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Free Music Notes for Say, Darling (1958 Original Broadway Cast)Free Music Review: STYNE DID IT AGAIN Hit: 5 StarsA perky litte musical about making a musical. Great numers by Jule Styne modelled after songs from Pajama Game, which is its inspiration.
Highly enjoyable entertainment.
Free Music Review: Middlin' Styne Hit: 3 StarsAlthough Jule Styne is one of the great names in Broadway musical comedy, SAY, DARLING was not one of his high points. The cast is good, David Wayne and Vivian Blaine in particular, with fine service by the pretty much forgotten Johnny Desmond, but the music/lyrics themselves are second rate, at best. The title track isn't bad, by Styne standards, but what is one to make of "The Husking Bee" or "Something's Always Happening On the River," which seems endless (but bouncy and a bit reminiscent of "Blow High, Blow Low")? No extra tracks are included, but perhaps they were mercifully lost.
Free Music Review: "THE MUSICAL THAT CHANGED THE WAY BROADWAY SOUNDED" Hit: 5 Stars'Here, after fifty years, is the CD debut of SAY. DARLING, the musical that changed the way Broadway sounded. That's quite a claim, and only half-seriously made; but this unassuming "comedy about a musical" did, in fact, directly bring about the revolution in orchestration that took us from the age of Russell Bennett to the age of -- well, GYPSY.'
So begins Steven Suskin's March 16 Playbill.com review of DRGs "never before on CD" reissue of RCAs first stereo Broadway Cast album, and I urge you to read Suskin's entertaining and highly informative piece. (Go to the website's homepage and chose "On the Record." Type "say, darling" as the keyword and chose the author from the drop down list.) Not only does Suskin clarify his opening statement, but he also provides a wonderful narrative about the creation of the show. Not really a musical, the show was scored for two pianos only, but "RCA reasoned they should add an orchestra, the better to sound like a real Broadway cast album, so they commissioned staff arranger Sid Ramin to work something up." The sound of Broadway was changed forever.
Some critics have dismissed the score as second rate. Marc Miller ("TheaterMania Guide to Musical Theater Recordings") writes: "Most of the numbers are performance pieces that don't advance the plot; some of them -- such as 'Husking Bee' and 'Chief of Love' -- are intentionally cheesy." Suskin avers: "Styne, Comden and Green wrote spoofs in many flavors, but their hearts -- or at least their best efforts -- seemed not to be in it." Call me weird, but I really like the score and have ever since first hearing it nearly 50 years ago. Although the show contains only 10 songs ("Try To Love Me" is sung at different times by the show's two leads), I found myself singing along with at least four of them. Not bad for a show that's not even a musical.
Johnny Desmond (Giovanni Alfredo De Simone), in his Broadway debut, applies his Big Band experience to the title song, as well as "It's the Second Time You Meet That Matters," and "Try To Love Me," and he puts his "legitimate" voice to good use in "It's Doom" and the afore-mentioned "Husking Bee." Vivian Blaine goes "torchy" with the first reading of "Try To Love Me," does a Big Broadway-style duet ("Dance Only With Me") with Steve Condos, and lets it all hang out on "Chief of Love." The big surprise is David Wayne, simply terrific as the second baritone in "Let the Lower Lights Be Burning" (a parody so good, you'd swear it came from a church hymnal), or the snake oil salesman in "The Carnival Song" (with Ms. Blaine and Mr. Condos joining in the sham), and the riverboat captain who informs us that "Something's Always Happening at the River."
All this, and the "breathtaking" overture as well. (Suskin's descriptive, not mine;, with which I agree.)
Allow me to let Mr. Suskin bring this review to an end: "Let us close by saying a word in appreciation of DRG. When the CD format came along, the survivor companies of the major labels -- Columbia, RCA and Capitol -- dutifully (if in a sometimes puzzling manner) transferred a good portion of their respective catalogs. But that was then. The newer corporate parents seemed to lose interest, the stream of reissues dried up, and many of the titles fell back out of print. Over the years, DRG has happily picked up many of the fallen cast albums, and with great dedication and care has brought them -- as well as various never-before-on-CD titles -- back into print. At this point, the catalog includes such titles as NO STRINGS, PLAIN AND FANCY, GREENWILLOW, THE GAY LIFE, the superb Shirley Jones/Jack Cassidy BRIGADOON, OH CAPTAIN!, GOLDEN BOY and more. Each of which, really, should be on your CD shelf . . . " (On the Record, Playbill.com, October 15, 2007)
Highly recommended, even though the audio quality is not up to DRGs lofty standards.
Free Music Review: A Forgotten Oldie Hit: 5 StarsBack in the late 1950's I saw Say, Darling in New York City. It was my first Broadway show. I loved it. There is such a force of humor in the music and the lyrics. That was transferred neatly to the album which I played over and over. I waited and waited for a CD and then I figured it would never come out. Well, thank goodness it has. This is a show with music that is fun to listen to. It sends up some things about Broadway but always with a loving heart.
Viviane Blaine, hot off Guys and Dolls is brilliant singing the show's ballads. And Johnny Desmond has that rich big voice that made him a star on records, on Broadway and on tour. David Wayne and Robert Morse add fun to the whole thing.
The full orchestration on this CD is better than the 2 pianos used in the theatre and the music reminds you that these were the days when even a minor musical like Say, Darling had a terrific score.
Say, Darling is a perfect addition to a theatre lover's collection. Thank goodness someone finally had the sense to release it on CD. If you want to wallow in Broadway nostalgia of the golden 50's this one is for you.
Gary Smith
Free Music Review: Reedited and mastered from the original session tapes Hit: 5 StarsThis Original Cast Recording of the 1958 Broadway comedy, SAY, DARLING features nine songs by Betty Comden, Adolph Green and Jule Styne. SAY, DARLING wasn't really a musical, it was a "Play About a Musical," in which the songs were used as rehearsal or audition material. RCA Records hired Sid Ramin (who would create the acclaimed Overture for GYPSY a year later) to orchestrate and conduct a full cast album of the show. This DRG CD has been reedited from the original session tapes and includes five previously unreleased dialogue lead-ins (by Vivian Blaine, Johnny Desmond, David Wayne and Jerome Cowan) which were intended to place the songs in their proper context, but were left off of the original LP release. These new introductions can be heard before "Try To Love Me," "It's Doom," "The Husking Bee," "Let the Lower Lights Be Burning" (an 1871 Christian hymn written by Philip P. Bliss) and "Chief of Love." There were actually two different introductions recorded for the latter song, one with Vivian Blaine and Jerome Cowan, and one with Robert Morse, David Wayne and Horace McMahon. In the play, the latter introduction was followed by a "rock 'n" roll" version of the song played on a phonograph record. Since that version of "Chief of Love" was not recorded for the cast album, only Vivian Blaine's lead-in has been included on the remastered CD. You can hear the "long-lost" Robert Morse lead-in at [...]. For a more detailed description of the show, click on the discussion button below.Say, Darling (1958 Original Broadway Cast)
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