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All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. Prologue - The Jets/The Sharks 2. Jet Song - Mickey Calin/The Jets 3. Something's Coming - Larry Kert 4. Dance at the Gym, The - The Jets/The Sharks 5. Maria - Larry Kert 6. Tonight - Larry Kert/Carol Lawrence 7. America - Marilyn Cooper/Chita Rivera/Shark Girls 8. Cool - Mickey Calin/The Jets 9. One Hand, One Heart - Larry Kert/Carol Lawrence 10. Tonight - The Jets/The Sharks/Chita Rivera/Larry Kert/Mickey Calin/Carol Lawrence 11. Rumble, The - The Orchestra/The Jets/The Sharks 12. I Feel Pretty - Carol Lawrence/Marilyn Cooper/Reri Grist/Carmen Gutierrez/Elizabeth Taylor 13. Somewhere (Ballet) - Larry Kert/Reri Grist/Carol Lawrence 14. Gee, Officer Krupke! - Eddie Roll/Grover Dale/Hank Brunjes/Tony Mordente/David Winters/The Jets 15. A Boy Like That / I Have A Love - Chita Rivera/Carol Lawrence 16. Finale - Ensemble 17. Prologue (Allegro Moderato) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 18. Somewhere (Adagio) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 19. Scherzo (Vivace E Leggiero) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 20. Mambo (Meno Pesto) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 21. Cha-Cha (Andantino con Grazia) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 22. Meeting Scene (Meno Mosso) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 23. Cool Fugue (Allegretto) - Leornard Berstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 24. Rumble (Molto Allegro) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track) 25. Finale (Adagio) - Leonard Bernstein/New York Philharmonic (bonus track)
Album Notes Music composed by Leonard Bernstein. Lyrics written by Stephen Sondheim. Principal cast: Carol Lawrence (Maria); Larry Kert (Tony); Chita Rivera (Anita); Mickey Calin (Riff); Ken Le Roy (Bernardo). Original cast recorded at Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, New York on September 29, 1957. Includes liner notes by Martin Charnin and Nicholas Deutsch. All tracks have been digitally remastered. This is part of Columbia Records' Columbia Broadway Masterworks series. Record buyers who had not seen the show that opened on Broadway in 1957, could hardly believe their ears when this dramatic, early stereo album reached the stores soon afterwards. Classical composer Leonard Bernstein and newcomer Stephen Sondheim's spellbinding score combined exquisite ballads such as "Maria" and "Tonight" with streetwise numbers such as "Gee, Officer Krupke" and the exhilarating "America." Carol Lawrence, Larry Kert and Chita Rivera led the superb young cast, and the album stayed for 120 weeks in the US chart but faired poorly on its UK release. In 1991 it was inducted into the NARAS Hall of Fame. | Find errors in the product description? Submit a catalog update request now. | ||||||||||||
Review created: 08/14/04 by: alexdg1 -- a member of Epinions Pros: Everything. Cons: None I was born six years after West Side Story premiered on Broadway, and I have only seen the movie version, so for me this CD is the next best thing to building a time machine to see the original stage production of the Jerome Robbins/Leonard Bernstein/Stephen Sondheim modern take on Romeo and Juliet. Set in mid-20th Century New York City's West Side, Arthur Laurents' book tells the story of two "starcross'd lovers" -- the "American" Tony, a former member of a street gang called the Jets, and Maria, a Puerto Rican immigrant and younger sister of Bernardo, the leader of the Sharks, who are the Jets' hated rivals. Tony and Maria's budding love is contrasted with the unremmitting blood feud between the two gangs. While an original cast recording is no substitute for having seen West Side Story on the New York stage, hearing the cast (which included Larry Kert, Chita Rivera, and Carol Lawrence) gives 21st Century listeners an aural glimpse into the brilliance of composer Bernstein and lyricist Sondheim's musical constructs. While I love the "standards" associated with West Side Story ("Tonight," "Maria," "Somewhere"), several other songs are outstanding. First, there's "Something's Coming," which reflects Tony's optimistic outlook as he looks to the future rather than to his past as a member of the Jets. Then there's the complicated quintet "Tonight" expresses the conflicting dreams and desires of the major characters and mixes the romantic aspects of the two pairs of lovers (Tony and Maria; Anita and Bernardo) as well as the hostility between the "American" Jets and the Puerto Rican Sharks. My favorite song, "Gee Officer Krupke!", is a sardonic ode to the cluelessness of adults as seen through the cynical eyes of teenage gang members. I remember this song vividly because when I was a member of the glee club at South Miami High, Gee Officer Krupke was in our repertoire for the first concert I performed in. Its wry humor never failed to make us laugh while we were learning it, and afterwards I wanted to hear the entire playlist from West Side Story. Thus it came to pass that I bought my first copy of West Side Story - Original Broadway Cast Recording on a vinyl LP some time during my sophomore year at South Miami High, and I remember listening to the Bernstein/Sondheim songs as I did homework or thought about a pretty girl I had a crush on or typed drafts of stories for the school paper. I practically wore out that album before I graduated from high school, and for a long time before I bought my first Magnavox CD/cassette player/AM-FM radio, the only recording I owned of West Side Story's music was the much inferior motion picture soundtrack, which covered most of the same ground as the Broadway cast recording but had a few songs with "cleaned up" lyrics. Fortunately, Columbia, now a label within the Sony Music aegis, reissued the Broadway cast album on compact disc, digitally mastering the original analog recording in a very nice transfer. Album producer Goddard Lieberson also made sure the original LP's liner notes, which contain both a short history of the West Side Story stage production from its first run (Sept. 26, 1957 through June 27, 1959) to its national tour and second run on Broadway (April - December 1960) and various major revivals up to 1968. The liner notes also include the synopsis by George Dale and commentary on the world-wide success of the stage production and the Academy Award-winning movie version released in 1962; directed by Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise (Star Trek: The Motion Picture), West Side Story won 10 Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Supporting Actress. Key Tracks: Top 10 Songs from West Side Story (Track Number, Song Title) 1. Prologue & Jet Song 2. Something's Coming 4. Maria 5. Tonight (Duet) 6. America 7. Cool 8. One Hand, One Heart 9. Tonight (Quintet) 11. I Feel Pretty 13. Gee, Officer Krupke! West Side Story remains a classic of American musical theater not only because the story of love in the middle of strife is so powerful, but because Leonard Bernstein's music and Stephen Sondheim's lyrics still have the ability to move listeners with their evocative melodies and still-relevant comments of the effects of prejudice, the harsh realities of urban life in the "land of opportunity," and the reservoirs of hope and love that reside in the human heart. Review ID: 10000000000237556 Epinions.com ratings are not included in the item's average rating. Links in this review may have been removed. |
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