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Little Women: The Musical [5/3]

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"Little Women [Original Broadway Cast]" (05/03/2005) Pop Vocal Original Cast, GhostlightComposer: Jason Howland. Lyricist: Mindi Dickstein. Original Cast Recording/Sutton Foster: Sutton Foster; Danny Gurwin, Janet Carroll, Maureen McGovern, Amy McAlexander, Megan McGinnis, Jenny Powers, John Hickok. Personnel: Karl Kawahara, Sylvia Davanzo, Eric Degioia, Mary Whitaker, Martin Agee, Sean Carney (violin); David Blinn, Liuh-Wen Ting (viola); Lawrence Feldman (flute, alto flute, piccolo, clarinet, bass clarinet); Lynne Cohen (oboe, English horn); Tony Kadleck (trumpet, cornet, flugelhorn); Russ Rizner-French (French horn); Mark Lusk (tenor trombone, bass trombone, euphonium); Rob Meffe (piano); Jim Saporito (percussion); Peter Hylenski (sound effects). Audio Mixer: Joel Moss . Liner Note Author: Allan Knee. Recording information: Avatar Studios, New York, NY (02/03/2005/02/28/2005); The Hit Factory, New York, NY (02/03/2005/02/28/2005). Photographers: Paul Kolnik; Joan Marcus. Louisa May Alcott's perennially popular 1869 novel Little Women, recounting the domestic adventures of the four March sisters (particularly the literarily minded middle sister, Jo) in the Civil War era in Concord, MA, has proven perennially popular as a subject of adaptation into other media, especially since the book fell out of copyright. There was the classic 1933 film starring Katharine Hepburn; a 1949 movie with June Allyson; a 1958 TV musical with songs by Richard Adler; a 1978 TV movie; and a well-received 1994 screen version featuring Winona Ryder. And, starting on January 23, 2005, there was a Broadway musical (no relation to the Adler work), with songs by composer Jason Howland and lyricist Mindi Dickstein, starring Sutton Foster (fresh from her Tony-winning performance in Thoroughly Modern Millie) as Jo, with cabaret singer Maureen McGovern as Marmee, the mother of the brood. The show made a modest appearance on Broadway, which had in recent years seen a plethora of musical adaptations of public-domain novels. Neither particularly liked nor disliked by critics, it nevertheless settled in for an extended run, and while the cast album, recorded the month after the opening, seems to have had a little trouble finding a home, such that it did not appear in record stores until May 2005 through the auspices of theater specialist Ghostlight Records, the show was still running at that point. (After the Tony Award nominations virtually ignored it, only giving a nod to Foster, it closed on May 22 after 137 performances.) On disc, the reasons for both the theater community's indifference and the public's acceptance are suggested. Certainly, this is not a remarkable score; serviceable would be a better word to describe it. The lyrics have none of the wit that critics revel in when it comes from the pen of Stephen Sondheim, and the music is neither traditional Broadway show music nor entirely in the camp of the sub-operatic style of Andrew Lloyd Webber, though it suggests both at times. But then, Little Women is not the sort of material that would be likely to attract either Sondheim or Lloyd Webber. As the show goes on, it becomes apparent that Dickstein is aiming at a simple, plainspoken language that matches the tone of the book, while Howland, though capable of dramatic passages (particularly employed comically in "An Operatic Tragedy," as Jo recounts one of her overwritten early stories to a friend at the outset), also wants to match his music to the understated particulars of the story. The score is conventional and workmanlike: it gives co-star McGovern two showcases ("Here Alone" and "Days of Plenty") and provides Foster with a typical Broadway "I am" song ("Astonishing"). Indeed, it provides her with much more; this is nothing less than a star vehicle, and Foster, who may be to Broadway what Sandra Bullock was to Hollywood in the early 2000s, a rough-and-ready heroine who can handle a kiss or a pratfall with equal aplomb, is up to that challenge. Slow to get going, Little Women makes its points about family commitment and social responsibility movingly by its end, and it's no surprise that audiences respond to that kind of sincerity

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Hair

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"Hair [Original Broadway Cast]" (05/31/1998) Pop Vocal Original Cast, RCA Victor Records (USA)Principal cast includes: Ronald Dyson (Ron); James Rado (Claude); Gerome Ragni (Berger); Steve Curry (Woof); Lamont Washington (Hud); Lynn Kellogg (Sheila); Sally Eaton (Jeanie); Melba Moore (Dionne); Shelley Plimpton (Crissy); Diane Keaton (Waitress); Jonathan Kramer (Young Recruit); Paul Jabara (General Grant); Lorrie Davis (Abraham Lincoln); Donnie Burks (Sergeant). Producer: Andy Wiswell. Recorded in RCA Studio B, New York, New York on May 6, 1968. Composer: Galt MacDermot. Lyricists: Gerome Ragni; James Rado. The first and best musical of the hippie peace and love generation, with a score by Gerome Ragni, James Rado and composer Galt Macdermot. The show and the album were quite different to the usual Broadway fare, but songs such as 'Aquarius', 'Good Morning Starshine', 'Let The Sunshine In' and the title number, soon went on to have a life of their own. The album spent 59 weeks in the US Top 40, 13 of them at number 1, and also did well in the UK. It was also awarded a Grammy for 'best score from an Original Cast album'.

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Wonderful Town

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"Wonderful Town [2003 Broadway Revival Replacement Cast]" (12/07/2004) Pop Vocal Cast, Broadway Musical, DRG (USA)Music composed by Leonard Bernstein. Lyrics written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. Principal cast includes: Jennifer Westfeldt (Eileen Sherwood); David Margulies (Appopolous); Michael McGrath (Chick Clark); Raymond Jaramillo McLeod (Wreck); Peter Benson (Frank Lippencott). Recorded at Righ Track Studios, New York, New York on January 12, 2004. Personnel: Marilyn Reynolds, Crystal Garner, Maura Giannini, Lisa Matricardi, Masako Yanagita, Christoph Franzgrote, Rebekah Johnson, Martin Agee, Jill Jaffe, Belinda Whitney (violin); Diane Barere, Lanny Paykin (cello); Lino Gomez , John Winder, Steve Kenyon (woodwinds); Stu Satalof, David Gale, Ron Tooley, Dave Trigg (trumpet); Jack Gale, Jack Schatz, Jason Jackson (trombone); Dave Ratajczak (drums, percussion). Audio Mixer: Cynthia Daniels. Liner Note Author: Jack Viertel. Directors: Rob Fisher; Kathleen Marshall. Photographer: Paul Kolnik. Donna Murphy stars as Ruth Sherwood, an aspiring writer from Ohio who is new to New York City, in this 2003 production of WONDERFUL TOWN. On each of Murphy's featured tracks, her voice is powerful and captivating. Her singing on the ballad "Ohio" is particularly poignant and entrancing; teamed up with Jennifer Westfeldt (as Ruth's sister Eileen), Murphy makes this song is one of show's true high points. The swanky "One Hundred Easy Ways" moves along in a jazzier vein. On this selection, Murphy is accompanied by punchy brass figures and bouncy clarinet lines. Later in the show, listeners are treated to the big-band chart "Swing," which includes a great deal of vocal and instrumental call and response, as well as the clever "Wrong Note Rag," a tune that simulates a skipping record player and purposely includes sour notes. Additionally, "Ballet at the Village Vortex" is rendered exquisitely by the orchestra. On this tune, composer Leonard Bernstein recalls the swinging style of Benny Goodman and all the elegance of the Jazz Age. WONDERFUL TOWN closes with two bonus tracks from the 1953 production. The first is a medley of "Ohio," "It's Love," and "Quiet Girl," and the second is a raucous version of "Wrong Note Rag," with both featuring performances by lyricists Betty Comden and Adolph Green themselves.

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"Mamaleh!" (01/09/2003) Soundtracks Songs from MAMALEH!, TripleMMM Productions

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Wicked the Musical (karaoke)

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"Wicked The Musical (Karaoke)" (04/19/2005) Pop Vocal Karaoke, Stage Stars RecordsPersonnel: Jim Mansfield (drums, percussion). Recording information: Island Sound Studios, Patchogue, NY.

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"The Broadway Musical [CD & DVD]" (04/13/2007) Soundtracks Various Artists, St. ClairThis release includes a bonus DVD featuring THE STAGE DOOR CANTEEN.

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Deals on Music broadway musicals in Original Cast Music. Visit BizRate to find the best deals on Original Cast Music. See which Music stores have the Music broadway musicals that you want. Read reviews on Music merchants and buy with confidence. Find savings on Little Women: The Musical [5/3] - Hair.