In 1993, American singer
Barbra Streisand and British actor
Michael Crawford released a duet version of "The Music of the Night". It is taken from Streisand's twenty-sixth studio album,
Back to Broadway (1993), and peaked at number 54 on the
UK Singles Chart. This version was also later included on Crawford's own album
A Touch of Music in the Night (1993).
Critical reception The duet received favorable reviews from music critics. Ron Fell from the
Gavin Report declared it as "the year's most triumphant duet". British
Lennox Herald wrote, "Familiar song which might be a hit again, given the high profiles of both stars." Pan-European magazine
Music & Media said it's "easily the most beautifully executed song" off the
Back To Broadway album, adding, "It will hypnotise anyone with a taste for real voices into playing it." A reviewer from
People Magazine found that
Streisand, "crossing cadenzas with
Broadway's first Phantom",
Michael Crawford "goes for grandeur instead of intimacy and winds up with grandiosity."
The Stage stated that they both are "squeezing the last drop" out of "Music of the Night". Richard Harrington from
The Washington Post declared it as "an anthemic duet in which Crawford's warm, theatrical subtlety is overwhelmed by Streisand's undiminishable power (just listen to her attempt to make real the phrase "tremulous and tender")."
Charts ==See also==