Back home

SectionsTodaySponsored by:
The Year in Entertainment
Dumb, dumber and then some

Movies
  • Best of 1998
  • Box Office

    Books
  • Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
  • Art Books

    Music
    Pop
    -Artists take a back seat to accountants

    -Pop music had hard edges with soft middle

    -Soundtracks, moms, and other phenomena

    Classical
    -'Creation,' Carter compositions hit warm chords in '98

    Jazz
    -Beleaguered jazz, rare, independent spirits are lost

    Top 10 discs
    -Wald's 10
    -Morse's 10
    -Sullivan's 10
    -Rodriguez's 10
    -Siegel's 10
    -Robicheau's 10
    -Dyer's 10

    Television
  • On Ratings
  • Best of 1998

    Food
  • The year of the chef

    Art

  • The superb and the shoddy

    Dance

  • Boston Ballet mixed while ABT excels

  • The News
    -1998 Golden Globe nominations -Academy Awards


    Multimedia

    Photos
    Links bring you to prior Globe Online news coverage
    -'98 Oscar winners
    -Red carpet arrivals


    The Year in Review 1998
  • Front Page
  • New England
  • Nation/World
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment

  • Ed Siegel's top 10 CD's

    By Ed Siegel, Globe Staff, 12/13/98

    1. Audra McDonald, ''Way Back to Paradise'' (Nonesuch)

    2. Audra McDonald, ''Ragtime: The Musical'' (BMG)

    Not since Julie Andrews and ''My Fair Lady'' have a musical and its star burst on the scene with the power of ''Ragtime'' and Audra McDonald, who also championed several new composers on the new musical front in her debut CD.

    3. Bob Dylan, ''Bob Dylan Live 1966: The `Royal Albert Hall' Concert'' (Columbia)

    Dylan aficionados waited more than 30 years for the release of a clean, complete record of his confrontation with the folkie faithful. Electric in every sense.

    4. Gidon Kremer and Kremerata, Astor Piazzolla's and Horacio Ferrer's ''Mar i a de Buenos Aires'' (Teldec)

    Everyone does Piazzolla these days, but nobody better than Kremer, and this ''tango operita'' is the best of all, despite Ferrer's pretentiousness.

    5. ''Ives and Ruggles,'' Cleveland Orchestra, Christoph von Dohnanyi, conductor (London)

    Scorching 20th-century American music, played by a great American orchestra.

    6. Angelique Kidjo, ''Oremi'' (Island)

    Kidjo soars to world-music heights in her first look at the African diaspora, blending her beautiful beat with hip-hop.

    7. Leonard Bernstein, ''Bernstein Century'' (Sony Classical)

    Sony atones for the hideously packaged ''Royal Edition'' Bernstein recordings, featuring re-releases and new gems from the vault.

    8. Lauryn Hill, ''The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill'' (Ruffhouse)

    The former Fugee blends rap with reggae and R&B, breaking down barriers the way McDonald and Kidjo do in their idioms.

    9. Pulp, ''This Is Hardcore'' (Island)

    Like the other bands on the ''Trainspotting'' soundtrack, Pulp restores one's faith in contemporary rock.

    10. Emerson String Quartet, Edgar Meyer ''Quintet'' and Ned Rorem ''String Quartet No. 4''(Deutsche Grammophon)

    The Kronos Quartet came out with the big box of 20th-century classical music, but no group is classier than the Emersons.

    This story ran on page C10 of the Boston Globe on 12/13/98.
    © Copyright 1998 Globe Newspaper Company.



     


    Advertising information

    © Copyright 1998 Boston Globe Electronic Publishing, Inc.

    Click here for assistance. Please read our user agreement.

    Use Boston.com to do business with the Boston Globe:
    advertise, subscribe, contact the news room, and more.