Original broadway cast in Original Cast Music

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Les Miserables

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"Les Miserables [Original Broadway Cast]" (07/01/1991) Pop Vocal Original Cast, Geffen Records (USA)The song selection is slightly different than the London Cast, and the song "Little People" is edited. Composed by Alan Boubill and Claude-Michel Schonberg. Additional producer: Claude-Michel Schomberg. Originally conceived as a simple recording production, Les Miserables evolved quickly into one of the premiere theater events of the 1980s. Theatrically on par with Phantom of the Opera, Les Mis is drawn from the Victor Hugo novel of the same name. The story chronicles the life of Jean Valjean, a simple Frenchman arrested as a youth for stealing a loaf of bread. After serving five years for that crime, as well as an additional 14 for attempted escape, Valjean is released on parole. Upon changing his name and eluding his parole officer, he becomes the surrogate father of a young girl and a Mayor as the French Revolution sets in. As the war rages, he finds that he cannot change the man he is. Les Miserables is typical of theater in the '80s, with extravagant effects and large, full-cast numbers. The beautiful score is full of emotion and humor, including such memorable and noteworthy songs as "Look Down," "Do You Hear the People Sing?," "Bring Him Home," "Empty Chairs at Empty Tables," and the ubiquitous "On My Own." The original Broadway cast recording contains some very fine performances, particularly by Colm Wilkinson (as Valjean) and Frances Ruffelle (as Eponine, the waif). The vocals on this recording are heavy on character, making it an interesting and entertaining listen. ~ Sarah Erlewine

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"Oliver! [Original Broadway Cast] [Bonus Tracks]" (08/01/1989) Pop Vocal Original Cast, RCA Victor Records (USA)Composer/Lyricist: Lionel Bart. Original Broadway Cast: Georgia Brown, Barry Humphries, Clive Revill, Wiloughby Goddard, Bruce Prochnik. Lionel Bart's musical version of Oliver Twist, Charles Dickens's novel of Industrial Revolution London in the late 19th century, was far more entertaining than the subject matter would suggest. The show has Dickens's sad story of poverty and crime, but also one of the strongest scores heard on Broadway in the 60s -- "I'd Do Anything," "Be Back Soon," "Oom-Pah-Pah," "As Long As He Needs Me" -- in fact, it's one hit after another (no wonder this album reached #4 in the charts and went gold). And it has the incomparable Georgia Brown too. ~ William Ruhlmann

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Rent

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"Rent [Original Broadway Cast]" (08/27/1996) Pop Vocal Original Cast, Dreamworks SKGMusic and lyrics written by Jonathan Larson. Principal cast: Adam Pascal (Roger Davis); Anthony Rapp (Mark Cohen); Jesse L. Martin (Tom Collins); Taye Diggs (Benjamin Coffin III); Fredi Walker (Joanne Jefferson); Wilson Jermaine Heredia (Angel Schunard); Daphne Rubin-Vega (Mimi Marquez); Idina Menzel (Maureen Johnson); Kristen Lee Kelly, Byron Utley, Gwen Stewart, Timothy Britten Parker, Gilles Chiasson, Rodney Hicks, Aiko Nakasone. Additional personnel: Stevie Wonder. Recorded at Sorcerer Sound and Right Track Recording, New York, New York. Includes a 36-page booklet with a plot synopsis and complete lyrics. RENT was nominated for a 1997 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album. Composer: Jonathan Larson. Lyricist: Billy Aronson. Personnel: Daphne Rubin-Vega, Rodney Hicks, Jesse L. Martin, Gwen Stewart, Idina Menzel, Aiko Nakasone, Taye Diggs, Byron Utley, Wilson Jermaine Heredia, Gilles Chiasson, Adam Pascal, Anthony Rapp (vocals); Anthony Jackson (guitar, contra guitar); Daniel A. Weiss (guitar, synthesizer); Kenny Brescia (guitar); Ira Siegel (electric guitar); Dominic Derasse (trumpet, piccolo trumpet); Tim Weil (piano, synthesizer); Steve Skinner (keyboards, synthesizer, drum programming); Jeffrey Potter (drums, percussion); Kurt Fischer (sound effects). Audio Mixer: Michael O'Reilly. Recording information: Right Track Recording, NY; Sorcerer Sound, NY. Directors: Michael Grief; Michael Greif; Robin Sloane; Tim Weil. Photographers: Joan Marcus; Richie Lee; Amy Guip. Unknown Contributor Roles: George Marino; Anthony Jackson; Stevie Wonder; Tim Weil. Arrangers: Arif Mardin; Steve Skinner; Tim Weil. This 43-track set includes in its entirety the unlikely opera about AIDS, drugs, squatters, down-and-out artists and (of course) love that won the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for drama and went on to knock Broadway off its feet at a time when the Broadway musical was widely assumed to be dead. Like the climactic love song that seems to magically rescue one of the main characters from near-death, RENT itself may well be responsible for bringing Broadway back to life. RENT was written and composed by Jonathan Larson, who died suddenly hours after the final dress rehearsal. Larson's music is almost seamless in the way it quilts together show-tune tradition with current pop styles, reflecting the story's blend of a classical plot (it's loosely based on Puccini's opera "La Boheme") with a thoroughly modern setting. A tango, in which a man and woman compare notes on a lover they have shared, fits comfortably between an electronic dance tune with rapped vocals ("Today 4 U," sung by the play's drag-queen hero) and a rocking entreaty to come "Out Tonight." The latter is sung by Daphne Rubin-Vega, whose coquettish pop voice and sensual presence help her stand out from a great ensemble cast. The play's unexpectedly optimistic message is spelled out in a breathtaking pop song called "Seasons Of Love," which leads off the second act. As a bonus, Stevie Wonder joins the cast for a reprise that puts a soaring coda of hope on this dark opera.

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Fiddler On The Roof [Remaster]

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"Fiddler on the Roof [Original Broadway Cast]" (06/03/2003) Pop Vocal Original Cast, RCA Victor Records (USA)Composer: Jerry Bock. Lyricist: Sheldon Harnick. Original Broadway Cast/Zero Mostel: Maria Karnilova, Zero Mostel, Bea Arthur, Bert Convy, Julia Migenes, Austin Pendleton, Joanna Merlin. The original 1964 Broadway cast recording of FIDDLER ON THE ROOF is one of the great albums of musical theater. Featuring Zero Mostel as Tevye and Maria Karnilova as Golde, the original Broadway cast left their indelible stamp on the iconic work of Jerry Bock (music) and Sheldon Harnick (lyrics). Nearly every song is a classic, with "Do You Love Me?" "Sunrise, Sunset," and "If I Were a Rich Man" still standing out as favorites.

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Dessa Rose [11/8]

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"Dessa Rose" (11/08/2005) Soundtracks Original Cast, Jay RecordsOriginal Off-Broadway Cast/Original Soundtrack: Tina Fabrique, LaChanze, Rebecca Eichenberger, Michael Hayden, David Hess (vocals). Lyricist/librettist Lynn Ahrens and composer Stephen Flaherty's musical Dessa Rose is in some ways reminiscent of their stage adaptation of Ragtime in that it tells interweaving stories of black and white Americans and their confrontation with racism. Nominally speaking, Ragtime was the larger scale work, encompassing a huge cast, playing in a Broadway theater, and also taking on the immigrant experience in America. But Dessa Rose, which opened at the off-Broadway Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater in New York's Lincoln Center on March 21, 2005, and ran through May 29, is described by annotator Ira Weitzman as a "folk opera," the term originally coined for Porgy and Bess, and this two-hour, full-length recording of the show, dialogue included, reveals that its artistic goals are at least as lofty as those of Ragtime. In her 1986 novel, Sherley Anne Williams created a fictional story combining the lives of two real-life women living in the South during the mid-19th century, a pregnant slave girl who incited a slave rebellion and a white woman, left alone on a plantation by her profligate husband, who harbored runaway slaves. Ahrens' adaptation finds both women, in old age, retelling their story, such that leads LaChanze, as Dessa Rose, and Rachel York, as Ruth, are forced to change back and forth from their old to their young selves, sometimes in the same scene. The story is heavily melodramatic, as the saintly African-American characters and the white woman who joins them struggle against the monstrous white men who enslave them, torture them, and try to rape them. The plot strains credulity at times, but it is less important than that, by the end, the bond of sisterhood overcomes barriers of race and jealousy. Flaherty's music naturally makes much use of 19th century American popular styles, from folk songs to society waltzes, with a heavy debt to Stephen Foster. The cast is talented and enthusiastic, lending a degree of authenticity to a work that otherwise might come across as contrived. ~ William Ruhlmann

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Jersey Boys [11/1]

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"Jersey Boys" (11/01/2005) Pop Vocal Original Cast, Rhino Records (USA)Composers: Denny Randell; Dorothy Fields; Doug Flett; Peggy Farina; Robert Feldman; Raymond Bloodworth; Gaynel Hodge; Gerald Goldstein; Guy Fletcher ; Thomas Austin; L. Russell Brown; Billy Dalton; Abel Baer; Jimmy McHugh; Judy Parker; Kenny Nolan; L. Wolfe Gilbert; Maurice Williams; Otis Blackwell; Sandy Linzer; Stan Rhodes; Barbara Belle; Bob Crewe. Lyricist: Bob Crewe. Original Broadway Cast: The Four Seasons, Daniel Reichard, John Lloyd Young (vocals); Steve Snyder (synthesizer); Ken Dow (bass guitar); Kevin Dow (drums); Christian Hoff, Ron Melrose, Bill Hayes, Randy Andos, Larry Saltzman, Ben Kono, J. Robert Spencer. Personnel: Christian Hoff, Donnie Kehr, Daniel Reichard, Tituss Burgess, John Lloyd Young , Sarah Schmidt, J. Robert Spencer (vocals); Larry Saltzman (guitar); Joe Payne (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, 12-string guitar); Louise Owen, Shinwon Kim, Robin Zeh, Cenovia Cummins, Belinda Whitney (violin); Debra Shufelt, Maxine Roach (viola); Anik Oulianine, Stephanie Cummins (cello); Matt Hong, Ben Kono (reeds); Dave Spier (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bob Milikan (trumpet); Randy Andos (trombone); Ron Melrose (piano, synthesizer); Steve Orich (keyboards); Ken Dow (electric bass); Bill Hayes (percussion). Audio Mixers: Pete Karam; Jason Stasium. Recording information: Right Track Recording Studios, New York, NY. Actors: J. Robert Spencer; John Lloyd Young ; Mark Lotito. Photographer: Joan Marcus. Broadway musical JERSEY BOYS brings to the stage the story of 1960s singing sensations Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, recounting their rise from working-class kids to pop-music superstars. The soundtrack, naturally, is filled with Four Seasons hits, including timeless classics like "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," and "December 1963 (Oh, What A Night)." Interspersed between the songs are snippets of dialogue from the play, and the actors playing the Four Seasons nail the group's famous vocal harmonies impressively. JERSEY BOYS is a fun listen for those looking to take a walk down memory lane for historical curiosity or even just nostalgia's sake.

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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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Monty Python's Spamalot [5/3]

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"Monty Python's Spamalot" (05/03/2005) Pop Vocal Original Cast, Decca (USA)Composer: John Du Prez. Composer/Lyricist: Eric Idle. Original Broadway Cast: David Hyde Pierce, Hank Azaria, Steve Rosen, Tim Curry, Christopher Sieber, Michael McGrath, Christian Borle. Silliness abounds on the Broadway cast recording of MONTY PYTHON'S SPAMALOT, a loose adaptation of the revered (and much-quoted) film MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL. Penned by Python member Eric Idle (along with his musical collaborator John Du Prez), SPAMALOT follows the absurd adventures of King Arthur (Tim Curry) and his Knights of the Round Table, including Sir Robin (David Hyde Pierce) and Sir Lancelot (Hank Azaria). While the production plays into the conventions of the musical, with plenty of over-the-top singing, it also subverts those cliches, most notably on the hilarious "The Song That Goes Like This," which skewers the Broadway standard of sugary-sweet romantic duets (where a couple can "overact like hell"). Throughout SPAMALOT, cheeky Python-esque humor is always on hand, so much so that the production even includes "Always Look on the Bright Side Of Life," the classic sing-along number from another favorite Python movie, LIFE OF BRIAN.

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"Sweet Charity [Original Broadway Cast] [DRG Bonus Tracks] [Digipak]" (07/12/2005) Soundtracks Original Cast, DRG TheaterComposer: Cy Coleman. Composer: Cy Coleman. Lyricist: Dorothy Fields. Lyricist: Dorothy Fields. Original Cast Recording/Christina Applegate: Ernie Sabella, Todd Anderson , Paul Schoeffler, Denis O'Hare, Christina Applegate, Anika Ellis, Janine LaManna, Kyra De Costa, Timothy Edward Smith, Rhett G. George, Shannon Lewis (vocals); Jeff Nelsen, Keith O'Quinn (trombone); Bill Holcomb (bass guitar); Chuck Wilson, Dave Ratajczak, Ed Hamilton, Roger Rosenberg, Tom Christensen, Walt Weiskopf, Stephanie Cummins, Charlie Descarfino, Mineko Yajima, Glenn Drewes, Donald Downs. Personnel: Ed Hamilton (guitar); Sarah Adams (violin, viola); Barry Finclair, Eric Degioia, Dale Stuckenbruck, Mineko Yajima, Cecelia Hobbs Gardner, Jonathan Dinklage (violin); Stephanie Cummins, Caryl Paisner (cello); Chuck Wilson, Roger Rosenberg, Tom Christensen, Walt Weiskopf (reeds); Glenn Drewes, Donald Downs (trumpet); Jeff Nelson & Covenant (trombone); John Samorian (keyboards); Dave Ratajczak (drums); Charlie Descarfino (percussion). Additional personnel: Cenovia Cummins, Dale Stuckenbruck (violin); Sarah Adams, Caryl Paisner. Audio Mixer: Cynthia Daniels. Liner Note Author: Will Friedwald. Recording information: Right Track Recording (??/??/1963-05/16/2005). Directors: Don York; Walter Bobbie. Editor: Cynthia Daniels. Photographer: Paul Kolnik. Unknown Contributor Roles: Harvey Weinstein; Sam Feldman.

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Ain't Misbehavin'

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"Ain't Misbehavin' [Original Broadway Cast]" (07/07/1987) Pop Vocal Original Cast, RCA Victor Records (USA)The Broadway musical based on the music of Fats Waller. Cast includes: Andre De Shields, Nell Carter. Ain't Misbehavin' originated as a simple song by Thomas "Fats" Waller that he sold for $500 and that was then performed by Louis Armstrong. In 1978, it became the title track of a cabaret show featuring the music of Waller. It was such a considerable success that it became a Broadway show, and was resurrected in 1988 for a brief stint. Ain't Misbehavin' won numerous Tonys, not the least of which was the award for Best Musical. The original Broadway cast recording features the Tony Award-winning performance of Nell Carter and captures the cabaret feel of the show that made it so charming and refreshing. An excellent recording of the show. ~ Sarah Erlewine

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Wonderful Town

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"Wonderful Town [Sony Original Broadway Cast]" (11/19/1991) Pop Vocal Original Cast, Sony BroadwayMusic by Leonard Bernstein, lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. A studio recording made by the original Broadway cast for a television broadcast of the show.

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New Faces Of 1968 [8/23]

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"New Faces of '68" (08/23/2005) Pop Vocal Original Cast, DRG (USA)Original Broadway Cast: Madeline Kahn, Robert Klein, Leonard Stillman. Leonard Sillman staged his first New Faces revue on Broadway in 1934; 34 years later came his seventh and final effort, New Faces of '68. The revue format was practically moribund by then, and it didn't help that the show opened in the midst of national crises that made it seem sillier than it was and even -- that most dreaded of 1960s putdowns -- irrelevant. One month before the opening on May 2, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated. One week before the closing on June 15, the same thing happened to New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy. No wonder the show ran only 52 performances. Who wanted to go to the musical theater at times like that, unless it was to see Hair? Even in better times, however, New Faces of '68 might not have had much of a chance, especially if its level of sketch comedy is accurately indicated by "Tango," a series of "believe it or else" one-liners accompanied by Spike Jones-style percussion that didn't offer any competition to the joke-wall on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, available for free on TV. As might be expected, the musical selections and the cast of unknowns are wildly uneven. Most of the performers were making their only Broadway appearances, which seems a shame only in the case of Marilyn Child, who affectingly sings the proto-women's lib ballad "Where Is Me?" Of the performers who did go on to other things, Brandon Maggart (later a featured performer in Applause among other shows) makes the best out of a series of songs using numbers and letters as puns that should have turned up later on Sesame Street; Robert Klein (later the star of They're Playing Our Song in addition to an extensive career as a comedian) has several funny bits, singing "Love in a New Tempo" (the new tempo being a march) and mugging his way through the parodies "Hullabaloo at Thebes" (a musical version of Oedipus) and "Die Zusammenfugung" (an opera about marijuana). Joining Klein in the last is Madeline Kahn (later the star of On the Twentieth Century as well as many comic films), who gets to show off her operatic voice, though her real showcase is "Das Chicago Song," a Kurt Weill/Bertolt Brecht send-up in which she gets to do to Lotte Lenya what she would later do to Marlene Dietrich in Blazing Saddles. For most musical theater fans, the turns by Klein and Kahn will more than justify the purchase of this album. (Interestingly, missing from the disc is "The Girl of the Minute," a song from the show that marked the Broadway debut of the songwriters David Shire and Richard Maltby, Jr.) ~ William Ruhlmann

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The Light In The Piazza

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"The Light in the Piazza" (05/24/2005) Soundtracks Original Cast, Nonesuch Records (USA)Composer/Lyricist: Adam Guettel. Original Broadway Cast: Patti Cohenour, Victoria Clark, Kelli O'Hara, Matthew Morrison, Mark Harelik, Michael Berresse, Sarah Uriarte Berry, Beau Gravitte, Felicity LaFortune, Joseph Siravo. Going into the family business was not what the grandson of songwriting icon Richard Rodgers originally had in mind, but composer/lyricist Adam Guettel rose to the occasion while grabbing the ring at his own steady pace. His musical THE LIGHT IN THE PIAZZA tells the touching love story of an American tourist and an Italian countryman in post-WWII Firenze. Guettel's unabashed romanticism includes soaring, long-lined melodies, rich and deep harmonic language not far from the land of Sondheim, and lush orchestrations. The refreshing, wide-eyed naivete felt by the young Clara is aptly translated in her solo "The Beauty Is," while Fabrizio's charming awkwardness with English (and with courting a beautiful stranger) is winningly expressed in their duet "Passeggiata. " The exciting rhythms of "Hysteria" and "Octet" recall Stravinsky's neo-classical language. The story's tragic secret is achingly revealed by Clara's mother in "The Beauty Is (Reprise)." All the proceedings are supported by a superior cast including Victoria Clark (URINETOWN, TITANIC), Kelli O'Hara (DRACULA, JEKYLL & HYDE) and Matthew Morrison (HAIRSPRAY, FOOTLOOSE). The future of musical theater may look murky to some. But Guettel's sure-handed amalgam of styles has a voice of his own, one that can point the way.

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"Promises, Promises [Varese] [Remaster]" (04/12/2005) Soundtracks Original Cast, Varese (Japan)Composer: Burt Bacharach. Lyricist: Hal David. Original Broadway Cast: Dick O'Neill, Donna McKechnie, Edward Winter, A. Larry Haines, Jerry Orbach, Jill O'Hara, Marian Mercer, Norman Shelly, Paul Reed. Recording information: A&R Studios, New York, NY. Authors: Neil Simon; Burt Bacharach. The 1969 Grammy-winning score by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, Promises, Promises was adapted by Neil Simon from Billy Wilder's screenplay of the 1960 film The Apartment (with Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine). A Broadway smash that lasted over 1,200 performances, the play won one Tony Award alongside four Grammys, and was out of print for many years before being reissued on CD in 1999. The songs include several of Bacharach-David's best, including "I'll Never Fall in Love Again," "What Do You Get When You Fall in Love" and the title song. ~ Jenna Woolford

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"The Frogs [Original Broadway Cast]" (01/25/2005) Pop Vocal Original Cast, PS Classics/Image EntertainmentComposer: Stephen Sondheim. Adapters: Nathan Lane; Burt Shevelove. Original Broadway Cast: John Byner, Michael Siberry, Nathan Lane, Peter Barlett, Roger Bart, Burke Moses, Daniel Orion Davis. Personnel: Jennifer Hoult (harp); Mineko Yajima (violin); Richard Brice (viola); Deborah Sepe (cello); Eric Weidman, Les Scott (clarinet); Tom Sefcovic (bassoon); Dominic Derasse, Phil Granger (trumpet); Michael Boschen, Richard Clark (trombone); Dean Plank (bass trombone); Paul Pizzuti (drums, percussion); Thad Wheeler (percussion). Audio Mixer: Tom Lazarus. Liner Note Authors: Nathan Lane; Ira Weitzman. Recording information: The Hit Factory, New York, NY (10/12/2004). Editor: Bart Migal. Photographer: Paul Kolnik. In his seventies, Broadway songwriter Stephen Sondheim's production of entire new shows may have slowed (only Bounce, which closed out of town in 2003, appeared after 1994's Passion), but the remounting of his earlier works became a torrent in the spring and summer 2004, when the Broadway-affiliated Roundabout Theatre revived both Assassins and Pacific Overtures and the Broadway-affiliated Lincoln Center Theater brought in a heavily revised version of The Frogs. Sondheim and librettist Burt Shevelove had collaborated on this adaptation of Aristophanes' 405 B.C. comedy for the Yale Drama School in 1974, when it was staged in a swimming pool. In 2001, Nathan Lane played the leading role of Dionysus in a studio cast recording that combined the short score with the four songs Sondheim wrote for a 1966 television musical, Evening Primrose. After that, Lane worked with Sondheim to expand The Frogs, adding to Shevelove's book as the composer wrote six new songs. The result opened on July 22, 2004, and played a limited run for Lincoln Center Theater's subscription audiences before closing on October 10. Two days later, the cast assembled for a recording produced by Tommy Krasker, who also had handled the 2001 album. While that version did theater fans the favor of preserving what then seemed like an archival work, this one reinvents The Frogs. The new material includes the hilarious "Dress Big," sung by Burke Moses with Lane, and the equally sidesplitting "Hades," sung by Peter Bartlett. "Invocation and Instructions to the Audience," an original number, has been refurbished; it now includes an admonition about cell phones. As Sondheim does with the music, Lane has sprinkled the dialogue with witty quotes from other sources. But as funny as The Frogs is, it also has a serious and timely message. By the end, when Dionysus has returned from Hades, the characters speak directly to the people of Athens, and it's clear the cast is speaking directly to the people of the U.S. in the audience. It isn't hard to understand that the implied message is that listeners should vote in the 2004 Presidential election, and vote against the incumbent. By the time the album was released in January 2005, five days after the Inauguration, it was too late for that message to be satisfied, but Sondheim, Shevelove, and Lane's The Frogs remained an entertaining and pointed cry for tolerance and peace. ~ William Ruhlmann

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"How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying [Original Cast]" (05/25/1990) Pop Vocal Original Cast, RCA Victor Records (USA)Composer/Lyricist: Frank Loesser. Original Broadway Cast: Robert Morse, Rudy Vall?e, Virginia Martin, Bonnie Scott, Charles Nelson Reilly. Personnel: Casper Roos, Charlotte Frazier, Fairfax Mason, David Collyer, Robert Kaliban, Claudette Sutherland, Maureen Sullivan, Lanier Davis, Ruth Kobart, Bob Murdock, Mara Landi, Paul Reed, Robert Morse, Rudy Vall?e, Sammy Smith, Virginia Martin, Bonnie Scott, Charles Nelson Reilly (vocals); Donna McKechnie, Carol Jane Abney, Rosemary Yellen, Suzanne France, Richard Korthaze, Nick Andrews (dancer). Liner Note Author: Bill Rosenfield. Recording information: Webster Hall, New York, NY (10/14/1961). Director: Robert Ginzler. How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying is justly considered as one of the definitive musical comedies of the modern Broadway era. The 1962 soundtrack captures much of the stage presentation's acerbic satire, as well as all of Frank Loesser's stunning score, on what would turn out to be his final endeavor on the Great White Way. Little more than a week after the show's October 14, 1961, debut at the 46th Street Theatre, the play's company documented this original cast recording in the acoustically-friendly environs of Webster Hall. Building on the success of the stage presentation, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying was propelled into the pop album charts, where it landed within the Top 20. The storyline was adapted from a novel by Shepard Mead, whose intimate knowledge of corporate politics stemmed from actual workplace experiences as an advertising executive. The central character's (J. Pierrepont Finch) rise from washing windows to being a CEO at the headquarters of the World Wide Wickets Company is brought to life under the supervision of Abe Burrows. In fact, it was Burrows who would eventually convince Loesser to participate in this project. Without a doubt, Robert Morse's riveting depiction of the over-ambitious Finch garnered the production much of its acclaim, and he was awarded one of the seven Tonys that the initial run rightfully collected. Other notable cast members are crooner Rudy Vall?e, portraying company president J.B. Biggley, and the affable Charles Nelson Reilly, whose re-creation of Bud Frump -- Biggley's insufferable and otherwise excruciating nephew -- was also a Tony winner. The melodies are uniformly stellar and reflect Loesser's wide range, from lighter fare such as "Coffee Break" and "Company Way" to the affective balladry of "I Believe in You" and the ensemble arrangements on "Brotherhood of Man" and the brief yet poignant "Finale." In 2003, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying was reissued with supplementary bonus tracks, including Walter Cronkite's narration gleaned from the 1995 new Broadway cast How to Succeed in Business... CD as well as interview excerpts from Morse, Reilly, and Loesser. ~ Lindsay Planer

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A Chorus Line [SACD]

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"A Chorus Line [Original Broadway Cast]" (03/11/2003) Pop Vocal Original Cast, Sony Music Distribution (USA)Music composed by Marvin Hamlisch. Words written by Edward Kleban. Principal cast: Scott Allen (Roy); Renee Baughman (Kristine); Carole (Kelly) Bishop (Sheila); Pamela Blair (Val); Wayne Cilento (Mike); Chuck Cissel (Butch); Clive Clerk (Larry); Kay Cole (Maggie); Ronald Dennis (Richie); Donna Drake (Tricia); Brandt Edwards (Tom); Patricia Garland (Judy) Carolyn Kirsch (Lois); Ron Kuhlman (Don) Nancy Lane (Bebe); Baayork Lee (Connie); Priscilla Lopez (Diana); Robert LuPone (Zach); Cameron Mason (Mark); Donna McKechnie (Cassie); Don Percassi (Al); Carole Schweid (Barbara); Michael Serrecchia (Frank); Michel Stuart (Greg); Thomas J. Walsh (Bobby); Sammy Williams (Paul); Crissy Wilzak (Vicki). Recorded at Columbia's 30th Street Studios, New York, New York on June 2, 1975. This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players. This Broadway cast recording presents songs from the 1975 production of A CHORUS LINE, directed by Michael Bennett with music by Marvin Hamlisch. As it tells the tale of its aspiring song-and-dance performers, the revered musical offers up renowned tunes such as ""Opening: I Hope I Get It" and "The Music and the Mirror."

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"25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee" (05/24/2005) Pop Vocal Original Cast, GhostlightOriginal Cast Recording/Original Soundtrack: Jose Llana, Derrick Baskin, Craig, Deborah S., Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Dan Fogler, Lisa Howard, Celia Keenan-Bolger, Jay Reiss, Sarah Saltzberg. Who would of thunk it? That some ingenious soul(s) would use the spelling bee -- that great American institution that millions of children have suffered through -- as a gristmill for a Broadway musical? The 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee does exactly that, and Ghost Light has provided an original Broadway cast recording of the musical. The compositions and lyrics are from William Finn, and with a Tony under his belt, he's got the experience to make even a spelling bee dramatic. As one might imagine, the cast includes a number of overachievers gathered at a junior high gym for the contest. There are love songs to the dictionary ("My Friend, the Dictionary" rhymes Nietzsche with Christiana Richie), expressions of inferiority ("I'm Not That Smart"), and lots and lots of spelling. The music is catchy and the cast are fine singers, though numbers like "Pandemonium" are a bit overwhelming as what seems like a dozen spellers trade lines and build to a crescendo as the band plays louder and louder. A musical without the visuals can seem a bit fragmented, and that's true of The 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee. Some may find all of this a bit precious and not unlike sitting through another spelling bee. Others (i.e., overachievers) will no doubt enjoy a glance back at their glory days. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

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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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Two's Company [4/12]

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"Two's Company [Original Broadway Cast]" (04/12/2005) Soundtracks Original Cast, Sepia RecordsComposer: Vernon Duke. Lyricists: Ogden Nash ; Sammy Cahn. Original Broadway Cast: David Burns, Bette Davis, Hiram Sherman, Nora Kaye. Additional personnel: Dorothy Richards (vocals); Vernon Duke (piano). This is a pretty amazing artifact, from Bette Davis' only appearance in a Broadway musical. TWO'S COMPANY, which starred Davis and David Burns (and included a young Tina Louise in its cast), was a charming revue by Vernon Duke, with lyrics by Ogden Nash and Sammy Cahn, that ran only 50 performances before closing. It was charming but not much more, and no amount of star power could get past the fact that Davis simply was not a singer, a fact evidently drilled home every time she opened her mouth. Fortunately, RCA Victor did a cast recording, which was released. There were lots of other things "wrong" with the piece in 1952-1953, including Peter Kelley, who seems to be parodying what a leading man is supposed be in musicals (indeed, at moments, he sounds eerily like Steve Martin lampooning that kind of performer), and none of the rest of the cast members featured here manages to make a much better impression on anything resembling a serious level. Still, as a remnant of a high-profile flop by a major composer, TWO'S COMPANY has value, even if it isn't essential listening.

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