Raissa!

Reviews

“RAISSA KATONA BENNETT does for contemporary songwriters what Andrea Marcovicci has done for American popular standards. She not only totally personalizes and acts the songs, but at the same time, showcases the writers’ intentions and reveals deeper meanings in the material. With some singers you say, “Wow, what a singer!” With some you say, “Wow, what a song!” With Raissa, you get both!”— DAVID FRIEDMAN – Composer and Musical Director/Writing Partner with Kathie Lee Gifford, from The Today Show’s, “Everyone Has A Story”, and celebrated composer (“Listen to My Heart”, “We Can Be Kind”), Broadway, TV and Movie composer/arranger/conductor.

RAISSA was nominated for a 2009 MAC* Award for Outstanding Female Vocalist!
*Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs.


Raissa Katona Bennett: Putting Things Away

May 13, 2008
By David Finkle
Raissa Katona Bennett not only has a sweet yet sturdy voice — even piercing and fierce when she wants — but she puts a generous helping of intelligence behind what she does. She also inserts a heap of courage (read chutzpah) into her act, because she doesn’t believe in luring and lulling audiences by clinging to tried-and-true material that remains the usual option for the majority of cabaret purveyors.

She eschews songs from the first two-thirds of the 20th century and concentrates on the so-you-don’t-think-they-write-’em-like-they-used-to crowd. That’s the busy contingent active up to and including the present moment. She seems to adore Craig Carnelia and also has a penchant for, among others, Paul Simon (the most generally recognized name in the collection), Amanda McBroom, Jason Robert Brown, William Finn, David Spencer, David Friedman, and her musical director, David Caldwell. The last-named wrote a song called “A Tomb With a View” that demands an extra dollop of guts. It’s about death and is a more congenial variation on Oscar Wilde’s line about lying in the gutter but looking at the stars. Yup, it’s a gumption inclusion not made any less challenging for being held until late in the set.

Bennett, who’s got a Broadway credit as Christine Daae in Phantom of the Opera on her résumé and a CD, What I Was Dreaming Of, available, appears to have plenty of that gumption commodity. Though petite and cute as a floral-fabric-covered button, she doesn’t indicate she’d shy from anything — and that includes allowing her vulnerability to show. Her title refers to “the bits and pieces of our lives” that accumulate — whether in actuality or psychologically — and how we deal with them. She’s obviously given her subject some thought and even gets specific by singing items like “I Furnished My One-Room Apartment” (Michael Mooney-Stephen Hoffman) from Upstairs at O’Neals and Carnelia’s “Just Where They Should Be.” She’s more philosophical on Finn’s “I Have Found” and, as a beg-off, Friedman’s more familiar “We Live on Borrowed Time.” Eventually, she allows, “Perhaps the universe is trying to tell me there is a place for everything.

…there’s no need for her to give any second thoughts to the program. She knows what she wants to offer audiences and should only be encouraged to stick to her guns.

Presented by and at the Metropolitan Room,
34 W. 22nd St., NYC.
May 11-27. Tue. and Sun., 7 p.m.
(212) 206-0440 or www.metropolitanroom.com.

 


 

RAISSA KATONA BENNETT
IT’S POSSIBLE
METROPOLITAN ROOM, NYC 

Even though it is her debut cabaret show, perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising that Raissa Katona Bennett quickly wins the approval of her cabaret audience. Bennett brings her lovely coloratura soprano to The Metropolitan Room with a track record in musical theater that includes national companies, regional theaters, Off Broadway, and perhaps most notably as Christine in Phantom of the Opera at the Majestic Theater.

The opening number sets the stage for Bennett’s varied song list to follow. A solid rendition of Amanda McBroom’s The Way of the Heart is a symbolic selection carrying out her autobiographical theme that anything is possible. Studying to become a baby nurse, she decided to change course, follow her heart and become a singer. The personal history leads her, about a third of the way into the show, to her jubilant title song, It’s Possible, from Seussical, The Musical. After that, the audience is treated to a festival of songs, Bennett potent with a wistful Sleepy Man, a lilting Storybook, and Alan and Marilyn Bergman’s yearning Niagra. She also has a humorous bent, revealing her versatility with several wryly comedic songs.

David Caldwell was Bennett’s musical director and accompanist, several times pitching in engagingly on the vocals and with some interplay. The program was directed and co-written by Eric Michael Gillett. J. P. Perreaux was technical director.

Peter Leavy
Cabaret Scenes
November 8, 2006
www.cabaretscenes.com

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Neil Sedaka
Rock 'n Roll legend, Songwriters Hall of Fame member, 2004 recipient of the Sammy Cahn Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Popular Music, Brooklyn native Neil Sedaka has written countless #1 hits in a career spanning six decades.
Amanda McBroom
Concert performer, actress and award-winning songwriter, Amanda McBroom, is the author of the Golden Globe Award-winning song "The Rose," made famous by Bette Midler in the film of the same name. Besides Midler, Leanne Rimes, Barry Manilow, Judy Collins, Harry Belafonte, Betty Buckley, Barbara Cook, Stephanie Mills, Donny Osmond, and the Chipmunks have recorded her songs. With Michele Brourman she wrote the songs for "Land Before Time."
Ann Hampton Callaway
Multiplatinum-selling singer, songwriter and pianist, Callaway has composed songs for television, Broadway, Off-Broadway and numerous major singers, including Barbra Streisand ("Higher Ground," "I've Dreamed of You"), Liza Minnelli, Patti LuPone, Michael Feinstein, Carole King, and her sister Liz Callaway. Her TV themes include The Nanny, Day's End, Cabaret Beat, and The Jim J and Tammy Fay Show.
Michael John LaChiusa
The Tony-nominated Broadway and opera composer/lyricist and librettist responsible for "Hello Again," "Marie Christine," and "See What I Wanna See." In the 1999-2000 season, he had two shows on Broadway, "Marie Christine" and "The Wild Party," both of which received Tony nominations for Best Book and Best Original Score. His early success, "First Lady Suite," was produced by The Public in 1993. He wrote the book, with Graciela Daniele and Jim Lewis, of "Chronicle of a Death Foretold," for whish he received a Tony nomination for Best Book.
David Friedman
For the Today Show, this prolific songwriter writes a new song every month based on stories submitted by viewers for the "Everyone Has a Story" series. He's written hundreds of songs with Kathie Lee Gifford, with whom he co-produced two children's CD's, one of which is now a children's musical "Party Animals." His song "Your Love" went quadruple platinum when Diana Ross recorded it. His multiplatinum selling "Open Your Eyes to Love" was featured on the soundtrack of "the Lizzie McGuire Movie," and Allison Krauss sang his opening song on Disney's "Bambi" sequel.
Matthew Parillo
Vice president of production at MTV Studios, Matthew oversees the production of live events, concerts, reality series and documentaries, including MTV Live, Beach House, Spring Break, The Hills Live, House of Style and the Video Music Awards. In 15 years at the company he's worked on over 350 productions.
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