Sarah Brightman Fly: Album
Included "Time to Say Goodbye" as a bonus track due to public demand. Fly 2 (2000): A limited-edition 2-CD set sold exclusively during the
One of the most striking achievements of Fly is how it synthesizes Brightman’s disparate musical identities. Here, the Andrew Lloyd Webber muse of The Phantom of the Opera meets the 1990s club diva. The track “A Question of Honour” is the album’s centerpiece, a microcosm of its entire aesthetic. Beginning with a spoken-word excerpt from a German adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo , the song erupts into a pounding electronic beat before giving way to a soaring vocalise reminiscent of a Puccini aria. It is audacious, almost absurd in its ambition, yet Brightman sells every second of it. She is not “crossover” in the sanitized, elevator-music sense; she is a boundary-destroyer. Fly proves that a classically trained voice can be a potent instrument of dance music, that heartbreak can be expressed as effectively over a synth bassline as over a piano, and that theatricality is not a liability but a superpower. sarah brightman fly album
: The album is a "mumbo jumbo" of styles, featuring everything from high-energy techno and pop-rock to rap and classical operatic passages. Included "Time to Say Goodbye" as a bonus
Released in 1995, is the fourth studio album by English soprano Sarah Brightman and serves as a pivotal bridge between her Broadway past and her future as a global classical-crossover icon . Produced by Frank Peterson , the album marked a daring shift into pop-rock, electronic, and gothic sounds, straying far from the traditional operatic expectations of her voice. A Sonic Evolution The track “A Question of Honour” is the