CD Shopper
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home > Music > Tick, Tick... Boom! (2001 Original Off-Broadway Cast)  
Categories
Music
DVD Movies
Video Games
Audio & Video
Books
Computers
Subcategories
General
By Decade
Anime & Video Game Soundtracks
Movie Scores
Movie Soundtracks
Star Trek
Star Wars
Television Soundtracks

Tick, Tick... Boom! (2001 Original Off-Broadway Cast)

Tick, Tick... Boom! (2001 Original Off-Broadway Cast)

zoom enlarge 
Artists: Jonathan Larson, Amy Spanger, Raul Esparza
Label: RCA Victor Broadway
Category: Music

Buy New: $17.98



New (26) Used (10) from $9.49

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 76 reviews
Sales Rank: 24594

Format: Cast Recording
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 63862
UPC: 090266386222
EAN: 0090266386222
ASIN: B00005NQK5

Release Date: September 11, 2001
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • 30/90
  • Green Green Dress
  • Johnny Can't Decide
  • Sunday
  • No More
  • Therapy
  • Real Life
  • Sugar
  • See Her Smile
  • Come To Your Senses
  • Why
  • Louder Than Words
  • Boho Days (demo tape)
  • 30/90 Playout

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Rent is usually treated as Jonathan Larson's one and only show, but the truth is that he had a career--albeit a hitless one--before that blockbuster. There was a musical titled JP Morgan Saves the Nation with lyrics by Jeffrey M. Jones and music by Larson. And there was Tick, Tick... Boom!, an autobiographical piece that Larson workshopped for a while before setting it aside and finishing Rent.

In 2001, Tick, Tick is getting a full off-Broadway production, and it's a rather endearing one. Lyrics have never been Larson's strong point, but he was a hell of a melodic composer--and the score here is even poppier than that of Rent (think Top 40 rather than Sondheim). It's hard to pick favorite songs: "Green Green Dress" is built on a rollicking piano boogie, for instance, and "Real Life" and "See Her Smile" are the kind of elegiac ballad that Larson would later perfect with "Seasons of Love." Luckily, this show has a lot more to offer than mere youthful musings. --Elisabeth Vincentelli


Customer Reviews:   Read 71 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Great soundtrack   September 19, 2008
I'd never heard of Tick Tick Boom until XM radio played a few tracks. This is already one of my favorites. If you enjoyed Rent, you'll love this as well.


4 out of 5 stars Precursor To "Rent"   January 12, 2008
Though most people only know Jonathan Larson for his spectacular Tony & Pulitizer-winning "Rent", his lesser-known effort, "tick, tick...Boom" displays Larson's amazing & evolving talent. Like "Rent", "Boom" is personal - though the score is not nearly as strong.

This 2001 Off-Broadway production (almost five years after Mr. Larson's death), starring Raul Esparza ("Company", "Taboo", "Rocky Horror") & Amy Spanger ("Kiss Me Kate", "The Wedding Singer"), sounds terrific and has several highlights:

30/90
Johnny Can't Decide
Why
Louder Than Words



5 out of 5 stars A Vocally Dazzling Esparza Rides High on an Exuberant Pre-"Rent" Larson Score   June 15, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Perhaps it's a coincidence that the immensely talented Raul Esparza plays a character dreading his 30th birthday in this 2001 recording of the hit off-Broadway show by the late Jonathan Larson, while five years later, he would play the elliptical Bobby dreading his 35th birthday in the enthralling 2006 Broadway revival of Stephen Sondheim and George Furth's Company. In both performances, Esparza shows a true affinity for capturing the angst of men undergoing transitional points in their lives which render them emotionally paralyzed. At first glance, Sondheim and Larson would not seem like kindred spirits, but both share a gift for sophisticated lyrics in an unmistakable musical style defined by their oeuvres. Larson even pays tribute to Sondheim in the story's climax and with the sardonic, work-is-hell "Sunday", a take-off of the song with the same name in Sunday in the Park with George.

However, it is the familiar Larson sound of Rent that is heard most in this score - driving, rock-out rhythms with unavoidable pop hooks and yearning, piano-driven ballads. Even the opener, "30/90", is a virtual sound-alike of the bigger show's title tune. If the songs are not quite as polished or even memorable as those in Rent, they feel more personal because the autobiographical story is far more intimate in scale. Set in 1990 in the same SoHo neighborhood as Rent, it's a simple three-character piece about Jon, an aspiring composer who considers giving up his dreams on the verge of his 30th birthday. With charismatic fire, Esparza is equally adept using his beautifully expressive voice in a rock milieu as in a Sondheim character study. He brings energetic brio to finger-snapping rockers like the Twinkie-induced "Sugar" and especially shines on the ballads, "See Her Smile" and the revelatory "Why".

With a slightly pinched voice that reminds me a bit of the Bangles' Susanna Hoffs, Amy Spanger as girlfriend Susan duets nicely with Esparza on the touching "Johnny Can't Decide", the rocking "Green Green Dress", and the comical self-help wordplay of "Therapy". Her shining solo moment comes with the knockout ballad, "Come to Your Senses". As Jon's embattled pal Michael, Jerry Dixon provides powerful vocals, bringing particular warmth to "Real Life" and grit to the fed-up rave "No More". The trio closes the show powerfully with the anthem-like "Louder Than Words". The overall score is a bit derivative and a tad too earnest, but the youthful zest of the cast and Larson's pop craftsmanship more than compensate. Two bonus tracks are offered at the end - an instrumental replay of the opener, "30/90 Playout" and a rare recording of Larson singing "Boho Days" a capella with propulsive hand claps.



5 out of 5 stars Great tunes - great lyrics - great harmonies   November 4, 2006
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

If you are a fan of the late great Mr. Larson you will love this music. Okay, I have seen the play a couple of times so I know what happens between the songs but this, his autobiography, really moved me. Even my kids like the Green Dress Song.

I hope you like it... The theme is "Actions Speak Louder Than Words" rings true today as the day he wrote it.

John we miss you.



5 out of 5 stars Love the Music   August 22, 2006
I saw this play a few weeks ago, and really enjoyed the music, so I got the CD. The voices, and lyrics are amazing! However, as I often find with CDs of musicals, there wasn't always the right feeling in the voice, particularly in "Therapy" where couple ought to be angry at each other, and it seems more cute on the CD.

Copyright 2006 - CD Shopper
Bestsellers
Twilight Soundtrack
High School Musical 3: Senior Year
Hit Man: David Foster And Friends
Mamma Mia!
High School Musical 3: Senior Year Premiere Edition [CD+DVD]
Camp Rock
Twilight: The Score
Wicked (2003 Original Broadway Cast)
Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
Disney's Karaoke Series: High School Musical
New Releases
Twilight Soundtrack
High School Musical 3: Senior Year
Hit Man: David Foster And Friends
High School Musical 3: Senior Year Premiere Edition [CD+DVD]
Twilight: The Score
Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
Wicked: 5th Anniversary Special Edition
Madagascar 2: Escape 2 Africa
Nightmare Revisited
Indiana Jones: The Soundtracks Collection