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The Puppini Sisters - Betcha Bottom Dollar (2007)

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The Puppini Sisters - Betcha Bottom Dollar (2007)

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EAC Rip | FLAC (Img+Cue+Log) ~ 253 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps ~ 115 Mb | Full Scans
Vocal Jazz, Swing, Pop, Easy Listening | 00:41:36 | Verve #B0008409-02

Betcha Bottom Dollar is the debut studio album by the close harmony trio The Puppini Sisters, released through Universal Classics and Jazz on 31 July 2006 in the United Kingdom. It was produced by Canadian composer Benoît Charest, whose music for the 2003 film The Triplets of Belleville inspired Marcella Puppini to form the group. Puppini and fellow band members, Kate Mullins and Stephanie O'Brien, arranged the songs on the album themselves. Betcha Bottom Dollar received mixed reviews from critics. It debuted at number 17 on the UK Albums Chart and became the fastest selling debut by a jazz artist.

Poised somewhere between the Andrews Sisters and Nouvelle Vague, the Puppini Sisters modernize vocal harmony pop while keeping its "so traditional, it's hip" appeal. On their debut Betcha Bottom Dollar, the Sisters' style is their substance; it's not a coincidence that the founding Puppini, Marcella, worked for fashion icon Vivienne Westwood before forming the group. Fortunately, the trio's style – vintage '40s outfits, cheeky covers of new wave and post-punk classics and all – manages to stay on the likeable, not grating, side of kitsch. Taken individually, the trio's voices aren't spectacular, but they blend together nicely enough to create a convincing homage to the heyday of vocal harmony pop in the '30s and '40s. A very pleasant "Mr. Sandman," a pretty, languid "Java Jive" and "Sway" are among the best vocal pop standards on Betcha Bottom Dollar, but interestingly enough, the Puppini Sisters often sound less campy on the songs they remake than on the classics. Not surprisingly, the original versions of the tracks they've chosen to give three-part harmony makeovers have strong melodies and distinctive singers, so it's not really all that surprising that Kate Bush's "Wuthering Heights" sounds lovely with three-part harmonies, or that their version of Blondie's "Heart of Glass" fits right in with "Mr. Sandman." There are times on Betcha Bottom Dollar that things feel a little too knowing and ironic, as on the chirpy cover of the Smiths' "Panic," and the album might be a little too long for the mood it's trying to sustain. On the whole, however, the genuine affection for the styles the Puppini Sisters adopt and adapt saves Betcha Bottom Dollar from being insufferably cutesy. ~ Heather Phares, All Music

Track List

01. Sisters [03:07]
02. Mr. Sandman [02:38]
03. Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy [02:30]
04. Java Jive [03:37]
05. Bei Mir Bist du Schцn [02:20]
06. Wuthering Heights [03:38]
07. Jeepers Creepers [02:36]
08. I Will Survive [04:04]
09. Tu Vuo Fa L`Americano [02:38]
10. Heart of Glass [02:57]
11. Sway [03:10]
12. Panic [02:17]
13. Heebie Jeebies [02:58]
14. In the Mood [03:12]

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