I have to confess that I have never seen and heard 
          Ute Lemper ‘live’, but have long admired her recordings of Weill and 
          others. This DVD is the next best thing to experiencing her ‘in the 
          flesh’ (so to speak), and makes for fascinating viewing and listening. 
        
 
        
It opens with her rehearsing the musical ‘Chicago’, 
          going through her song-and-dance routines, and talking about her career. 
          The songs that follow show her range; Weill as you would expect, but 
          also Michael Nyman and other contemporaries, as well as a great version 
          of Lili Marlene. Her vocal style is, of course, highly personal, and, 
          I find, can pall. There are tricks, or gimmicks if you want to be unkind, 
          that can get a bit repetitive if you hear her sing a number of songs 
          on the trot, as I found with her recent CD Illusions. But she 
          is essentially a cabaret artist, a singer for whom movement, facial 
          expression, the whole business of presentation is a vital part of the 
          whole, and she is very watchable, with her sinuous figure and beautifully 
          languid features. 
        
 
        
There are also, between the music items, fairly lengthy 
          interviews where she talks of her experiences of life, and her views 
          on various contemporary trends, in the arts and elsewhere. This could 
          be tedious, but it isn’t, because she is a genuinely interesting and 
          thoughtful person. And I hadn’t realised that she is also a painter, 
          one of some considerable ability as can be seen from the examples we 
          are shown. 
        
 
        
For admirers of this talented and intelligent ‘cross-over’ 
          artist, this DVD will be informative as well as hugely enjoyable. 
        
 
        
        
Gwyn Parry-Jones