'Tis the season to haul out those holiday albums and add to the mix of old
favorites some new CDs to brighten up the holidays. Once again, Broadway
Cares/Equity Fights AIDS has released a CD that features the casts of
various Broadway musicals performing holiday tunes, earning money for a
worthy cause in the process. This year they have outdone
themselves with Carols For A Cure: Volume Five, a two-disc set that
features twenty songs representing just about every musical that has
appeared on the Great White Way this season, and it is the strongest volume
to date. While every year's offering contains a mix of traditional carols
and usually irreverent special material, the ratio of standout material to
largely harmony free filler was decidedly tipped towards the latter. This
year, however, every number is a keeper and is well performed,
orchestrated and harmonized.
From Big River's traditional but stirring "Silent Light," to
Rent's gospel/R&B infused "O Holy Night," the holiday standards are
well represented, with highlights being Idina Menzel's (Wicked)
folky "I Saw Three Ships" and Liz McCartney's (Taboo) beautiful
rendition of the Bach/Gonoud "Ave Maria." As delightful as the standards
are, the true highlights are the special material numbers. The cast of
Hairspray is delightfully irreverent performing South Park's
"Dreidel, Dreidel, Dreidel" (by Marc Shaiman, of course). Gypsy's
company retells the Christmas story in a Once on this Island-sounding "Sing Out" that incorporates elements of their show (including
having the strippers appear as the wives of the wise men). And Rod from
Avenue Q gives a holiday cabaret medley (performed at "Don't Tell
Daddy's," of course) that sets carols to Broadway vamps. This year's edition also
features numbers by high profile stars: Antonio Banderas and the cast
Nine in the driving "Los Peces En El Rio" and Hugh Jackman and the
cast from The Boy from Oz in the Peter Allen-esque disco number
"Wrapped Up Nice."
The Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS website not only
features the entire Carols for a Cure collection but also last
year's incomparable Home For The Holidays and holiday albums by a
variety of Broadway performers (many of them available in signed versions as
well).
It's hard to believe that it has taken until 2003 for legendary
Broadway and cabaret performer Barbara Cook to finally release a holiday
CD, Count Your Blessings. Giving us plenty to be thankful for, Cook
and her arranger/conductor Wally Harper have put together an intimate
album that closely resembles the great holiday albums of the late Rosemary
Clooney with its subdued instrumentation and simple vocals. While the
album is comprised primarily of familiar holiday standards, the standout
number is Amy Grant's "Breath of Heaven," which is performed solely with
Harper's piano and Cook's vocals. Also highly effective is an a capella
rendition of "I Wonder As I Wander," which segues into a down-home version
of "He's Got the Whole World in his Hands" that starts spare and builds to
include harmonica and banjo.
Award winning pianist/conductor/arranger/composer Peter Nero has joined
forces with the Philly Pops and Ann Hampton Callaway for Holiday
Pops!, a delightful collection of pops-orchestra/jazz-piano/vocal
holiday numbers. From the piano driven "White Christmas" and the touching
"Christmas Lullaby" (written and performed by Callaway), to the jazzy
"Jingle Bells" and "Sleigh Ride," to the pops-symphonic carol medley "A
Christmas Festival," Nero, who is the conductor and
music director for the Philly Pops, has crafted a perfect accompaniment to
snowy December nights and various festivities this season.
If you are looking for a more high-octane holiday album, you can't go
wrong with Great Joy: A Gospel Christmas. Performed by the Broadway
Inspirational Voices, a gospel ensemble founded in 1999 by Michael McElroy
(The Wild Party, Rent, Tommy) that is comprised of actors
performing on and off Broadway, Great Joy is a high energy gospel
romp that features thrilling gospel vocals married to orchestrations that
support and never overwhelm. Featured soloists abound and all are
highlights (but for sake of space, we'll only mention Gavin Creel on "Some
Children See Him," Billy Porter's "Infant Lowly, Infant Holy," and Sara
Ramirez & Michael McElroy's tender take on "Away in a Manger").
Minneapolis based performer Jennifer Grimm has released a holiday
album: A Christmas with Family and Friends. As the title suggests,
the album is a family affair with support given throughout by various
family members. It is also an old-style jazz holiday album, with smooth,
smoky vocals provided by Jennifer and B3 organ accompaniment by brother
Trey giving a nostalgic touch throughout the album. Highlights include a
simple piano jazz accompanied "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?," a
rendition of "Christmas Island" complete with steel guitar and ukulele,
and a jazzy instrumental version of "Skater's Waltz." For more information
and to preview tracks, visit www.jennifergrimm.com.
John Bucchino's celebration of life, "Grateful," has been transformed
into an illustrated children's book that features his lyrics paired with
the soft-focus crayon/pastel illustrations of Anna-Liisa Hakkarainen. The
drawings provide a tender commentary on the lyrical poetry that Bucchino
has created on faith and an appreciation of the simple gifts of nature
that surround us. Grateful, which was published through the efforts of
Julie Andrews, contains a CD single of the song performed by Art Garfunkel
and a copy of the sheet music, giving the reader a chance to sing along.
In order to aid the prerequisite gift giving (and getting) of the
season, here are some theater related DVDs/videos.
High on the list of any musical theater fan is Broadway's Lost
Treasures
, a collection of 21 scenes preserving, at least in part,
historic performances from the American musical theater as televised on
the Tony Awards shows between 1967 and 1986. While the show appeared on PBS
earlier this year, the DVD and video include five tracks not seen on TV
(although they are still missing the Dreamgirls and A Chorus
Line numbers that were pulled at the last minute). Since the majority
of the clips came from various compilation medleys, it is more than a
little disappointing to have truncated versions (especially of Gwen Verdon
and Chita Rivera doing a paired down and non-costumed "All That Jazz" and
"Hot Honey Rag" and the editing down of "Applause!" is also puzzling). The
picture/sound quality is not always the greatest (but it is a treat to see
Barbara Harris' performance of "Movie Star/Gorgeous" from The Apple
Tree in any clarity) and some of the clips are obviously (and poorly)
lip-synced (Angela Lansbury's "Worst Pies In London" from Sweeney
Todd being the worst offender). However, these are minor drawbacks
when compared to the chance to see John Raitt sing "Hey There" from The
Pajama Game, or Patti Lupone, Mandy Patinkin and Bob Gunton perform
excerpts from Evita (although seeing just how much time used to be
devoted to musical numbers, such as the almost six minutes given to
Annie, which preserves the late lamented Dorothy Loudin's turn in
"Easy Street" plus a reprise of "Tomorrow" featuring most of the
principles and orphans, is an exercise in frustration).
Barbara Cook's incredible solo show, Mostly Sondheim, has been
preserved on DVD and videotape. As much a tribute to Cook as it is to
Sondheim, the video features Cook and pianist Wally Harper performing
nineteen numbers that Stephen Sondheim either wrote or wishes he had
written, per a 1996 article published in The New York Times.
Recorded live in Dolby 5.1 Surround Sound (on the DVD), the show displays
Cook at her warmest and most engaging and still sounding remarkable for any
age (while she has retired Candide's "Glitter and Be Gay" from her
repertoire, "Ice Cream" from She Loves Me remains as sure
and thrilling as always), and the show preserves such classic Cook
performances as the aforementioned "Ice Cream" as well "Losing My
Mind" (which she performed in Follies in Concert), which is
superbly paired with Merrily We Roll Along's "Not a Day Goes By."
Bonus materials on the DVD include master class footage from a class she
gave at the Kennedy Center and an interview with Cook.
One of the most exciting Broadway shows from the 2001-2002 season has
been preserved on DVD as well, Elaine Stritch: At Liberty.
Impeccably filmed in 1.78:1 widescreen ratio (and enhanced for widescreen
TVs), this live recording is a necessity for anyone who missed the most
honest show ever presented on Broadway, as Stritch candidly discusses at
length the three loves in her life: men, the theater, and booze (not
necessarily listed in order of importance). In between (and sometimes
interrupting) her anecdotes are songs that either made up her career or
that impacted her throughout life.
From the opening number, "There's No
Business Like Show Business," into which Stritch packs more comedy and
personal history than most singers do in an entire evening, to a haunting
"Something Good," At Liberty takes one on an emotional
roller coaster ride. While last year's CD version of the show provided
ample evidence that Stritch was cheated out of a Tony Nomination for best
actress (if not for the award itself), the DVD brings to fuller light the
level of acting on display in the show. The DVD contains no extras (as if
an interview track is necessary), but is presented in both Dolby and dts
5.1 formats and contains material not included on the CDs.
This has certainly been a banner year for Hugh Jackman's incarnation as
musical theater leading man, with rave reviews coming his way for his
performance as Peter Allen in The Boy From Oz and the recent
American release of the Royal National Theatre's 1999 production of
Oklahoma! on DVD. While the Trevor Nunn helmed production finally
arrived on our shores last year (after Nunn's failure to convince Equity
to allow him to import the RNT's production lock, stock and barrel), this
is the first time American viewers (at least those without PAL equipped
VCRs) have been able to see the original production on film.
Let me say off the bat that this production is not going to please
everybody. Purists will loathe Nunn's tinkering with the book and lyrics,
both of which represent Oscar Hammerstein II's freshman collaboration with
Richard Rodgers. Nunn also made the show darker and grittier than usual,
making it more closely resemble the turn of the century prairie locale it
represents (and drawing comparisons to Nunn's previous work in Les
Miserables). Also, as is usually the case with non-natives performing
a region specific show, the accents tend to stray away from Oklahoma and
venture further into the Deep South.
However, as Oklahoma! has always been the top entrant on this
reviewer's list of least favorite mainstream shows, I found this version
to be the first that I not only could sit through in its entirety, but the
first in which I even cared about any of the characters, who were
refreshingly more fleshed out and less musical theater caricature than
usual. I know I am in the minority, but one could edit out the entire Will
Parker/Ado Annie subplot (nothing against Jimmy Johnston or Vicki Simon
who do a more than admirable job in the parts) and make me a much happier
viewer. Hugh Jackman's portrayal as cowboy Curley, who gives up his
entire way of life to woo and rescue the woman with whom he is smitten, is
winning and would melt the heart of anyone (as it finally does the hard as
nails tomboy Laurey, as portrayed by Josefina Gabrielle). Curley's first
confrontation scene with the menacing hired hand/stalker Jud (Shuler
Hensley, who won a Tony for his portrayal in the American production) is
an exercise in machismo one-upmanship and Jackman's "Pore Jud is Daid" is
a masterpiece of backpedaling and covering one's ass after accidentally
speaking out loud.
The sound and picture quality on the DVD are crisp and the film does a
remarkable job of striking a balance between theatricality and the
cinematic. The only flaw with the presentation, however, is the frequent
cutaways to a mythic audience (the show being filmed on a soundstage, not
during a live on-stage performance) that disrupt the flow of the piece and
seem to have been added to cover scene changes or to needlessly remind the
viewer that the show is theatrical in nature.
As the show is three hours in length, no bonus features appear on the
primary disc. However, a secondary disc is included that features a
30-minute documentary featuring Trevor Nunn, Mary Rodgers (Richard
Rodger's daughter), Theodore Chapin (current president of the Rodgers and
Hammerstein Organization) and members of the cast discussing the
production to mildly entertaining (and occasionally a tad too
self-congratulatory) effect.
A DVD of the documentary Wallowitch & Ross: This Moment has been
released with additional footage, making it even more entertaining and
indispensable. Directed by Richard Morris, the film examines the over
three-decades long partnership, both onstage and in life, of
singer/songwriter John Wallowitch and the late Bertram Ross, who is best
known as Martha Graham's principal dancer for almost thirty years. The two
men had performed together as a cabaret duo up until Bertram's passing
earlier this year, and the movie features clips of them onstage and around
the living room piano where they display a remarkable ease and joyful
chemistry.
The documentary is also an important historical document, with
Bertram's reminiscences of working with Graham (the DVD features several
outtakes not included in the original film, including more material
focusing on his years with Graham) and Wallowitch's entertaining and
poignant remembrances of caroling in front of Irving Berlin's home (and
getting invited to meet the reclusive composer) and of the bygone days in
New York City. The DVD, which can be ordered by visiting
www.wallowitchandross.com/06.asp, contains extra songs and
interviews and comes with a soundtrack to the documentary.
If you or someone you know has been especially good this year,
legendary vocal coach, David Craig, has released a nine hour, six video
set that represents an entire year of his famed classes at UCLA. The tapes
cover six categories: The Lectures, Technique, Subtext, Process/The Ballad, Process//The
Uptempo and Performance/Q&A (which includes performances by
Sandra Caron, Nancy Dussault, Penny Fuller, Ellen Geer, Earl Holliman,
Lonny Price and Whitney Rydbeck). The set also includes a 64-page study
booklet to help guide the viewer through Craig's techniques. While there
is no substitution for hands on one-on-one feedback and training, On
Singing On Stage
is an invaluable tool for those looking for coaching,
but are not in an area offering such instruction.
-- Jonathan Frank
Make sure you check our list of Upcoming Releases.
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