Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Show Tunes--Rosemary Clooney CD


I should have looked at the label of this CD release more closely before picking it out of the stacks at the library; it's on a jazz label and most of the 12 tracks on Rosemary Clooney Show Tunes, while indeed being songs from Broadway shows, are treated as jazz standards presented in a club or cabaret setting. Jazz arrangements are not my thing.

Oh, well, it's hard to go wrong with Rosemary Clooney, and indeed, she rarely goes wrong on this disc. While her voice may be well past its prime, her interpretations, musicality and communicative skills are at their peak. This disc could serve as a primer for younger performers who let too much of their own personality get in the way of good songs. Rosemary uses her personality and personal experiences to inform the song, never to mask it.

My beef with jazz arrangements is that they too often follow the same format and mold--a verse of the song, some instrumental solo turns, another verse of the song. This happens too often on this disc, which all but one track involving all six of the session instrumentalists. The one song that is piano-only is my favorite on this recital--"Where do you start?" by Johnny Mandel with lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman. If this tune is from an actual show, I couldn't find it, but the song is melancholy and soulful, and Rosie imbues it with a lot of feeling.

There are three Rodgers and Hart tunes on this disc--the only songwriters represented more than once--and Ms. Clooney clearly feels at easy with the 1st R&H's swing and rhymes. Another successful swing arrangement is of the title song from Guys and Dolls.

Show Tunes
Music by Rodgers and Hart, Burton Lane, Frank Loesser, Kurt Weill, Alan and Marilyn Bergman, Johnny Mandel, and others
Cast: Rosemary Clooney
Recorded for the Concord Jazz label in 1992

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Standing Room Only--Jerry Hadley Recital Disc on CD


I have previously considered the wonderful singing and sad story of the late Jerry Hadley in three entries, so I was pleased when I came across his recital disc Standing Room Only. It is a varied mix of Broadway standards and rarities, several of which were new songs to me, surprisingly.
In reading a bit about Hadley's background and career, I was surprised to learn he was an Illinois native and received his Masters degree from the University of Illinois at Champaign Urbana--also the alma mater of one of my favorite baritones, Nathan Gunn. Obviously, these are two very different singers, but there does strike me to be a similarity in their muscular upper registers.

The tracks on this recording are all well done and well-sung. The liner notes make a point of saying that the orchestrations and arrangements are all new. I assume part of the reason behind that is to bring some of the songs into the rich center of Mr. Hadley's tenor range.

This album is at its best when offering material to showcase Mr. Hadley's wonderful legato singing, notably "Bring Him Home" from Les Miserables, and "Younger Than Springtime" from South Pacific. But there are character pieces, too, that are well done, with Mr. Hadley able to scale-down his ringing open top to present a lighter sound. Also impressive is the trust placed in some of the arrangements, not all of which feel the need to bring on the brass section to drive home their point; some are very sparsely instrumentalized (is that a word?) to create a contrast with bigger arrangements. "Momma Look Sharp" is perhaps the most effective of the smaller-scale efforts.

After listening to this very good recital disc, it's not difficult to come up with another 18 musical theater songs I would have enjoyed hearing him sing. Sadly, that can never be.

Standing Room Only
Broadway Favorites
(including songs by Rodgers & Hammerstein, Rodgers & Hart, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Marvin Hamlisch, Lerner and Loewe, Frank Loesser, and others)
Cast: Jerry Hadley, Paul Gemignani, American Theatre Orchestra
Released on the RCAVictor label in 1992

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

American Masters--Ella Fitzgerald Something to Live For, television biography on DVD


Ella Fitzgerald is an artist that I find it easy to be inspired by--and this PBS American Masters television biography makes it plain to see why. Ella Fitzgerald Something to Live For gives good insight into Ms. Fitzgerald's personal life while giving over the bulk of its time to her professional life.

She recorded almost 2000 songs in her 5 decade career, and nearly 35 of them are excerpted or played in full during this 90 minute documentary. There is a nice balance between the well-known Ella hits and the unfamiliar. A funny highlight for me was a trio of Ella, Dinah Shore and Joan Sutherland singing "Three Little Maids" from the Mikado.

There are perhaps too many duets excerpted in this show, including with Frank Sinatra, Mel Torme, Louis Armstrong, Perry Como, and others. While some of these duets are fun and interesting, it takes away time from showcasing what Ms. Fitzgerald could accomplish when in complete control of the music-making.

And control is what she demonstrates in every song. No one could roll out a legato line, or bend a pitch like Ella. The scat and swing singing is also of the highest order. How does one manage to do both so well?

Ella Fitzgerald--Something to Live For
from PBS American Master's Series on DVD

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Benjamin Britten's "Rejoice in the Lamb" preparation for live performance


Tomorrow, the church choir in which I sing is performing Benjamin Britten's Rejoice in the Lamb during the service. So I thought I would share my lamb thoughts...

When the choir started rehearsing Rejoice in the Lamb, you could easily count the number of confused looks on members' faces--mine among them. The poetry of Christopher Smart (pictured, right) and the message Britten extracts from it are not obvious at first. There is a slight Gertrude Stein "pigeons on the grass, alas" quality to much of the verse that obfuscates its meaning. But this is not mere word-play. There is also a child-like quality that belies an adult understanding of the ways of God.

Christopher Smart was in in an insane asylum and considered mad when he wrote the poem he called Jubilato Agno. He seems to have equated some of his fate to that of Jesus--misunderstood by the public powers, and resigned to suffer at their hands. But Smart also saw God in this suffering. He saw God in everything--in his cat, in mice, in flowers, in rambling off the alphabet, in silly rhymes. But what drew composer Benjamin Britten to Smart's poem, I believe, is Smart's belief that we are perhaps closest to God in music, whether making it or listening to it.

Britten wrote this piece in 1943. Imagine London at that time. The city has been a primary target of bombing for four years. During the blitz, civilian lives are being lost daily. Public services like power, water, trash collection are sporadic. Supply chains from Europe and elsewhere have been interrupted, so food is often in short supply. Blackout orders have shut down all the concert halls, theaters, and movie houses. Entertainment of all types has come to a complete stop for fear of being in a crowd when the bombs start falling.

It is in this world that Benjamin Britten is asked to compose a cantata for use in church--about the only place that live music is being heard. And WH Auden hands Britten a poem from a forgotten 18th Century poet. A poem which has raised its author's reputation from obscurity and madness to prominence and brilliance. A poem which, while written in 1763, was not published until 1939 after being pieced together from hand-written loose-leaf sheets that had somehow survived 175 years. A poem which was probably written to stave off deeper depression during Smart's institutionalization and daren't consider anything other than his cat Jeoffry. Did Britten see this as the survival story that England needed in its dark days?
The music Britten composes is by turns nursery rhyme-like tunes, robust mixed-meter dances, and chant. Chant opens the piece, and is used again for the darkest, most penetrating moments of the cantata. The dances enliven the texts about how the many Old Testament characters to which Christopher Smart refers should glorify God. Dance meters also are used when the chorus sings it anthem to music-making.
The nursery rhyme-like tunes come during three solo sections; a treble soloist (a female soprano in my choir) likens the stretches and meanderings of a cat's movement to praying. The organ part portrays the cat with its twists and turns. An alto soloist sings of the bravado of a mouse (perhaps this is an analogy to how we are to engage our lives?). Thirdly, a tenor soloist muses about flowers and draws comparisons to Christ, the bloom of Mary. Here, the arching line of the soloist floats over a chipper organ part that seems to me to be tripping through a field of daisies.

You can make your own correlations between that time and ours. Between Christopher Smart's story and your personal struggles. Between Benjamin Britten's faith and your own. For me, when the darkness seems to be all around and I'm not certain where the next bomb is going to fall, I am glad to be able to revel in the "Shawn, Lawn, Fawn", and the "Flute, Suit, Moot, and the like", believing that "the trumpet of God is a blessed intelligence" which comes "from the hand of the artist, and from the echo of the heavenly harp, in sweetness magnifical and mighty."

Hallelujah. Amen.

Rejoice in the Lamb
Music by Benjamin Britten
Text from Jubilate Agno by Christopher Smart
One performance only by
St. Pauls United Church of Christ Chancel Choir
Lincoln Park, Chicago IL 60614

Sunday, May 16, 2010 11am service

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Billy Elliot The Musical live on stage in Chicago


I believe this is a "sit-down" production that is in Chicago for a long stay. Judging by the full house and enthusiastic audience, Billy Elliot The Musical deserves a good run.

It took me a while to get my head around this show; it breaks some conventions that I have stuck in my craw about musicals. Mostly, the expectation that the moving moments of a show will be during songs; here the highlights are during dances. Billy's dancing was of course the standout and Cesar Corrales, the young performer who played Billy in the matinee I saw, was excellent. Not just a well-trained dancer, but an actual stage presence.

The music by Elton John was a little disappointing to me. Apart from Billy's "Electricity", the songs don't have a tune that you can leave the theater humming. And Billy's song is nearly immediately swept out of your head by the wonderful dance number that follows. Having seen Sir Elton's Lion King and Aida, I know the man can write effective stage musical songs.

In Billy Elliot, there are three roles other than the title character who have primary songs--Billy's father; dance instructor Mrs. Wilkinson; and Billy's friend Michael. Mrs. Wilkinson is portrayed in Chicago by Emily Skinner, an accomplished Broadway veteran from Side Show, Jekyll & Hyde, and The Full Monty. That experience shown in her performance. Armand Schultz as Billy's father was best when not singing.

One thing this show did a lot, and usually well, was blend Billy's real life with his fantasy life. This happened in the dancing dress number for Billy and Michael, the pas de deux for Billy and Grown Billy, and in scenes between Billy and his deceased mother. Even the struggle between striking miners and British police authorities was a blend of realities of sorts--although I found this less effective. Perhaps purposely, the police presence was made into a joke with their first entrance that seemed straight out of Gilbert and Sullivan.

I have to end with a probing question that kept me awake last night: why when Billy left at the end of the show to go off to The Royal Ballet school, did the actor climb into the orchestra pit?

Billy Elliot The Musical
Music by Elton John
Book and lyrics by Lee Hall
Opened in London in 2005, the New York production opened in October, 2008
This Chicago production opened in March, 2010 and has an open run.
Cast: Emily Skinner, Armand Schultz, Cynthia Darlow, Patrick Mulvey, Cesar Corrales (my Billy), Gabriel Rush (my Michael),

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Golden Boy original Broadway cast album on CD


If you need any proof of Sammy Davis, Jr.'s strength as a singer, just listen to this show from 1964. I suspect his live performances were electric, because his vocal performance of Golden Boy seems to jump off the cast album. Mr. Davis makes the uneven score uniformly sing.
Between the notes to this CD release and some online reading about the history of this musical, I can understand why the show seems a bit of a hodge-podge. The book is based on Clifford Odet's 1937 drama of the same name but with significant changes--including changing the title character from an Irish-American immigrant to an African-American outsider. I suppose that in the 30s, the Irish in America were outsiders, too, but now the race card is clearly played, and the civil rights cause of the 60s is the larger issue that boxer Joe Bonaparte is fighting.

I generally like most of the music on this album, although it does seem to be missing a uniform "voice" a lot of the time. There are numbers that seem like Big Band, swing, gospel, pop and more conventional Broadway. Some of it deserves a life outside the theater, although I had never heard any of these songs before. I was particularly struck by two elegiac ballads about life in the big city--"A Night Song" which is in the Sinatra vein, and "While the City Sleeps" which lacks a little structure and oomph.

This is clearly a vehicle for Sammy Davis who shines throughout even when the heavy-handed inter-racial love story and some obvious racial jokes are added. The rest of the cast has significantly less to do, except Paula Wayne as the love interest with the great character name of Lorna Moon. Ms. Wayne has a slightly gravely character voice that reminds me of a younger Elaine Stritch.

I wonder if Encores has ever done a concert version of this show? I can imagine Taye Diggs in it.

Golden Boy
Music by Charles Strouse
Lyrics by Lee Adams
Book by Clifford Odets and William Gibson
Opened in 1964
Cast: Sammy Davis, Paula Wayne, Billy Daniels

Monday, April 5, 2010

Ghost Light Monday--Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, British Television adaptation on DVD


The year 2011 is the centenary of playwright Tennessee Williams and I've been considering some sort of personal Williams project. Maybe the Year of Williams Thinking? Too derivative?

While I was a theater major in college, I have seen and read very little of Williams'
work--just the occasional film adaptation and I'm sure I had to read Glass Menagerie for some class. Oh, and I was in a production of Summer and Smoke in college. I've always had the (unsubstantiated) thought that Williams told the same couple of stories over and over. Perhaps I should read and see a little more before I make such a bold and damning statement.

Well, while I consider that project, I ran across a television adaptation of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof that I thought might be interesting, so I checked it out from the library and enjoyed watching a version created for Granada Television in 1977. Such a quintessential American play seems an odd choice for the British Television company, but this was part of a series of performances produced and starring Laurence Olivier, who must have seen the role of Big Daddy as a good fit for him at the time.

The production is well done with a seasoned cast of mostly Americans. Natalie Wood is memorizing as Maggie and while I found her performance a little too twitchy even for this twitchy character, I couldn't take my eyes off her. Ms. Wood's husband Robert Wagner portrays Brick, Maggie's downward-spiralling husband. I enjoyed Mr. Wagner's performance as well. He is very still for much of it, particularly in contrast to Maggie.

If I do take on Tennessee, one question in my mind is the structure within his plays, both the overall structure and of the scenes and beats within the plays. If feel that maybe he is a good structuralist and gives actors lots of moments to build and release the tension in a scene. At least that is my first impression based on this one television version. Given the loads of Williams plays to investigate (by reading, seeing live, or viewing on film) that question alone could fuel a year's worth of discussion.

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
by Tennessee Williams in 1955
This production for Granada Television produced in 1977 as part of Laurence Olivier Presents
Starring Laurence Olivier, Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, Maureen Stapleton