Review: Barbra Streisand's Gracefully Aging Voice Is 'What Matters Most'

Review: Barbra Streisand's Gracefully Aging Voice Is 'What Matters Most'

Published: August 22, 2011 @ 1:27 pm
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By Chris Willman

Is it possible Barbra Streisand’s voice could actually get better with age?

That seems like an iffy proposition, with 70 around the corner next year and an upper range that can’t last forever. Yet she’s never sounded more appealing than she does on her 33rd studio album, “What Matters Most: Barbra Streisand Sings the Lyrics of Alan and Marilyn Bergman.” 

The occasional slight rasp in her voice -- we’re talking very slight -- makes her sound almost human. The intersection of near-perfection and near-mortal turns out to be a sweet spot.

The new album hasn’t been as wildly anticipated among fans as her previous effort, 2009’s “Love Is the Answer,” which had her tackling standards under the direction of producer Diana Krall. For this self-produced followup, she looked solely to her favorite longtime lyricists, the Bergmans, and swore to take on only songs she’d never recorded before.

Since, as she points out in the liner notes, she’d already cut 51 of their tunes, what was left from their catalog is pretty much obscurities, except the opening “The Windmills of My Mind.” But for those of us who cotton to the idea of Streisand lending her pipes to something unrecognizable, the lack of familiarity is a boon.

From all appearances, Streisand has reached a secure place in her life, so it makes sense that she should devote an entire album to the work of longtime BFFs whose work positively oozes romantic contentedness. After 50 years of blissfully wed co-writing, the Bergmans are so devoted to love as an eternal ideal, they make Sade sound like Sartre. They’re practically AARP poster children for keeping passion alive into the 60s and 70s – and beyond (Alan is 85, Marilyn is 81).

As a result, they have a reputation for schmaltz -- and there’s a reason why some of the songs here were originally heard as Oscar-bait ballads in forgotten movies “Micki and Maude” and “The Champ” and not “Kill Bill.” But if the Bergmans have a mutually one-track mind when it comes to exalting the power of love, Streisand’s faith in them is not altogether misplaced.

You can -- and maybe should -- wince at hearing Streisand sing lines like “The moon must surely love us, as it bathes us in its light” or “Love’s the refuge that sees us through.” But when, in “I’ll Never Say Goodbye,” she declares “When I say always, I mean forever/I trust tomorrow as much as today,” you shouldn’t let the fact that the song is the theme from “The Promise” blind you to the simple profundity of that proclamation of faith.

“Windmills of My Mind” is the standout, and not just because it probably marked the last time the Bergmans indulged in lyrical psychedelia. Streisand sings a good portion of the standard a cappella, in a reading as effective as it is brave, before William Ross’ fairly subtle orchestral arrangement adds to the turbine power.

Tags: Alan and Marilyn Bergman, barbra streisand, Chris Botti, Chris Willman, Frank Sinatra, music, Music, Patrick Williams, reviews
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Chris Willman has been a frequent contributor to TV Guide, New York magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Rolling Stone, Spin, Billboard, Parade and other publications. In a long run at Entertainment Weekly, he penned more than 20 cover stories as a senior writer before becoming the magazine’s chief music critic. His recent essay about Bob Dylan for New York magazine was selected for the latest edition of De Capo's’ "Best Music Writing" book series. Advertising Age’s media columnist included Willman in a short list of “the entertainment world’s sharpest critics.”

His book "Rednecks & Bluenecks: The Politics of Country Music" was praised by Stephen King, who said, “You won’t read a better book about American music this year — or, probably, a better one about American political thought.”

During his time at EW, meanwhile, he received the ultimate celebrity accolade from Kanye West, who famously blogged (in response to a B+ review), “Kill yourself, Chris Willman!” Failing to heed that advice, Willman has survived to live, live-blog, and grade another day.

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