by admin

Dreamgirls Soundtracks Free Download

This title is a cover of Dreamgirls as made famous by Dreamgirls

  1. Dreamgirls Serial Songs Free Download
  2. Dreamgirls Movie Soundtrack Free Download
Free

Dreamgirls Serial Songs Free Download

Tempo: variable (around 145 BPM)

In the same key as the original: A

This song ends without fade out

Aug 26, 2019  Free Mp3 Dreamgirls Soundtrack Download, Lyric Dreamgirls Soundtrack Chord Guitar, Free Ringtone Dreamgirls Soundtrack Download, and Get Dreamgirls Soundtrack Hiqh Qualtiy audio from Amazon, Spotify, Deezer, Itunes, Google Play, Youtube, Soundcloud and More.

Duration: 3:19 - Preview at: 0:29

0
€1.99Add to cart
0
€1.99Add to cart
0
€1.99Add to cart

These music files do not include lyrics. Download the karaoke with lyrics.

About

Release date: 2006
Format: MP3 320 Kbps
Genres:Pop, Disco, Soundtracks, Musicals & Broadway, In English
Songwriter: Tom Eyen
Composer: Henry Krieger

All files available for download are reproduced tracks, they're not the original music.

Related instrumental karaoke music

€1.99

Dreamgirls Movie Soundtrack Free Download

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

€1.99

Music Rights are covered by collection societies and publishers. The images are for illustrative purposes only and are not contractual. All musical material is re-recorded and does not use in any form the original music or original vocals or any feature of the original recording.
Without expressed permission, all uses other than home and private use are forbidden. More information...

Karaoke Version

All MP3 instrumental tracksInstrumentals on demandLatest MP3 instrumental tracksMP3 instrumental tracksFree karaoke files

Instrument Backing Tracks

Backing Tracks for GuitarBacking Tracks for BassBacking Tracks for DrumsBacking Tracks for PianoNew Custom Accompaniment TracksFree Custom Backing Tracks

Karaoke Songs

Karaoke catalogNew video karaoke filesFree karaoke
Copyright © 2004-2019, Recisio - All rights reserved

When Dreamgirls became the most successful musical of the 1981-1982 Broadway season, composer Henry Krieger and lyricist Tom Eyen's score was not the primary reason most observers pointed to, opting instead first for director/choreographer Michael Bennett's imaginative, non-stop staging and second for the talented cast, led by Jennifer Hudson in the role of Effie Melody White. (In the plot's fictionalized retelling of the story of Motown Records and the rise of the Supremes, Effie is the Florence Ballard character, shunted aside by manipulative record company president Curtis Taylor, Jr. (read: Berry Gordy, Jr.) in favor of the bland Deena Jones (read: Diana Ross), who he thinks is more likely to reach a crossover audience.) Krieger and Eyen did succeed in providing a showcase for Holliday in the volcanic torch song 'And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going,' which topped the R&B charts and made the original Broadway cast album a gold record (a rarity for show music LPs by 1982), but on the whole their score struggled to achieve its twin goals of shadowing actual Motown and other pop music of the '60s and early '70s, while also expressing plot and character points.

Twenty-five years later, the score has been reshaped for a movie version of Dreamgirls. On this 20-track soundtrack album (there is also a 36-track deluxe edition), even less of an attempt has been made at fidelity to the sounds of the '60s; in these new arrangements, the songs, which always had elements of early '80s Adult Contemporary styles, lean even more toward American Idol power ballad territory. Ironically, Dreamgirls, which on-stage was sort of an anti-star vehicle driven by the injustice against Effie and her subsequent revenge, has been partially transformed into a star vehicle for other characters. One of those characters is Deena, here played, even more ironically, by Beyoncé Knowles who is, arguably, the Diana Ross of her times in more ways than one. (Destiny's Child, her former group, also had its share of controversy and personnel changes, with attendant lawsuits.) Not surprisingly, Deena Jones is softened in the movie and given a new solo song, 'Listen,' co-written by Knowles. That the song is out of character for Deena and defies the logic of the plot doesn't seem to matter; Knowles must have a showcase, and this is it. Similarly, Eddie Murphy, as James Thunder Early, a James Brown-like singer unable to smooth his rough edges sufficiently to cross over, also gets an out-of-character number, 'Patience,' which improbably bids to transform Early into a kind of Marvin Gaye figure. Again, the plot suffers, but a star is accommodated. (The one other major star in the film, Jamie Foxx, having already won an Academy Award for Ray, doesn't seem to have felt the need to turn Curtis into a good guy with a big solo number. Instead, he revels in his villainy, all but twirling a mustache on occasion.)

Neither 'Listen' nor 'Patience' is really a bad song, however, and both are competently sung. Both were composed by Krieger with new lyricists, along with a third new song, 'Love You I Do.' (Eyen has died in the interim.) The real problem is that they take some focus away from the show and film's real star, Effie, here played by Jennifer Hudson. Hudson is an American Idol runner-up, but that should not be held against her. In fact, she's a major talent, and she dominates the musical and dramatic proceedings exactly the way Effie is supposed to, not only on 'And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going,' but throughout, from the opening song, 'Move,' to 'Dreamgirls (Finale),' with convincing performances of 'Love You I Do,' 'I Am Changing,' and 'One Night Only' in between. It is striking that, while Holliday won the Tony Award for Best Actress for Dreamgirls the stage musical, Hudson entered the 2006-2007 movie awards season being touted for Best Supporting Actress nominations for the same part in the film version. But on the soundtrack album, at least, the added attention given to her co-stars is a minor complaint. To work, Dreamgirls requires one major talent, and Jennifer Hudson is it for the screen version, just as Jennifer Holliday was on-stage. (Theater music fans should note that, to make room for the new songs, 'Ain't No Party' and 'I Miss You Old Friend,' which appeared on the cast album, have been deleted, although 'I Miss You Old Friend' was in the film and is on the deluxe edition of the soundtrack. On the other hand, 'I Want You Baby,' which was in the stage production but not on the cast album, is heard here, as is 'It's All Over,' which is essentially the recitative scene preceding 'And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going.')

Title/ComposerPerformerTimeStream
Dreamgirls, musical
1
Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Anika Noni Rose
02:18
2
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Eddie Murphy / Anika Noni Rose
03:54
3
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
Laura Bell Bundy / Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Eddie Murphy / Rory OMalley / Anika Noni Rose / Anne Warren
02:22
4
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
Hinton Battle / Jamie Foxx / Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Eddie Murphy / Keith Robinson / Anika Noni Rose
04:54
5
Siedah Garrett / Henry Krieger
02:50
6
Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Eddie Murphy / Anika Noni Rose
02:53
7
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
Jamie Foxx / Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Keith Robinson / Anika Noni Rose
03:22
8
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Anika Noni Rose
03:19
9
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
Jamie Foxx / Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Sharon Leal / Keith Robinson / Anika Noni Rose
03:40
10
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
04:45
11 02:16
12 03:34
13 04:04
14
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
03:12
15 02:58
16
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
03:10
17 03:40
18
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
02:37
19
Jennifer Hudson / Beyoncé Knowles / Sharon Leal / Anika Noni Rose
02:32
20
Tom Eyen / Henry Krieger
03:01
blue highlight denotes track pick