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As part of an extensive 50th anniversary campaign in 2015, The Sound Of Music's soundtrack will be reissued with previously unreleased score cues and all vocal performances for the first time in one release. The soundtrack has been remastered from the original analog tapes
D**.
"LET'S START AT THE VERY BEGINNING; A VERY GOOD PLACE TO START"
For 50 years now, "The Sound Of Music" has received disdain from critics, who rebuke its excessive sentimentality, and adoration from international audiences. Buried somewhere underneath the odd mix of rebuke, disdain, and adoration lies a compelling musical with a lovely, final score from Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. To re-discover it, you can "start at the very beginning", with this excellent re-issue of the Original Broadway Cast Album from 1959. This album was recorded at Columbia Records historic 30th Street Studio; where such other classic Broadway Cast Albums as "My Fair Lady," "West Side Story," and "Gypsy" were also recorded. In its original production, "The Sound Of Music", rather controversially, won eight Tony Awards, including "Best Musical" over Jule Styne and Steven Sondheim's darker, more complex, musical "Gypsy." Even more controversially, Mary Martin won the Best Actress Tony Award as Maria, instead of Ethel Merman as hard-driving, ambitious and obsessed Mama Rose in "Gypsy." On the surface, Mary Martin, then 43 years old and fresh from her high-flying success as "Peter Pan", was far too old to portray 20 year old would-be nun turned governess Maria. But the rules are different on stage. And, perhaps taking a cue from her "Peter Pan" persona, Mary Martin was determined to be the theatrical personification of "youth, joy" and "freedom"-- qualities which are as well suited to Maria Von Trapp as to Peter Pan. Mary Martin sings her heart out as Maria, generating genuine warmth and infectious high spirits as she sings "Do-Re-Mi" and "The Lonely Goatherd" with the children. But the real singing star of this recording is Patricia Neway as the Mother Absess. Her mighty, diva power rendition of "Climb Every Mountain" can not, indeed, will not, be denied. Neway practically demands and rightfully deserves respect! The generation who grew up with the 1965 movie version will likely be shocked by this original Broadway version. This "music", under the direction of conductor Fredrick Dvorch, has a far more intimate "sound." There are also two songs, "How Can Love Survive?" and "No Way To Stop It" for the characters of Max and Elsa (Kurt Kaszner and Marion Marlowe) that were cut from the movie version. If there is a dud in Rodgers and Hammerstein's stage score, it is definitely "An Ordinary Couple", a duet for Mary Martin and co-star Theodore Bikel, that sounds like a deadly dirge. "An Ordinary Couple" was, mercifully, cut from the movie version and replaced by Richard Rodgers with "Something Good." The bonus material included here is very informative and entertaining. The CD booklet includes an excellent essay by Bert Fink and several rare photos. My favorite photo shows the real Maria Von Trapp (a formidable looking-woman, indeed!) standing alongside Mary Martin and Florence Henderson; who was the "second Maria" (following Mary Martin-- thank God Florence Henderson did not play Maria in the movie)! The Bonus Tracks include a hilarious "Sound Of Music" Parody titled "The Pratt Family from Switzerland" from "Julie Andrews & Carol Burnett at Carnegie Hall" in 1962. Julie says, "And now, we bring you a happy song that I used to sing when I was a happy nun back home in Switzerland," to which Carol adds, "You all can sing along if it doesn't make you sick!" Richard Rodgers was so upset by this parody that, three years later, he was reportedly furious when Julie Andrews was cast as Maria in the film version. He changed his tune quickly enough; when the film became the most successful film of all time-- and became known in the industry as "The Sound Of Money." By the time the movie was planned, Mary Martin was pushing 50 and definitely too old now. In an odd show-business irony, Audrey Hepburn, an early candidate for the role of Maria, accepted the role of Eliza Doolittle-- that Julie Andrews had played to great acclaim on stage-- in the 1964 film version of "My Fair Lady." This left Julie Andrews free to accept film roles in "Mary Poppins" and "The Americanization Of Emily": and to replace Mary Martin as Maria in the film version of "The Sound Of Music." "The Sound Of Music" has been embraced in practically every country in the world-- except Austria; where the real-life events took place. Austrians seem to hold the same disdain for "The Sound Of Music" as American theatre and film critics do. That finally changed in 2005, when the first German language production was staged in Vienna; the birth place of the real Maria Von Trapp. This CD includes Michael Kraus and Sandra Piers' emotional rendition of "Edelweiss" from that historic production. And finally, basking in the show's international appeal a bit more, this CD concludes with a Swedish version of "Sok Dig Till Bergin" ("Climb Every Mountain") by Tommy Korberg; proving that, after 50 years, "The Sound Of Music" is still moving in emotionally honest, far from manipulative, ways.
W**D
I grew up listening to this soundtrack.
Listening to Mary Martin brings back wonderful memories. Peter Pan and South Pacific too.
B**N
the hills are alive with the voice of Mary...
The final musical from the teaming of Rodgers and Hammerstein, THE SOUND OF MUSIC first opened on Broadway in 1959, starring Mary Martin as the unruly postulant who is assigned the task of becoming governess to the seven children of widower Captain Von Trapp (played by Theodore Bikel).Even the hugely-successful 1965 movie version--starring Julie Andrews--has done little to dim the enchantment and magic of the original 1959 Broadway cast album, now reissued in this lavish 50th Anniversary package from Sony Broadway Masterworks.Mary Martin imbues Maria with a childlike wonderment and maternal warmth; you can completely follow her character's journey through Maria's songs on the cast album. Cutting through any possible sugar within the piece are the two numbers shared by the Captain's worldly mistress, Elsa (Marion Marlowe) and her wisecracking friend Max (Kurt Kasznar), "How Can Love Survive?" and "No Way to Stop It", which are the closest that lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II ever came to approaching the cynical, rueful ballads made famous during Richard Rodgers' days with Lorenz Hart. The fact that those two songs never made it to the eventual movie version robbed the Baroness Elsa of much of her impact, and gave the film no real sense of mounting conflict within the Maria/Captain/Elsa love triangle.Playing the Mother Abbess, Patricia Neway graces the album with her soaring "Climb Ev'ry Mountain"; Lauri Peters is the love-struck Liesel, and Brian Davies plays Rolf. THE SOUND OF MUSIC opened on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on the 16th November, 1959 (moving in 1962 to the Mark Hellinger Theatre) and eventually clocked up 1,443 performances before closing in 1963. Mary Martin's various replacements throughout the run included Jeannie Carson, Nancy Dussault, Martha Wright and Barbara Meister.Bonuses featured in this 50th Anniversary package differ from those heard on the previous 1999 Broadway Masterworks edition, so collectors will be inclined to double-dip. Chief among the extra treasures is the "Pratt Family Singers" skit from Julie Andrews and Carol Burnett's 1962 Carnegie Hall album (which is begging to be reissued in it's entirety...hint, hint, Sony!).
J**G
Contains Important Bonus Selections
The Broadway cast and the movie soundtrack recordings of The Sound of Music are both indispensable if you love Rodgers and Hammerstein. Why I specifically recommend this 50th Anniversary Edition of the Broadway version is that it contains three bonus tracks: a nearly seven-minute parody with Julie Andrews and Carol Burnett, a thrilling "Climb Ev'ry Mountain" sung in Swedish by Tommy Korberg, and "Edelweiss" sung in German by Michael Krauss. Krauss possesses a much more polished singing voice than the Broadway and movie singers, and adds greatly to the poignancy by being overcome by emotion and becoming temporarily silent as the children take over the song.Now, a 60th Anniversary Edition is about to be released. The list of contents shows that the bonus selections have been removed. There may be an improvement in the sound, but please be aware of what will be missing.
J**N
the hills are alive
very good quality in the recording sounds better then the downloaded 45th anniversary from I tunes , plus lots of notes to read
T**H
Thank you for your fast delivery and great
Beautuful cd. Thank you for your fast delivery and great product
と**と
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L**U
Three Stars
The old version has better sound quality.
C**A
ALUCINANTE
No puedo decir otra cosa de esta fantástica edición en vinilo. Es alucinante. Aunque he de decir que al principio me preocupé, pues al abrir la caja, el plástico del disco venía abierto, daba la sensación de que habían estado manipulándolo. Pero dado que se escuchaba perfectamente y no presentaba desperfecto alguno, no le dí más importancia. Suena estupendamente, una maravilla. Totalmente recomendable
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