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I Dreamed A Dream
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I Dreamed A Dream
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MP3 Music, November 23, 2009
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Track Listings
1 | Wild Horses |
2 | I Dreamed a Dream |
3 | Cry Me a River |
4 | How Great Thou Art |
5 | You'll See |
6 | Daydream Believer |
7 | Up to the Mountain |
8 | Amazing Grace |
9 | Who I Was Born to Be |
10 | Proud |
11 | The End of the World |
12 | Silent Night |
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
2009 debut from the vocalist who became an overnight sensation after appearing on the first round of 2009's popular UK reality show Britain's Got Talent. Boyle caught the judges (and the world) off guard with her masterful rendition of 'I Dreamed a Dream' from the musical Les Misérables. Within hours of her appearance on the show, Boyle was not only an internet sensation; she was a world-wide phenomenon. This is the musical story of the year!
About the Artist
January 21st 2009 is not a date that Susan Boyle is ever likely to forget. ‘I will never forget it,’ she clarifies, in her unmistakeably Celtic brogue. It was the day that the shy, devout 48 year old stepped onto the stage of the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre in Glasgow for an audition on Britain’s Got Talent. Or to put it another way, the day her world turned 360 degrees on its head. In front of the three-strong panel of judges charged with divining which of this year’s British hopefuls really did have talent, the singing voice of Susan Boyle turned out to be a watershed moment neither she nor anyone involved in the show could possibly have foreseen. It is now both her and the show’s defining moment.
In her own haphazard fashion, during three and a half minutes of television airtime, later aired to slack-jawed intakes of breath in May of this year, Susan Boyle fashioned a new kind of fame. She elicited a moment of pure, molten zeitgeist. She broke every rule of the talent show book and tore up a considerable number of the pages of popular music marketing into the bargain. She symbolized an astonishing variety of the little-people’s revenge, quite by accident. Ms Boyle describes her own astonishing 2009 in refreshingly frank and simple terms. ‘All I did was to apply for a talent show. I was lucky enough to be chosen. That’s it in a nutshell.’ But something deeper was going on in the collective public consciousness. If the two watchwords of the 21st century have been ‘reality’ and ‘celebrity’, Susan Boyle had accidentally located a brand new point on the graph where they both intersected. One of Britain’s forgotten characters had rarely, if ever, been so memorable.
After her one audition for Britain’s Got Talent, in which she confounded the judges, the audience and then anyone with access to Youtube’s expectations by dazzling her way through a version of the song I Dreamed A Dream, from the musical Les Miserables, a tornado of opinionated column inches, speculation, rumination and conjecture around Susan Boyle grew feverishly. 300 Million You Tube hits and counting. She became the subject of op-ed newspaper columns, a front cover sensation in her own right. This unlikely candidate for the melting pot of the new star machine in 21st century Britain caused computer crashes, miles of newsprint and the sophisticated approval of Hollywood’s well-heeled and super-groomed A-list. Though the content differed wildly, everyone proffering their thoughts on the self-confessed ‘wee wifey’ seemed agreed on one point. That in 2009, to be free of an opinion on Susan Boyle was to be free of opinion itself.
For one brief moment, vanity itself collapsed. As that ancient old maxim – ‘Never judge a book by its cover’ – clanked around the globe with speedy viral intensity, it was as if the world was about to offer its first unspoken apology for prizing beauty above all else. Perhaps it would temporarily forget its grotesquely accentuated new heights of judgement. Or perhaps Susan Boyle was just a fleeting icon by which a microscope was shone on our more fickle presumptions. Whatever history gifts the Susan Boyle story in the long term, it is now her time to prove that there is more to this incredible woman than being the symbol for a moment of international reflection. She will do it in the exact same way she entered our consciousness in the first place. With the raw combination of strength and fragility, beauty and solitude that is her singing voice.
In some ways, Ms Boyle’s story is just the same as any woman with a voice in any choir up and down the UK. In her home town of Blackburn, she had been schooled in singing in churches and choral societies. She says now that, as a shy young woman with some learning difficulties, being hidden in the blanket of a collective singing arrangement offered her comfort. So in one other, crucial way, her story is entirely her own. The most unlikely chorister in the sea of voices stepped out of line and put her head above the parapet to be noticed. For Susan Boyle, though she would never deign to say so much herself, this was an act of personal heroism, the like of which she had never contemplated before.
The speed with which reaction to her performance picked up gravitas proved an incendiary media hotbed. But it was most surprising for the woman at the centre of it. ‘It started off with the [Scottish newspaper] Daily Record visiting my door. And it ended up with TV stations from all over the world camping out on my street waiting for interviews and stories. I’d peak behind the curtains in the house, saying ‘what in God’s name is going on here?’ Then the phone calls started. My number was still in the book at that particular time, so anybody could get it and the phone was ringing 24 hours a day. It was constant. People were ringing me who I couldn’t understand because of their accents. All sorts of nationalities. Lots of Americans. It was absolutely unbelievable if I’m being honest.’ She is self-deprecating about why she should have caused such a furore. ‘A woman who went on with mad hair, bushy eyebrows and the frock I was wearing had to be noticed. Come on!’
Such is the quick nature of today’s star system, in September, just four months after her TV debut, Susan Boyle made her live TV comeback. She performed a rarefied take on The Rolling Stones Wild Horses, re-orchestrated to gently clasp the exact timbre of her natural talent, on the show’s US cousin, America’s Got Talent. An unprompted standing ovation followed. Outside of the unruly cyclone of her fame, there is something within the voice of Susan Boyle that is absolutely perfect for our times. At a moment when Dame Vera Lynn and Barbra Streisand are topping the album charts, there is something peculiarly modern about her improbably status as holding the international record for most pre-ordered album of all time. As the dust settles on the sheer wattage of conversation that she has prompted, it is time – as they say – to face the music.
Ms Boyle’s debut album was put together during the summer of this year. She first entered a recording studio in July in Edinburgh, to test how her vocals would respond to tape. The results shocked both her and veteran producer Steve Mac. Decamping to London, she fashioned the record over two months, picking songs that resonated with her, that pricked something within that she felt ready to unleash through music. ‘It was important that I could feel everything I was singing,’ she says, cutting straight to the core of why music can be such a useful release, an escape valve from the everyday.
A disarming mix of the sacred (‘My faith is my backbone,’ she says) and the secular, there is not a moment on it that is not moving. It is pitched exactly within the framework of the year she has enjoyed and, at well-documented times, endured. It is a collection of covers and original material that cuts a swathe into the interior life of the woman who is arguably the most intriguing, not to mention instantly recognisable character yet to be produced by the reality talent medium, the decade’s defining TV genre.
When she hurts, it hurts. Her rousing rendition of Madonna’s You’ll See is a riposte to the children that picked on her in the playground. The new composition Who I Was Born To Be is an astonishing testament to self-belief against some startling odds. Yet when she dreams, we dream too. Because of her uncanny knack of picking a song so perfect for her tale at that very first audition, Ms Boyle has become synonymous with the word ‘dream’. Her flawless album rendition of I Dreamed A Dream may come as no surprise, but it still manages to pick every individual hair from the back of your neck and yank them to attention. A country ballad version of Daydream Believer delicately seals the deal of her being synonymous with the concept of dreaming.
For this is Susan Boyle’s tale. The fearlessness to dream about something other than the lot life has handed you. The chance to escape. The pivotal role of music as a conduit to go to another place, sometimes lodged at the outer recesses of your imagination, and to allow that new place to blossom. Yes, this is Susan Boyle’s tale. It is why it connected with so many unsuspecting people across the world. In another nutshell? If she can dare to dream, so can you.
SUSANS DEBUT ALBUM “I DREAMED A DREAM” IS RELEASED IN THE UK/WORLDWIDE ON NOVEMBER 23RD
“I Dreamed a Dream’ is already the most pre-ordered album worldwide of all time.
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Product Dimensions : 5.56 x 4.96 x 1.76 inches; 0.96 ounces
- Manufacturer : Legacy Recordings
- Item model number : 6852788
- Original Release Date : 2009
- Run time : 43 minutes
- Date First Available : April 16, 2009
- Label : Legacy Recordings
- ASIN : B0026P3G12
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #19,846 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- #426 in Broadway & Vocalists (CDs & Vinyl)
- #616 in Pop Singer-Songwriters
- #789 in Vocal Pop (CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer Reviews:
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Though I really enjoyed the CD I preferred the way she sang I ...
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2024Susan Boyle has a beautiful singing voice and I'm so happy to have her CD added to my music collection!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2024Gorgeous voice and fantastic song choices. Highly recommend!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2024She won on America's got talen
- Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2009We knew her voice as incomparable; with her CD we know her as an incomparable interpreter - thanks to the way the selections allow her to sweep us from reality to dream and back again. "Wild Horses" - the powerful urgency of the words 'wild horses...' following the sense of helplessness Susan is able to conjure up softly, subtly. "I Dreamed..." in which her clarity and volume at the high notes achieves what we have to acknowledge over and over again: the incomparability of the premier female vocal artist of our time.
What could follow two such riveting songs? A recording of one of the greatest torch songs of all time. Susan's "Cry Me a River" brings us back from the swelling magnitude of "Dream" to the reality of one person, one moment, and she wins us all over again with "plebian". It's all her song, killing them softly her way.
So - from this moment, how can it continue? - One of the greatest songs of Christian brotherhood, in which Susan shows us there is no end to her interpretive skills or to the ability of her voice to become the beauty of the words. She - and, it has to be said, the arrangement and the choir - shows us what the song means, not only to her, but to us: humility.
One wonders what can follow the insurpassable. But "You'll See" haunts. The sweeping orchestration, a few poignant notes from a guitar - and the compelling pace that comes really from Susan who alone has the truly beautiful voice necessary to lift us through the words to new height, while still, behind it, the soft conviction of her voice diminishing at moments to a hush.
And then we are returned again to dream: "Daydream Believer" - "too slow" a self-purported critic has claimed. But isn't this the point where dream and reality merge? Where 'looking in on' is what most people - sadly, softly - do?
"Up the Mountain" follows, mirroring the transition from #3 to #4, and reality again gives way to the dimension of belief overcoming pain. Certainly, Susan's interpretation makes us forget that this is merely an interpretation and not real life, real feeling. Or isn't this just the best of interpretation - real feeling?
But now one wonders how this ends without a let-down. In four steps: 1) Gently. "Amazing Grace" recapitulates the humility sounded in #4, while recapturing as well her amazing ability for a capella - clear, rich, beautiful. 2) Softly. But taking the power with us of "Born to Be". 3) Tenderly. The understanding of simple aspiration to be loved for self, to make "proud." And, finally, 4) Signing off: to the simple, melancholy plucking of a guitar, Susan signs off from this one-of-a-kind journey between dream and reality, with 'end of the world.'
What's left? The closest thing we know to a song of universal meaning - in what is easily one of its most moving renditions.
No CD for the cynical.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2009Like probably most of the others providing reviews for Susan Boyle's premier professional CD, I Dreamed A Dream, I pre-ordered the selection on Amazon.com and added to the stunning event that has made her Amazon's best-selling pre-order phenomenon in its history. The year 2009 will certainly go down as an absolute whirlwind for her, beginning with being initially mocked upon entering the stage on "Britain's Got Talent." Accused of being a frumpy, dowdy-looking woman from Blackburn, Scotland, with thick eyebrows and having a slight learning disability due to hypoxia at birth, she still lived alone with her cat (after her elderly mother's recent death) in the family's council house (the equivalent to sectional housing in the U.S.) after a meager existence growing up. But Susan always relied strongly on her faith and was popular in her hometown because of her well-known vocal talent. Those in the "BGT" audience and those watching "telly" at home, and most likely the judges themselves, thought surely she would be bounced within seconds. That is, until the chanteuse began singing.
Millions upon millions have seen the YouTube video clips of that initial performance--most from the U.S.--when Boyle first performed "I Dreamed a Dream" from the stage musical classic "Les Miserables, and the audience's laughter quickly erupted into cheers. The look on judge Simon Cowell's face said it all. His mouth opened wide into a proud smile, and the "American Idol" curmudgeon was obviously charmed beyond belief. Boyle continued through the "BGT" process, including a bravura performance of "Memory" from the Andrew Lloyd Webber/Tim Rice stage hit "Cats" (another YouTube sensation), into the finals. In the interim, Boyle went through a style makeover, having her eyebrows tended to, makeup, a new hairdo, etc., and underneath lay an attractive woman. However, despite everything, obviously America was far more in love with Boyle than the UK, as she came in runnerup to a dance troupe. Boyle was stunned but polite upon hearing the news of her loss when interviewed by the "BGT" presenters, and within hours was admitted into a psychiatric hospital for a week's worth of "rest." That whirlwind had finally tossed her into a frenzy.
Naturally, a live appearance in this summer's season finale of NBC's "America's Got Talent" was a foregone conclusion. America was still in love with Susan Boyle, regardless of Britain's decision. And now, Amazon buyers are obviously wise and correct, because as I write this, I have just been emailed by Billboard magazine that I Dreamed A Dream has debuted at #1 on Billboard's Top 200 Albums chart, with sales of over 700,000 copies, which automatically certifies the album as past gold status (500,000 copies) in its very first week. Undoubtedly, the album should go platinum (1 million) within a week or two. That is a phenomenon for a British artist whose music would aim toward the "light" (at best) adult contemporary genre. In these days of hip-hop's stranglehold on the charts, there is no doubt that Susan Boyle has charmed the U.S. as much as she charmed Simon Cowell--which might explain why she is signed to his record label, Syco Music, under the Sony Music umbrella. She also thanks him first in the liner notes. (Cowell also executive-produces "AGT" as well as "BGT," and "AGT" judge Piers Morgan co-judges on "BGT" as well. Nothing like keeping it in the family. To think they used to despise each other as rivals years ago!)
The CD contains 12 tracks, and as what usually happens after a TV competition's winner or breakout star's debut album, the production value suffers. Most of the tracks are covers, although several are intentional songs of faith and inspiration, so one cannot fault her for that. They are the stock of what makes Susan Boyle, Susan Boyle. One is slightly humorous, though: "Silent Night" closes the album; one can't blame Cowell for strategically placing a Christmas carol on a non-"Christmas"-themed CD, fully knowing when the album was due to be released. That's why he's such a shrewd businessman.
The CD opens with her lead single and probably best-sung track, her cover of The Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses," which was a Top 30 hit for the Stones in 1971. She performed the song on the UK's "X-Factor" earlier this fall to promote the release of the single. Her tender and earnest delivery reveals an aching heart and a hint at loss. It's easily one of the album's best tracks. To my great surprise, the production values on "Cry Me a River" were better on Boyle's self-financed 1999 version (yet another YouTube hit), which just about drained the Boyles of every quid they had. Singer/actress Julie London's 1955 version is best known, hitting the Top 10 the following year after its inclusion in the "The Girl Can't Help It" film soundtrack (London later played Nurse Dixie McCall in the NBC-TV series "Emergency!" [1972-79]). Still, Susan sings the track perfectly, giving it the "heave-ho" to the man she is presumably singing.
The title track, from "Les Miserables," is given due attention, and again, Boyle sings the show's best-known song with power and determination, as expected. But an interesting inclusion is a cover of Madonna's 1995 Top 10 hit, "You'll See," again sung with earnest anticipation and almost a hint of defiance. One could argue that the lyrics require such defiance, but Boyle wears her heart on her sleeve in every song she sings, and her emotions are always laid threadbare. Also, on this track--whether intentional or coincidental--Susan sounds a great deal like Ms. Ciccone on "You'll See." If she's trying to do a Madonna imitation, not bad! (But it would have gone better if we'd heard Susan, not Madonna.) If it's Susan, well done in either regard. It's one of the best tracks on the album. Getting back to her emotional fragility, "Daydream Believer" is another such example. Written by John Stewart, a member of the Kingston Trio as well as a solo artist, "Believer" was a bright, uptempo #1 hit for The Monkees (with witty British imp Davy Jones handling the lead vocal) in 1967. It was then covered by Anne Murray in 1979 and became a hit again, reaching the Top 15 on the pop singles chart and doing even better on the country and adult contemporary charts. Here, Boyle has a chance to change the pace and do an untempo song, but yet again, she keeps the mood grim--with only a piano (and synth strings at the very end)--remarking on her handwritten note beneath the lyrics (as provided for each track), "The tears of happiness don't mean a thing." That is but one line in what is, otherwise, entirely a very happy song.
The core of the album are the back-to-back tracks "Who I Was Born to Be" and "Proud," and also Patty Griffin's scorching tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr., "Up to the Mountain." They are all outstanding, beautifully-sung tracks. The former, co-written by Audra Mae, reportedly a British artist of her own about to release her own CD and also allegedly Judy Garland's grand-niece, could be termed Susan Boyle's autobiographical song. The lyrics are powerful and speak volumes to Susan's continued search to find herself and her place in this world. And while Boyle claims "Proud" is about a boy seeking acceptance from his non-approving father, she admits in her notes that, "My dilemma was finding my own identity--a conflict, if you like, with myself..." Again, Susan is trying to find out who Susan is. With "Mountain," no reference to MLK is given, but the choir gives the song the power and respect Griffin's opus deserves. In dealing with life's "'slings and arrows,'" as she puts it, "God is our light." On her cover of Skeeter Davis' #2 pop/country crossover supersmash from 1963, "The End of the World," which moved along at a pleasant 12/8 clip, in Boyle's cover, the lyrics "Don't they know it's the end of the world? / It ended when you said goodbye" sound like Susan could mean them literally--although she writes a "ha-ha, just foolin'"-type note beneath the lyrics. As for me, I'm not quite so easily convinced. The song is slowed way, way down, and once again Boyle brings a rather depressing song down ever further and makes it downright morose. Furthermore, her voice shows a bit of strain and sounds rather shaky. Whether that's deliberate (for emotion's sake) or due to recording fatigue is debatable. But at track #11 out of 12, it could make the listener downright weary.
On her inspirational choices, however--"How Great Thou Art," "Amazing Grace," and the aforementioned "Up to the Mountain" and "Silent Night"--her unshakeable faith in God is evident in every note sung, whether it be powerful bombast or a barely audible whisper in song. Also, the emotional debt due her mother permeates the CD. It's not only written everywhere, it's inferred in each track. It's evident that her late mother was probably her biggest fan, and this music is a daughter's gift to her mum in heaven. With only 12 tracks coming in at 48 minutes, it's a short CD for a debut album. Most CDs today average between 13-16 tracks, and almost all of the tracks were very recognizable covers. As I said previously, it was a typical rush-job coming in immediately after a competition, just in time for holiday gifts, and except for the terrific choir and Susan Boyle's oustanding voice, the production values are amateurish, especially for Simon Cowell's stature.
But I'm not reviewing the production values. I'm reviewing Susan Boyle, the vocalist. And she is TERRIFIC. She is easily better than I thought she would be. After listening to her YouTube product, especially her 1999 version of "Cry Me a River," I predicted that her voice would have deteriorated substantially after 10 years. I was very happily surprised to find that, despite the fact that Cowell should have just used her own version instead of re-recording the song with inferior musicians and mastering, her voice is better than ever.
Her emotional state has been cause for concern in recent months, and I submit that there may indeed be cause for concern. But on the other hand, with the news that the U.S. is welcoming her with open arms, perhaps she has found people who will truly love her for who she is and not scorn her as her countryfolk have done. That said, if the system allowed for half-stars, which I really wish it would, I would give the CD 3.5 stars. But since I can't, I'm going to give SUSAN the benefit of the doubt, not the production values or the number of the tracks or the short length of the CD. Therefore, my decision is:
CD RATING: **** (out of 5 stars) -- BOBBY BOURBEAU - Mauitunes -- 02 Dec 09
Top reviews from other countries
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SylvianeReviewed in Canada on August 9, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Oh que ouiiii
Mon idole
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Hans Martin WestrichReviewed in Germany on August 8, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Eine tolle Stimme
Diese CD wollte ich mir schon immer kaufen. Ich liebe die Stimme von Susan Boyle
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Hugo HerreraReviewed in Mexico on July 21, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Lo recomiendo ampliamente
Realmente bueno, volveré pronto a comprar en Amazon
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Italy on January 22, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Musica ed emozioni
Prodotto arrivato nei tempi attesi. Musica da sogno. L’ho comprato per me e anche da regalare. È stato molto gradito
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のりやまReviewed in Japan on May 29, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars 声の美しさを生かした最小限の編曲
言わずと知れた有名オーディション番組でデビューしたスーザン・ボイルのアルバムですが、歌い手の『声』を生かすために極限まで削ぎ落とされたアレンジが素晴らしかったです。ほとんどカバー曲でどの曲も良い曲ばかりですが、オリジナル曲の『Who I Was Born To Be』は特に秀逸なので是非広く知られて欲しい名曲です。