Barry Manilow Music and Passion Live From Las Vegas

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Product Description Track Listing: Disc 1 - Opening, It?s A Miracle, Opening Medley:, -Daybreak -Somewhere In The Night -This One?s For You, Mandy / Could It Be Magic?, I Made It Through The Rain, Here?s To Las Vegas (Intro), See The Show Again, Can?t Smile Without You, Fifties Medley: -Bandstand Boogie -Venus -Love Is A Many Splendored Thing -Unchained Melody, Mayflower Medley: -Brooklyn Blues -Do You Know Who?s Livin? Next Door? -Come Monday -They Dance! --Boogie Wonderland --Hot Stuff --Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I?m Yours, Brooklyn Blues (Reprise), Weekend In New England, If I Can Dream, Somewhere Down The Road, Here?s To Las Vegas, I Write The Songs, Copacabana (At The Copa), It?s A Miracle (Reprise), One Voice (Encore), DISC 2 Inside MANILOW: MUSIC AND PASSION, Making the PBS Special, Tryin? To Get The Feeling Again, Even Now - Performed december 17, 2005, Unchained Melody music video, Photo gallery Amazon.com Passionate but always personable, Barry Manilow celebrates his 100th performance at the Las Vegas Hilton with a stylish, witty show originally taped in December 2005 for a PBS special. Happy to be taking up residence in the same Hilton theatre where Frank Sinatra, Jerry Lewis, and Elvis Presley all played, Manilow spreads his joy with a wildly enthusiastic audience. Beginning with his opening number, "It's a Miracle," Manilow spends most of the evening on his feet and close to the crowd, seldom sitting behind his piano except to wrap fans in the comfort of dreamy, hook-filled ballads. His take on the pretty "Daybreak" highlights the song's lushness and positive outlook, while "Somewhere Down the Road" comes across as a mature plaint about love and loss. A mini-tribute to hit songs of the 1950s proves hugely entertaining, starting with the American Bandstand theme (indeed, there are lyrics), featuring Manilow's backup singers as typically star-struck teens. The '50s suite includes Manilow's version of pop standards "Venus," "Love Is a Many Splendored Thing," and "Unchained Melody," all of which evoke a warm nostalgia. Going autobiographical, Manilow sings several songs ("Do You Know Who's Living Next Door?") from his Here at the Mayflower album, reflections on a unique childhood in a Brooklyn apartment building. Manilow pays homage to Elvis in a stirring reading of the King's "If I Can Dream," reminisces about bygone days of being an opening