Monday, May 27, 2013

The 100 Greatest Broadway Songs - The Grand Finale!!!


THE 100 GREATEST BROADWAY SONGS
AND NOW...
SONG #1
"There's No Business Like Show Business"
from Annie Get Your Gun
Music & Lyrics by Irving Berlin
sung by Annie Oakley, Frank Butler, Buffalo Bill Cody & Company
We top the entire 100 list with a song that is considered the ultimate Show Business anthem.  It is yet another signature song for the woman that is hailed by many has the "Grande Diva" of the Broadway stage: Ethel Merman.  When one looks at Irving Berlin's inviting lyrics, one realizes that it is truly a love letter to the industry for which Berlin loved writing songs.  Berlin's simple melody is also quite iconic and popular with many a star (from both stage and screen!).  What more can I say than "nowhere could you get that happy feeling when you are stealing an extra bow!"  The song really does speak for itself!

Well, that's it!  We are finally finished with this month-long endeavor.  With this #1 (and the links above!), you have my list for the 100 Greatest Broadway Songs of All-Time.

As it is Memorial Day and in honor of the man who wrote our #1 tune, I feel we could all share in his appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1968 below where he sang his phenomenal American ballad (that is oftentimes considered an "honorary" National Anthem!): "God Bless America."

HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY AND GOD BLESS AMERICA!

Sunday, May 26, 2013

The 100 Greatest Broadway Songs - Part XVIII


THE 100 GREATEST BROADWAY SONGS
SONG #3
"The Sound Of Music"
from The Sound Of Music
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
sung by Maria Rainer
When you think about all of the famous moments in Musical history (especially anything from or based on a Broadway Musical!), there is one image that I would argue is more iconic than any of them: Julie Andrews twirling on an Austrian mountaintop singing this beautiful Rodgers & Hammerstein tune.  People who have never even seen or even heard of The Sound of Music know this image.  Yes, it was originally introduced on Broadway by the fabulous Mary Martin and yes, many other actresses and singers (like Florence Henderson, Marie Osmond, Rebecca Luker and Laura Benanti) have sung this song on the stage.  But it is that opening sequence from Robert Wise's 1965 film version that skyrocketed this song into the stratosphere of Pop Culture icons.  Andrew Lloyd Webber knew this very well as he used that image in the opening sequence to his reality show-casting of his London revival of The Sound of Music entitled How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? (the eventual winner, Connie Fisher, was even directed to sort of imitate Andrews' performance and manner in the revival, above!).

SONG #2
"Everything's Coming Up Roses"
from Gypsy
Music by Jule Styne
Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
sung by Mama Rose
This song was introduced on Broadway in the very same season as The Sound of Music and by the theatrical powerhouse that was Ethel Merman.  The song is one of the most musically thrilling songs of the Golden Era of Broadway.  The strains of Jule Styne's masterful chords (which uses everything from trumpets to strings to percussion!) mixed with the perfect colloquial created by Stephen Sondheim heightens the emotion and power of this song.  And boy is this character full of heightened emotion!  The character of Mama Rose (based on the real-life mother of famed stripper Gypsy Rose Lee) runs the gamut of all kinds of emotions (anger, frustration, guilt, passion, pain, euphoria, loneliness, etc.) within every song she sings in the show.  This first act finale is quite frankly the character's tour-de-force.  Like Phantom's "The Music Of the Night," this is a "seduction song;" however, Mama Rose is trying to lure her daughter Louise (who will later become Gypsy Rose Lee) into being the star of their new act.  Therefore, she is using tons of happy and child-like images (roses, daffodils, lollipops, sunshine, Santa Claus, etc.) to entice her "child" to join her in her world (no matter how crazy it is!).

Tomorrow, on Memorial Day, I shall reveal the #1 Greatest Broadway Song of All-Time!

Saturday, May 25, 2013

The 100 Greatest Broadway Songs - Part XVII


THE 100 GREATEST BROADWAY SONGS
SONG #6
"Luck Be a Lady"
from Guys and Dolls
Music & Lyrics by Frank Loesser
sung by Sky Masterson & Gamblers
This is probably Frank Loesser's most famous song (and that's pretty much thanks to Sinatra!).  With its fast and tremulous riffs and its snake-oil gambling imagery, the song taps into that seedy underbelly of Damon Runyon's world.  The song is sung by ultimate gambler Sky Masterson as he tries to convince a bunch of his fellow low-life gamblers to attend a prayer meeting at the Mission, where the woman he loves works.  The title has gone down into the canon of American colloquialisms as people say it on their way to either Nevada or Atlantic City.  The song is even an unofficial anthem that is used in Films and Television shows in which the characters travel to Vegas!

SONG #5
"Oklahoma!"
from Oklahoma!
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
sung by Curly McLane, Laurey Williams, Aunt Eller & Company
One of the most popular title songs in Broadway history (and yet it is NOT the highest ranking title number on this list!).  But like "Ol' Man River" before, this song is quite representative of the changes in the American Musical.  The overall metaphor of the show is that change is coming for everyone in the territory as it journeys towards statehood.  So when Curly and Laurey (the feuding lovers of the show) finally marry, it is a reminder to all the other characters of the new horizons on the brink with this "brand new state."  Mixed with Hammerstein's depiction of rural Oklahoma prairies is Richard Rodgers' use of choral singing in the background (something he worked on with his longtime orchestrator Robert Russell Bennett).  The choral singing leads right into that famous moment when the entire cast spells out (in iambic rhythm!) "O-K-L-A-H-O-M-A" with such a force.  It is no wonder the actual state of Oklahoma officially adopted the song as their state anthem 10 years after the show opened on Broadway (making it the only official state song from a Broadway Musical!).

SONG #4
"One"
from A Chorus Line
Music by Marvin Hamlisch
Lyrics by Edward Kleban
sung by The Company
Yet another song that has become an anthem for Broadway and its high-strutting numbers.  While that signature vamp is definitely a tribute to the late Marvin Hamlisch and his composing genius, the success of this number can be directly attributed to director Michael Bennett's inventive original staging and choreography.  Every step in this number is what was considered typical "chorus-style" dancing (especially the Tiller kicks at the end!).  The song also served as the overall metaphor for a show about dancers who are part of a virtual assembly line and, in their audition for the "show-within-the-show," are for the first time recognized as individuals and very different people.  It's the kind of perfect elements that make a great long-running Broadway hit.

Tomorrow, we step into the Top 3 of the 100 Greatest Broadway Songs of All-Time!

Friday, May 24, 2013

The 100 Greatest Broadway Songs - Part XVI


THE 100 GREATEST BROADWAY SONGS
SONG #10
"Somewhere"
from West Side Story
Music by Leonard Bernstein
Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
sung by Dream Soloist; in some productions, sung by Maria & Tony
This is one of my all-time favorite songs (and yes, it only got as high as #10 in the evaluation process)!  Not only do I love it because it is a beautifully poignant song with a powerful message (I mean when I was a naive kid, I truly believed a song like this could end all prejudice!), but I love it because it is musically a thrilling song.  Leonard Bernstein's music is so uplifting and almost operatic (it was originally sung by a woman cast as a Shark girl who later went on to fame at the Metropolitan Opera!).  And Stephen Sondheim's "purple prose" lyrics are romantic and almost "utopian."  It was originally the centerpiece of Jerome Robbins' massive ballet that occurs within the second act of the show, but has been used in many other capacities.  The song has been recorded by several pop artists including Aretha Franklin, Johnny Mathis, Cher, Celine Dion and, most notably, Barbra Streisand (as seen above!).

SONG #9
"The Music Of the Night"
from The Phantom Of the Opera
Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber
Lyrics by Charles Hart & Richard Stilgoe
sung by The Phantom Of the Opera
I have talked about this song before and I do consider it Andrew Lloyd Webber's greatest song (from his greatest Musical!).  What is really fascinating about this song is not only how difficult a song it is (musically speaking) for the actor playing the leading role (no one can do it like Michael Crawford though!), but how it is considered (by many a Phantom "phan") one of the sexiest songs ever written for the stage.  In Harold Prince's gloriously staged original production, the song is sung by the Phantom once he has brought the ingenue Christine to his underground lair.  He has her alone, surrounded by candlelight, she is in a dressing gown and he is obsessively in love with her.  I think we all know what is on his tormented mind.  It really is the ultimate "seduction song."  I mean the song even climaxes (when he sings the phrase "the power of the music of the night")!

SONG #8
"I Could Have Danced All Night"
from My Fair Lady
Music by Frederick Loewe
Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner
sung by Eliza Doolittle with Mrs. Pearce & the Maids
Most traditional Musicals have that moment in the show where the lead character (either the man or the woman!) realizes "I'm in love!"  And that moment more often than not is put into song.  And in My Fair Lady, a show that is highly considered one of the most romantic Musicals (without the lead characters ever sharing a kiss!), this is that moment.  Eliza Doolittle has been working with Professor Higgins day and night trying to learn to drop her heavy cockney accent.  It has been long and arduous for everyone in the household.  But in one evening, she begins to retain everything she has been taught and Higgins his excited (the thrilling "The Rain In Spain" number!).  Now Eliza has a new euphoric feeling that she has never felt before.  It is a mix of the accomplishment and (quite possibly) an adoration of her tutor.  So she sings about how that feeling could quite literally carry her away "all night," all while the housekeeper and maids try to get her to get some sleep.  It is an exciting and glorious song that is always sung beautifully (whether by original Broadway star Julie Andrews or film dubber Marni Nixon or Downton Abbey's Amy Nuttall in a UK touring production, above!).

SONG #7
"Ol' Man River"
from Show Boat
Music by Jerome Kern
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
sung by Joe & Chorus
It has been said before, but it needs to be said again: Show Boat changed everything.  And this song is the complete representation of that fact.  The song is sung by the supporting character of "Stevedore" Joe, who works on Captain Andy's Show Boat.  Yet the song serves as the overall metaphor of the show.  Oscar Hammerstein II wrote it to serve as that metaphor of being the one constant in these people's oftentimes chaotic lives: The Mississippi River.  Musicals were not written like this before.  Composers and librettists didn't come up with metaphors and character studies that would serve the plot.  They just wrote simple stories in which the songs could exist.  Jerome Kern's overwhelming and lustrous score mixed with Hammerstein's need to introduce character, metaphor and sprawling plots made for a landmark in American Musical Theatre.  I mean, the history of American Musical Theatre can be separated into two categories: before Show Boat and after Show Boat.  And since then, Broadway has "just kept rollin' along."

Tomorrow, I will slide right into the Top 5 of the 100 Greatest Broadway Songs.  We're inching our way to #1!

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

The 100 Greatest Broadway Songs - Part XV


THE 100 GREATEST BROADWAY SONGS
SONG #15
"Hello, Dolly!"
from Hello, Dolly!
Music & Lyrics by Jerry Herman
sung by Dolly Gallagher Levi & Company
By the mid-1960s, the Rock 'n Roll Era had become so culturally significant that it had shoved Broadway music off the pop charts (Before the mid-1950s, Broadway music is usually what made up most of the hit singles!).  But in 1964, there was one last bastion of hope for Broadway with this song when Louis Armstrong recorded this song (in order to promote the show!) and became a #1 hit in month's following the Musical's opening.  This high-strutting title number skyrocketed songwriter Jerry Herman into Broadway stardom and became the anthem as a "parade" of divas took over for original star Carol Channing (including Martha Raye, Ginger Rogers, Pearl Bailey and Ethel Merman).  It even was beloved by the troops in Vietnam when Mary Martin starred in a special USO production.  It was a perfect example of Broadway's Americana.

SONG #14
"My Funny Valentine"
from Babes In Arms
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Lorenz Hart
sung by Billie Smith
This is the second of two Rodgers and Hart songs to appear on this list and it is considered their most popular, having been recorded over 1300 times by 600 different artists.  It is from one of their shows that is not well-known, yet the show contains some of their most famous songs (in addition to this one, the show also includes "Johnny One Note," "Where Or When" and "The Lady Is a Tramp").  This sweet romantic jazz standard is also noted for its slightly witty Lorenz Hart lyrics that have now gone down into the compendium of American colloquialisms ("unphotographable," "figure less than Greek," etc.).

SONG #13
"I Dreamed a Dream"
from Les Misérables
Music by Claude-Michel Schonberg
Lyrics by Alain Boublil & Herbert Kretzmer
sung by Fantine
Contrary to popular belief, this song was not written for Susan Boyle to wow Simon Cowell and his fellow judges panel on Britain's Got Talent.  It was first written back in 1980 for the Les Misérables French concept album by Claude-Michel Schonberg and Alain Boublil (titled "J'Avais rêvé d'une autre vie" and sung by French pop singer Rose Laurens).  The single became a hit in France and (being one of the first songs on  the concept album) is pointed as the song that sold Cameron Mackintosh on adapting the show into English for the West End.  When it was performed in the London production (by the fabulous Patti LuPone!), it became an instant hit and became an anthem for the "dreams" within the show.  It's no wonder that the 2012 film version only used the song (sung to Oscar-winning perfection by Anne Hathaway!) in the trailers.

SONG #12
"People"
from Funny Girl
Music by Jule Styne
Lyrics by Bob Merrill
sung by Fanny Brice
As soon as Jule Styne began writing songs to fit Barbra Streisand's voice, he immediately wrote this soaring ballad with Bob Merrill that soon became Streisand's signature number...but it was almost cut from the show.  Original director Jerome Robbins, even though he liked the song and the way Streisand sang it, felt that it slowed down the action of the play and wanted it taken out.  Styne refused, and soon Robbins left (over other disagreements with the creative team) to be replaced by Bob Fosse, who also felt that "People" should be cut.  Not wanting to go round for round with Jule Styne, Fosse left about a week after taking the job.  Then came Actors' Studio director Garson Kanin.  He too felt that the song dragged down the play and wanted it cut.  He kept it out-of-town, but promised it would be gone by the New York opening.  Soon, Robbins was brought back to make some final changes and be the overall "production supervisor."  To combat both Kanin and Robbins, Styne got creative.  He pulled Barbra Streisand into a recording studio and recorded it as a single then released the single.  The single became a Top 10 hit immediately.  Kanin and Robbins were painted into a corner and...the rest is history!

SONG #11
"My Favorite Things"
from The Sound of Music
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
sung by Maria Rainer & The Mother Abbess
This song became an instant classic in the original 1959 Broadway production of The Sound of Music.  In the show, it was originally sung by Mary Martin (as Maria) when she was leaving the Abbey to go to the Von Trapps (she sang it with Patricia Neway's Mother Abbess).  A year after the show opened, jazz saxophonist John Coltrane covered the song (in an almost fourteen-minute long version!) and became a huge jazz favorite.  Soon, it also became a favorite of pop and lounge acts for their respective Christmas albums (mainly because the song lists a lot of nice things).  When screenwriter Ernest Lehman was adapting the show for the 1965 film version, he decided to re-position the song for Maria (played by Julie Andrews) to sing to the children during the thunderstorm.  The scene (which was the first scene filmed for the movie!) became a personal favorite of Andrews and the children (who reprise the song later in the film, above).

In the next post, we will jump right into the Top 10 of the 100 Greatest Broadway Songs!