly discordant ringing of sinister church bells. Come to think of it, it'd be worth owning the Platinum Piaf set just to have on hand her painful paean to "Mariage." This is a better deal than other shoddier collections, although with Piaf you generally get what you pay for. With this in mind, a more intensively researched and annotated higher end Piaf set is recommended for anyone wishing to examine her recorded legacy more closely and carefully. If all you want is a good stash of her better work, EMI's Platinum Piaf might be exactly what you're looking for. It's your call.