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The Puppini Sisters
The Puppini Sisters: The Rise and Fall of Ruby Woo
by David Rickert
For those who have been longing for a revival of the Andrews Sisters style of singing (and surely Christina Aguilera's Candyman" whetted a few appetites) the Puppini Sisters' second album, The Rise and Fall of Ruby Woo, will be right up their alley. The Sisters, one from Italy and two from England and none related, employ the sound of old groups like the Andrews and the Boswells, yet with a modern sensibility that keeps it from being merely a gimmick. ...
read moreThe Puppini Sisters: Betcha Bottom Dollar
by Woodrow Wilkins
The Andrews Sisters revisited? Not exactly. But the Puppini Sisters do capture their spirit, look and sound with their U.S. debut, Betcha Bottom Dollar. With three-part harmony, the trio brings 1940s music into the present-day, mixing some World War II-era classics with more contemporary pop and even disco selections--all done in the style popularized by the Andrews Sisters.Based in the United Kingdom, the Puppini Sisters were inspired by a French animated movie, The Triplets of Belleville, which received ...
read moreThe Puppini Sisters - The Rise and Fall of Ruby Woo Ecard | the Puppini Sisters | Ecard
Source:
All About Jazz
The girls (Marcella Puppini, Kate Mullins, and Stephanie O'Brien) are back with their trademark fusion of 1940's harmonies and modern day pop on their new album, The Rise & Fall of Ruby Woo. Featuring their unique take of the jazz standard It Don't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing," covers of Walk Like an Egyptian," and Crazy in Love," and originals such as Soho Nights" and I Can't Believe ...
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