Bring Him Home--Heavily requested by fans is Chris Hassett's version of "Bring Him Home" from Les Miserables -- a stage musical with astonishing poignance and richness. Chris's a capella intro is Gene Raskin's "Those Were the Days."
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A Woman Is My Friend--This song about the women in Chris Hassett’s life starts with a tribute to his Mom and goes from there. With all the ink and anguish expended on love ballads, we need to remind ourselves that friendship may be the most powerful human enterprise of all.
Hallelujah--This Leonard Cohen song has been a long-time favorite for music-lovers who are willing to contemplate the simultaneous rawness and complexity of human relationships. YouTube has hundreds of versions of people interpreting this song.
Another Plate--At a May 2009 concert, Chris Hassett sings this a capella version of his original song, "Another Plate." The songs addresses homelessness and our response to it. Appearing with him is San Diego-based ASL interpreter, Carla Warnock.
El Centro--Chris Hassett dons a cowboy hat to sing this fan favorite, "El Centro" — a gay love story written to the tune of Marty Robbins' "El Paso." Hassett comments: "I've written a new Western saga that may not match the original in violence but more than makes up for it in the romance department."
How to Order
Bring Love Home can be purchased on this site for $15.00 each, plus S&H, and tax (CA only).
Let Love Be Your Family--Chris Hassett closed the first half of his May 2009 concert with "Let Love Be Your Family," a song that compellingly makes the case for marriage equality. And “Bonnie and Jan” were in the audience, too.