In the early '90s while enjoying the success of her star-making performances on the musical concept album
Jekyll & Hyde and the Broadway-bound stage version,
Linda Eder recorded two albums for
Angel Records. The first was
The Scarlet Pimpernel, another musical concept album by
Jekyll & Hyde composer
Frank Wildhorn, while the second was the solo disc
And So Much More, also produced and mostly composed by
Wildhorn. Songs from these two albums are revisited on
Storybook along with some minor treasures unearthed from the
Angel vaults. Among these unreleased gems are
"Vole Mon Ange" and
"If He Never Said Hello," both from
Svengali, a non-Broadway musical by
Wildhorn that starred
Eder. In the aria
"Vole Mon Ange," Eder's voice reaches with gusto into
Sarah Brighman's operatic territory while the sweet contemporary
ballad "If He Never Said Hello" sounds like it was lifted directly from one of
Barbra Streisand's latter-day efforts. Whether intended or not,
Eder has always had to deal with comparisons to
Streisand's voice and phrasing, but she unabashedly invites the criticism with this eerily similar performance. More successful is
Wildhorn and
Jack Murphy's ode to
big-band swing,
"One Bad Habit." Backed by a hot band,
Eder excitedly wraps her chords around an intense melody that reaches an exhaustive climax thanks to numerous key changes. On
"Let Him Fly," an immense show-stopping
ballad,
Eder's voice soars higher and higher, keeping pace with the orchestra, until she sounds perilously close to crashing on the final note. These newly discovered recordings are far more interesting than the previously released material included on the disc such as her pedestrian walks through the
standards "All the Way," "Smile," and
"The Man That Got Away." However, it is through these early renditions that a listener can appreciate how over the years
Eder's voice and her interpretive skills have matured and improved. While not an essential purchase,
Storybook does hold a few treats for fans and documents
Eder's early days of recording when her Broadway debut was just around the corner and her star was on the rise. ~ Aaron Latham