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Making Love

jnheuring

This is a superb album especially produced for making love. Pour a glass of wine for your favorite lady, check the fire, put out the dog, look into her eyes and tell her of your love. . . you're on your own from here. Barbra has sung me through several lasting relationships and I know she'll do the same for you.

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Super

PastorLiz

Some really interesting pairings and great songs

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Duets

gwhogs

Not only do you get Strisand but you get a whole lot of others. Great buy

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Duets (Barbra Streisand)

r2d2again

Wonderful album ... I can't listen to it enough.

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Duets

skmarble70

Nice to reconnect again with Streisand. Also the wonderful artists who sing with her. Great album.

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Nice collection

rucarden

Several great tunes on one album. Some I'd forgotten and am delighted to "rediscover"

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eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of The Goldberg Variations

By Gavin Borchert, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

In her lengthy career, Barbra Streisand has never shown much inclination to share the spotlight. In the movies, she must endure a leading man, but in her recordings, she has gone it alone for the most part. In 1978, however, a disc jockey edited together her and Neil Diamond’s recordings of “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” and she and Diamond quickly cut a real duet, resulting in a number one hit. Thereafter, she cannily coaxed others into sharing the microphone, resulting in chart singles with Donna Summer, Barry Gibb, Kim Carnes, former boyfriend Don Johnson, Bryan Adams, and Celine Dion, and album tracks with Johnny Mathis, Michael Crawford, and Vince Gill. The material mostly consisted of mediocre adult contemporary ballads that were outshone by the star power of the singers. This album collects all those duets, plus a couple of newly recorded mediocre adult contemporary ballads sung with Barry Manilow and Josh Groban, and a few stray tracks from the 1960s and early ’70s when Streisand joined another singer. Her unsuitability to the duet format is repeatedly evidenced, as she seems virtually incapable of shutting up when her partner is trying to take a solo, invariably humming in the background to draw attention back to herself. The only real exception to this rule is the version of “I’ve Got a Crush on You” recorded for Frank Sinatra’s own Duets album, a track Streisand did not control. Naturally, the best performances occur when she is paired with a singer who is more than just a cipher — Sinatra, Ray Charles, or Judy Garland, the latter two in TV performances. Then, of course, there’s the medley of “One Less Bell to Answer” and “A House Is Not a Home” on which she finally finds the perfect duet partner, her overdubbed self! – William Ruhlmann

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