Cast Recordings

The Sixth Day of Second Discmas

Well, Week 2 of Second Discmas is in high gear, and here at Second Disc HQ, we can’t get enough of the great music of the silver screen and the Great White Way!  Today, we’re sharing the immortal music of Hollywood and Broadway with you! Thanks to our fantastic friends at Kritzerland, we have two amazing prize packs for you today! Our “Screen” pack is a triple-threat of soundtrack classics, including two from the legendary Elmer Bernstein!  From Bernstein’s pen comes the Original Soundtrack Recording of 1957’s Drango, as well as Kritzerland’s landmark 100th release,…

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Kritzerland Goes “Inside Out” with Jan Maxwell and Ann Crumb

The Kritzerland team would be forgiven for slowing down after such an exciting fall, what with the sold-out, 2-CD deluxe edition of Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (read our interview here!) and the expanded release of Elmer Bernstein’s score to Summer and Smoke.  But the label isn’t slowing down, at all, but barreling towards 2012 with a full slate of more exciting releases.  Today, Kritzerland announced not one, but two, new titles.  In addition to the brand-new Melodyland, the debut recording by 13-year old rising cabaret…

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Stephen Sondheim, Angela Lansbury, Mary Martin Feature in Latest Masterworks Line-Up

Some of The Great White Way’s brightest stars will be on the receiving end of the latest reissue bonanza from Sony’s Masterworks Broadway label.  Leading the pack is the 1985 Original Cast Recording of Stephen Sondheim’s Follies in Concert.  Lee Remick, Barbara Cook, Mandy Patinkin and George Hearn star in the 1985 recording of Sondheim’s 1971 musical currently enjoying a critically-acclaimed, hit revival on Broadway.  Follies in Concert will arrive at general retail on CD in a new eco-friendly digipak format, while the long out-of-print soundtrack to Jerry Herman’s 1996 television film Mrs. Santa Claus…

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Everybody Cut Loose! Ghostlight Revisits and Remasters 1998 “Footloose”

Well, everybody didn’t quite cut loose this weekend.  Despite Paramount Pictures’ lavish promotional campaign for the film, its remake of 1984’s Footloose couldn’t topple Hugh Jackman’s Rocky-meets-The–Transformers epic Real Steel for the top spot at the box office.  Still, the lukewarm reception accorded Craig Brewer’s picture likely won’t diminish the reputation or popularity of Herbert Ross’ original.  A more successful adaptation of Footloose arrived at Broadway’s Richard Rodgers Theatre on October 22, 1998, where it remained ensconced for 709 performances until its July 2, 2000 closing.  The production was recorded by Q…

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Review: “Godspell: 40th Anniversary Celebration”

When Hair ushered in the Age of Aquarius on April 29, 1968, it heralded the arrival of the rock revolution on Broadway.  The New York Times‘ influential critic Clive Barnes didn’t mince his words, declaring that the musical was a “long-term joust against Broadway’s world of Sigmund Romberg [the composer of such operettas as The Student Prince]” and more importantly, “the first Broadway musical in some time to have the authentic voice of today rather than the day before yesterday.”  And while the songs of the stage once populated the Billboard charts,…

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Listen to the Music of the Night: “Phantom” Box Coming to the U.K.

Two decades after The Beatles ushered in the first British Invasion, the Brits were back.  This time, they had their sights set on Broadway, traditionally home to one of America’s great indigenous art forms, the musical.  The British Invasion of the 1980s saw the work of American musical theatre legends like Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Herman, Cy Coleman and John Kander and Fred Ebb take a seeming back seat to lavish spectaculars imported from London, often with iconic logos and some kind of special effect sure to keep the tourists talking: Cats (a…

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Review: Original Cast, “Half-Past Wednesday”

Anyone have a little love for Rumpelstiltskin? The Brothers Grimm popularized the story of the mischievous imp in the early part of the 19th century, but he has never received the same kind of commercial fame as many of the Grimms’ other creations. No wonder, then, that Rumpelstiltskin was so ornery when he appeared as the villain of Shrek Forever After.  And how many indignities did he survive as the titular character of a 1996 grade B horror film!  Rumpelstiltskin has had a few moments in the spotlight, however, and one of…

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Prepare Ye: “Godspell” Turns 40, Celebrates With Deluxe Album Reissues

Prepare ye the way of the Lord.  Just as the musical gears up for its first-ever Broadway revival, Masterworks Broadway is giving the deluxe treatment to Stephen Schwartz and John-Michael Tebelak’s Godspell with a new 2-CD set to celebrate both the new revival and the show’s 40th anniversary.  Godspell and its score announced a major new talent in Stephen Schwartz, alumnus of Carnegie-Mellon University (the birthplace of his next musical, the legendary Pippin).  With its varied and diverse textures, as well as a decidedly modern feel, Schwartz’s score yielded a Top 15…

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Release Round-Up: Week of August 9

GQ, Two (Funkytowngrooves) GQ’s 1980 Arista album gets the remastered treatment. (Amazon) Jefferson Airplane, Red Octopus (Friday Music) The 1975 effort from Paul Kantner, Marty Balin, Grace Slick and co. arrives on 180-gram vinyl with the mega-hit “Miracles” a highlight!  (Official site) Evelyn “Champagne” King, Music Box (Funkytowngrooves) King teams with T-Life for this groove-laden RCA set from 1979! (Amazon) The Motels, Apocalypso (Omnivore) The Motels’ lost album from 1981 finally surfaces, and Omnivore’s expanded edition boasts seven additional tracks!  Full story here.  (Amazon) Mickey Newbury, An American Trilogy (Drag City) Drag…

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July 4 Special Reissue Theory: “1776: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack”

Happy 4th of July!  Welcome to another installment of Reissue Theory, where we take a look back at notable albums and the reissues they could someday see. In 1969, a Broadway musical about a most unlikely subject became the toast of New York.  Three years later, a movie mogul in the twilight of his years shepherded it to the big screen, and while the film has lived on, its soundtrack album has all but disappeared.  Today’s Reissue Theory, pulled from The Second Disc archives, imagines a long-overdue expansion of the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack…

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Masterworks Broadway Announces Three More CD Debuts Including “Divine Hair”

In a recent Wall Street Journal column, Scott Farthing, Sony Masterworks’ Senior Director of Marketing, estimated that the Sony vaults house 80-85% of all [American] cast recordings ever made. Largely built on the combined catalogues of Columbia Records and RCA Victor (and their associated labels), the Masterworks Broadway label has gradually been making that immense library available once again in the digital domain. Masterworks has just announced its summer line-up, and as usual, it’s a varied one! July 19 sees the reissue of RCA Victor’s 1954 cast recording of one of only…

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Review: Two By Richard Rodgers, “On Your Toes” (1952) and “Carousel” (1955)

June is busting out all over, and so is the music of Richard Rodgers. Then again, the work of the composer (1902-1979) is always busting out all over. Even in 2010, Rodgers had the third most-covered song of the year, according to ASCAP. The song was “My Funny Valentine,” with lyrics by Lorenz Hart, and it was written in 1937, proving that Richard Rodgers’ music is, indeed, timeless.  Masterworks Broadway, drawing from Sony Music Entertainment’s Columbia and RCA Victor vaults, has been a leading light in bringing classic theatre titles into the digital…

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Memorial Day Special: The Andrews Sisters and the Sherman Brothers, “Over Here!”

We interrupt our regularly-scheduled Memorial Day hiatus to bring you this surprise holiday feature! It was 1972, but 1959 was all the rage.  Grease was the word then, as it is now.  The little musical from Chicago’s Kingston Mines Theatre had opened on Broadway where it would garner seven Tony Award nominations, run for a then- record-breaking 3,388 performances and spawn a massively successful film version.  Grease was the toast of New York, launching the careers of Adrienne Barbeau, Barry Bostwick and Walter Bobbie, among others.  But its producers, Kenneth Waissman and…

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A Quartet of Broadway Classics Coming From Masterworks

Back on April 5, we filled you in on the latest slate of reissues from Sony’s Masterworks Broadway division, available as digital downloads or discs-on-demand from Arkiv Music. Next week, May 17, sees release of RCA Victor’s 1964 Music Theater of Lincoln Center Recording of Franz Lehar’s The Merry Widow, making its very first appearance in the CD age. The classic operetta is joined by four new releases returning to print: the Original Broadway Cast Recordings of Irving Berlin’s Mr. President and E.Y. “Yip” Harburg’s The Happiest Girl in the World, as…

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Back Tracks, In Memoriam: The Musical Legacy of Arthur Laurents

The late Arthur Laurents wrote many of the most beloved musicals and films in entertainment history including West Side Story, Gypsy, The Way We Were and Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope.  He passed away on May 5, but today’s special Back Tracks celebrates this great writer’s legacy in music. “If you have a good strong finish, they’ll forgive anything!” So implores stage mother Madame Rose to her daughter Louise, the future Gypsy Rose Lee, in the 1959 musical Gypsy.  Rose’s bon mot was one of many priceless lines written by Arthur Laurents, and unsurprisingly,…

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Release Round-Up: Week of April 26

Derek and the Dominos, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (Universal) The 2-CD remastered/expanded 40th Anniversary Edition (previously a Best Buy exclusive) and super deluxe 4-CD/2-LP/1-DVD box set of the seminal album both arrive in stores today.  Read more here.  (2-CD – Amazon, Box Set – Amazon) Bob Dylan, The Other Side of the Mirror: Live at the Newport Folk Festival 1963-1965 (Columbia/Legacy) Murray Lerner’s film chronicling Dylan’s incendiary performances at Newport is released on Blu-Ray for the first time. (Amazon) Ella Fitzgerald, Ella in Japan (Verve Select) Hip-o and Verve resurrect…

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Stage and Screen Classics, Reissued: “Until September” and “Camelot”

If there’s a link between Kritzerland’s two new releases, it would have to be melody.  I’m speaking of sheer, unadulterated, romantic melody, courtesy of two of music’s finest purveyors of such themes: John Barry and Frederick Loewe.  This morning, the stage and screen specialists announced two limited edition titles of 1,000, and both are notable, indeed.  From Mr. Barry comes the 1984 score to Until September, while Mr. Loewe is represented by the first-ever CD release of the 1964 Original London Cast Album to his musical penned with Alan Jay Lerner, Camelot.  The…

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Stage and Screen: John Barry, Steve Lawrence Get Reissued

Kritzerland continues to mine the MGM/UA soundtrack library for its latest release, a two-for-one CD. The disc, a limited edition of 1,000, contains the score to Bryan Forbes’ 1967 thriller The Whisperers composed by the legendary John Barry as well as Richard Rodney Bennett’s score to Sidney Lumet’s 1977 adaptation of Peter Shaffer’s play Equus. (Barry’s very different score to The Deep has already enjoyed a terrific reissue earlier this year, courtesy our friends at Intrada, and it’s been mentioned over at the Film Score Monthly message board that a reissue is…

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Labor Day Special Reissue Theory: Stephen Schwartz and James Taylor, “Working”

The Second Disc Archives are open!  We’re reprising this look at a musical which united the talents of Stephen Schwartz, James Taylor, Mary Rodgers, Micki Grant and Craig Carnelia, while our story also features “appearances” along the way by Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Jennifer Warnes and Rupert Holmes!  Welcome to our Reissue Theory special: Working! On Monday, September 6, 2010, America celebrated its 128th Labor Day, all but the first 12 of them recognized as a federal holiday. Labor Day was designed as a holiday to celebrate the contributions, both…

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Review: “Promises, Promises: Original MGM Broadway Cast Recording”

The Fourth of July isn’t usually a holiday known for gifts. But your humble reviewer felt as if he got a gift, and what a gift!, on July 3 when Kritzerland’s limited edition deluxe 2-CD reissue of the original cast album of Promises, Promises (KR 20015-9) arrived in the mail. As a result, much of the weekend was spent listening to an album I’ve known for years, but hearing it as if for the first time. For background on this release, see The Second Disc’s post of June 14 and join us…

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