Product Details
Streisand: Live In Concert (2 CD's)

Streisand: Live In Concert (2 CD's)
Barbra Streisand

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Average customer review:
MUST-HAVE! Released May 8, 2007, this double CD includes Barbra Streisand's complete 2006 North American concert tour set, as recorded in New York, Washington, and Ft. Lauderdale in October '06. The best Streisand live recording to date.

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Funny Girl Broadway Overture
  2. Starting Here, Starting Now
  3. Opening Remarks
  4. Down with Love
  5. Way We Were
  6. Songwriting (Dialogue)
  7. Ma Premiere Chanson
  8. Evergreen - Il Divo, Barbra Streisand
  9. Come Rain or Come Shine
  10. Funny Girl (Dialogue)
  11. Funny Girl
  12. Music That Makes Me Dance
  13. My Man
  14. People (Dialogue)
  15. People

Disc 2:

  1. Entr'acte
  2. Music of the Night - Il Divo, Barbra Streisand
  3. Jason's Theme
  4. Carefully Taught/Children Will Listen
  5. Unusual Way
  6. What Are You Doing for the Rest of Your Life?
  7. Happy Days Are Here Again
  8. (Have I Stayed) Too Long at the Fair?
  9. William Saroyan (Dialogue)
  10. Time of Your Life
  11. Cockeyed Optimist
  12. Somewhere (Dialogue)
  13. Somewhere - Il Divo, Barbra Streisand
  14. My Shining Hour
  15. Don't Rain on My Parade (Reprise)
  16. Smile

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #9580 in Music
  • Brand: Sony
  • Released on: 2007-05-08
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Format: Live
  • Dimensions: .28 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
There's a reason Barbra Streisand's 2006 tour broke the arena house record in every city it visited, and it's because she's not only a legend but (still) a performer who effortlessly twists intimacy and friendliness and fierceness into a perfect, sturdy braid. This two-disc set, which pulls performances from dates in New York, Washington, D.C., and Fort Lauderdale, will raise its share of goosebumps. For longtime fans, they'll be a reaction to songs Streisand hasn't touched since the '70s and earlier, including "(Have I Stayed) Too Long At the Fair?" and "Unusual Way," from the Broadway musical Nine. For relative newbies, they'll be a response to her between-song patter, which touches with grace, wit, and sincerity on everything from her love for her son to her political leanings to her limitations as songwriter. The voice, of course, enthralls--there it is glowing on "Carefully Taught," one of four songs that have never before appeared on a Streisand recording, and there it is again wrapping luxurious tones all around "Evergreen," one of three songs she shares with Il Divo. Streisand--diva, political dynamo, superstar--still knows how to orchestrate a showstopper. --Tammy La Gorce

More from Barbra


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The Broadway Album


The Barbra Streisand Album


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The Essential Barbra Streisand


Customer Reviews

A Treat From a Timeless Entertainer5
Barbra Streisand has now released six lives albums / CDs during her prodigeous career, each one unique in representing her at specific times in her legendary journey as an entertainer and artist. This new recording is a more casual and nostalgic affair than anything she's done live, and is much the better for it. While "Live in Concert 2006" shows a bit of "wear and tear" in her vocal ability, that's like saying Maria Callas hit a wrong note. Streisand is now 65 and still doing it her way. What she may have lost in range and suppleness as the result of age, she more than makes up for with her interpretive skills and her pitch-perfect phrasing. This lady knows how to deliver a song like no one alive.

What's most exciting about this CD is that the song selection almost completey ignores more obvious choices (we've gotten them on other dics...now was the time to stretch and, boy, did she) for songs she has rarely performed or has never recorded before. The opening overture, which is the complete overture from her classic Broadway show "Funny Girl", let's you know you are in for some time capsule offerings that no one else could surpass. In fact, many songs from "Funny Girl" permeate the disc, as do several esoteric songs Streisand recorded earlier in her career that were exquisite non-hits. Brilliant.

Yes, there's the obligatory duets with Il Divo, but Streisand has always managed to channel her old-time glamour into one or another of the current pop crop, almost always with sterling results (Neil Diamond, Donna Summer, Johnny Mathis, Barry Gibbs...and the list goes on). Streisand's show business savvy has continued to make her relevant to generation after generation.

Finally, Streisand's in-between-song patter is a real treat here. Less formal and polemic than on other recordings, she is humorous, warm, folksy and quite self-deprecating. A delightful performance.

Streisand will hopefully continue to record for years to come because this CD proves that her talent is not only still intact, but relevant and delightfully dextrous. Lucky for the record buying public.

Still evolving5
A true artist, Streisand has been evolving since her first recordings and continues to. When she first came on the scene I thought "As she moves on she will be less shrill and become more subtle." She became less shrill and more subtle. And then later I thought "As she moves on she will become less concerned with perfection and more interested in living, breathing artistry, imperfections and all." She became less concerned with perfection and more interested in living, breathing artistry. And then I thought, "She's always thought of herself as an actress who sings but eventually she will come more to live the songs as she sings rather than portraying a character singing them." That progression is fully evident on this album. As is the happiness of this stage of her life which has allowed her to relax, enjoy and be comfortable on stage. The bottom line on Barbra is she has never, ever stopped studying, has never stopped learning, has never stopped, in the words of one of her best songs, being ready to "Move On." I think she is singing more magnificently than ever, I think she is an even deeper artist (and that's saying something about an artist who began very deep), I think she is even wiser (and she was always wise) and I think what comes from her reveals more than ever her very heart--which is above all ethical and truthful and in some ways holy. I met her once and was so impressed by the person--not the star, not the diva (didn't see anything like that) but the person. I've first hand experienced her kindness and generosity. My theory has always been that only someone who suffered terribly as a child could as an adult bring forth the emotion, insight, understanding and passion she has brought to her art. It's all here in this album to be experienced over and over. It's not only a thrilling listening experience, it's a master class in achieving excellence.

Portrait of a mellowing artist - wonderful and melancholy.5
I've studied the voice for years and years, and have always been literally amazed at the reach and the far-beyond-the-reach results that this one-of-a kind artist has given the world. There never has been, isn't now, nor ever will be another like Barbra Streisand. I've followed her through show music, pop, disco, back to pop, into theater music and movie music, and of course, the treasured, rare live performances, such as this one. I've accepted her personal feelings to be what they are and have cheered her every step of the way and will always do so. So, to have a glorious live recording of her recent concert tour is a joy indeed. The best thing about this recording, other than the utterly flawless technical sheen of the actual sound, is the fact that Barbra Streisand has finally seemed to mellow, to enjoy life, and, most wonderfully, to embrace performing. She sounds charming and relaxed in her spoken passages, and she can still send notes through the roof of the stadium with enormous power and grace. It's a treat to hear songs that she hasn't sung in years and to hear numbers that she's not recorded before. Just about anything that Ms. Streisand chooses to do for the public is a genuine thrill for someone who has been a devout fan for decades. But, and this is the melancholy part, if you've studied her voice for years so much that you know exactly how it has sounded across the almost 45 years she's been a professional, you'll know that her range has diminshed slightly, her top notes have to be finessed without full power, and that the timbre has darkened and deepened. These are not bad things, because she remains the one and only of her kind, and everything existing so clearly in our memory must bear witness to time's effects. But it's heart-tugging for me to hear her age reflected in her singing voice. I've listened to this album repeatedly over the past week, because it's a terrific concert, but I've also found myself with a heavy heart sometimes in hearing the changes in her vocal prowess that are only natural. She is still, and will continue to be, my personal superwoman figure and someone whom I admire more than any words could possibly communicate. But the tears that I now shed when she sings are for both of us, because if Barb's getting older, than I am as well.