new york subway
 

Are You A Fan Of Broadway Music? Try It! You’ll Love It!
By Timothy
With its feet firmly planted on the live stage, music is exciting, dynamic and enthralling. And you can find every style of music on the stage today.

The first show to truly launch the concept of musical theater was something called ‘The Black Crook’. This musical production was over five hours long and ran for 474 performances, starting on September 12, 1866 in New York City's Niblo's Gardens.

Though it wasn't a musical in the same sense as we know them today, it WAS the production that launched the idea of incorporating music into a show with plot and situation relevance.

Most of the musicals that followed during the 1800s and early 1900s were more in the genre of musical reviews with cabaret type staging and feel.

Musical selections followed one another with no real book or persistent story line.

Then came ‘Show Boat’ which opened on December, 12th, 1927, at the Ziegfeld Theater.

The music was integrated into the story, with the musical numbers scattered throughout, and it was designed to advance the plot and characters. The show and the lyrics by were based on an Edna Ferber novel.

The show ran 572 performances and was a groundbreaker at the Ziegfeld, where Flo Ziegfeld's previous

 

 

 
 
  Jewel: The Essential Live Songbook on Blu-ray Disc
Jewel: The Essential Live Songbook on Blu-ray DiscJewel: The Essential Live Songbook finds Jewel at her strongest -- performing folk songs, in sparingly instrumented arrangements. This two-disc Blu-ray Disc set comprises 52 tracks spread across three different live sets and is a must-have for any Jewel fan. ]]>
VUDU Unveils XL2 Set-Top Box: High Def Movies On Demand for the High-End Crowd
Vudu XL2The funky download-to-rent/own box goes legit with a brand-new high-end form factor available exclusively from a custom installer near you. ]]>
 
 
 

Click Here for tickets at TicketsNow

 
 
  shows had included lots of music, costumes and choreography but NO stories.

From then on, the stage was set!

In 1935, ‘Porgy and Bess’ opened at the Alvin Theater with music by George Gershwin, and songs like ‘Summertime’, and ‘It Ain’t Necessarily So’, breaking the color barrier for the musical stage.

The musical ‘Oklahoma’ was originally called ‘Away we Go’. It opened in 1943 at the St. James Theater (home of today’s hit musical, ‘The Producers’).

With music by Oscar Hammerstein II, who had also contributed to ‘Show Boat’, it became an instant classic that is still revived today in community and regional theaters all across the country

In 1950, ‘Guys and Dolls’ hit the stage for the first time. With music by Frank Loesser and songs like ‘Luck Be a Lady’ and ‘A Bushel and a Peck’, Guys and Dolls was sharp, and romantic. Everything a audience wanted in music and story!

Then in 1957, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim wrote the music and lyrics for ‘West Side Story’, ushering in the age of Sondheim, who would go on to become the best known composer of his time, writing shows like ‘Company’, ‘Marry Me a Little’, ‘Sweeney Todd’, ‘Assassins’, and ‘The Frogs’.

His music has been performed by cabaret performers everywhere and recorded by the likes of Barbra Streisand, Barbara Cook, Mandy Patinkin and many more.

With the advent of rock operas and contemporary musicals like ‘Hair’, ‘Cats’, and ‘Rent’, the music of changed yet again.

Today, Disney has brought many of its most famous animated films to Broadway: ‘Beauty and the Beast’, ‘The Lion King’ and others, and the Juke Box Musical craze has spawned shows like ‘Movin’ Out, the ‘Jersey Boys’, ‘Mama Mia’, and more.

Today’s music has something for every taste. Teenagers love ‘Wicked’, and romantic shows like ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ continue to sell out.

If you are not yet a fan of musicals, hop on a plane and take a week to see the best that has to offer. If you ARE a fan, take a look on your favorite CD websites to see a sampling of the newest musical show cast recordings.

From revivals of the haunting ‘Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris’, to new musicals by up and coming composer Adam Guettel (‘The Light in the Piazza’) today’s music reflects all tastes and all times.

Article Source: http://www.article-outlet.com/

 
   
 

And Remember...

There's No Business Like Show Business!

 

 
Copyright 2007 by www.butleyonbroadway.com All Rights Reserved Trinity Publishing

Trinity publishing is not associated in any way or form to any of the shows promoted on this website

|Threesome|PUA|Relaxation|Immigration Canada|Eye exercises|Internet Marketing|Accelerated Learning|