Punishing Kiss

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Punishing Kiss album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Ute Lemper (See All Albums by Ute Lemper)
  • Date Released: Apr 4, 2000

  • Genre: Classical, Style: Alternative, Vocal Pop

  • Label: Decca

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 57:33

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Daniel Felsenfeld

eMusic Contributor

11.16.10
A chanteuse for this or any other age
2000 | Label: Decca

With a voice like a Lotte Lenya, looks like Marlene Deitrich, and the performing gifts of Piaf, Ute Lemper is a chanteuse for this or any other age. Known mostly for her interpretations of Kurt Weill or her collaborations with composer Michael Nyman (both of which are available on Decca as well), this record stands as a fantastic and new direction for her — or certainly did when it was released in 2000. Rather than tour through her beloved Weimar Cabaret catalogue, she instead assays songs by none other than Elvis Costello, Nick Cave, Steve Nieve, Neil Hannon (from the Divine Comedy) and Tom Waits. The arrangements are sumptuous, and Lemper is in not only excellent voice but well in her element, singing work written for her by some of the most erudite and reaching of modern songwriters. Especially worthy are the title track (by Costello), Nieve's "Passionate Fight," and Waits's tender closer "The Part you Throw Away." Called, not un-aptly, by one reviewer, "Cyberpunk Cabaret," Lemper is not just content to pour the old wine into even the most fabulous of new bottles — she needs new wine of her own.

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Love it!

SavagePopster

This is Ute Lemper doing contemporary songs that fit her perfectly, backed by The Divine Comedy. Songs are delivered with just the right amount of drama and style without being overly theatrical or too stylized.

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They Say All Music Guide

Ute Lemper has developed a reputation as a successor to Lotte Lenya with the looks of Greta Garbo or Marlene Dietrich, a northern European chanteuse with a taste for the decadent sound of Weimar Germany; she is arguably the definitive interpreter of Kurt Weill for her generation. Punishing Kiss, her first album devoted primarily to songs by contemporary songwriters, extends her reputation by incorporating the work of artists influenced by Weill, including Elvis Costello, Tom Waits, and Nick Cave. But the primary collaborators on the album are the members of the British group the Divine Comedy, who provide the backing tracks on most of the songs, and three compositions by group members Neil Hannon and Joby Talbot, with Hannon singing duet vocals on three tracks. The sound of Weill — the early Weill — pervades the album, starting with the inclusion of his “Tango Ballad,” a song in which a couple reminisce about the good old days when he was a procurer and she a prostitute. Such a decadent tone continues in Cave’s “Little Water Song” (sung by a woman who is being drowned by her lover), Costello’s complex tales of romantic dissolution, and in the characteristic Waits songs of romantic low-life types. Among the most impressive selections, however, are the Divine Comedy tracks “The Case Continues” and “Split,” which finds Lemper and Hannon hurling witty insults at each other. From its extensive set of photographs of Lemper in black leather posing in a decaying building to the dramatic arrangements and the singer’s powerful, precise vocals, this is highly stylized art music given a pop element by its composers. A daring effort, it deserves more of an audience than it is likely to get, at least at first. – William Ruhlmann

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