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Disneymania 5

CD - 2007 Youth-CD Disney Disneymania 2007 1 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 3.6 out of 5

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Call Number: Youth-CD Disney Disneymania 2007
On Shelf At: Downtown Library

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown Kids
2-week checkout
Youth-CD Disney Disneymania 2007 2-week checkout On Shelf

Compact disc.
Part of your world (Miley Cyrus) -- Two worlds (Corbin Bleu) -- So this is love (Cheetah Girls) -- I wan'na be like you (Jonas Brothers) -- When she loved me (Jordan Pruitt) -- Kiss the girl (Ashley Tisdale) -- Second star to the right (T-Squad) -- Cruella De Vil (Hayden Panettiere) -- Colors of the wind (Vanessa Hudgens) -- Go the distance (Lucas Grabeel) -- Siamese cat song (B5) -- Reflection (Everlife) -- Let's get together (Go-Go's) -- True to your heart (Keke Palmer) -- Find yourself (Drew Seeley).
Various performers.

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

Fun! submitted by adilaura on July 1, 2011, 7:16pm Classic Disney songs with a new twist! Quite fun and upbeat.

Corporate Synergy! submitted by Meginator on July 6, 2020, 6:10pm This series of cover albums is, in some ways, obviously representative of a corporate synergy strategy, with Disney Channel stars singing hits from Disney productions and keeping the money all in the family. The results are somewhat predictable and widely variant in quality, both in terms of absolute talent and in the ways that they reinterpret (or don’t) the original tunes. Every track falls squarely into the realm of radio-friendly teen pop and the ballads don’t have much gravity to them, with Jordan Pruitt’s rendition of “When She Loved Me” as a surprising exception (perhaps not so surprising given the strength of the song itself). As ever, some of the performers are limited by their chosen (or assigned) material and its natural tendency to sound good in this very specific musical format; some songs seemed destined to fail from the start, even though most of the renditions here hew pretty close to the party line and do little to truly reinvent these standards. Yet for all of that, the album largely accomplishes what it sets out to do, and its core audience should be satisfied even if the compilation oozes with potential more than with actual achievement. At the very least, it *is* fun.