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The Boys From Syracuse (1997 Studio Cast)

The Boys From Syracuse (1997 Studio Cast)

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Artists: Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart, Debbie Gravitte, Rebecca Luker
Label: Drg
Category: Music

Buy New: $11.98



New (26) Used (9) Collectible (4) from $5.25

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 60912

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

MPN: 94767
UPC: 021471476729
EAN: 0021471476729
ASIN: B000000PL8

Release Date: September 16, 1997
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Overture
  • Prologue
  • I Had Twins
  • Dear Old Syracuse
  • What Can You Do With A Man?
  • Falling In Love With Love
  • The Shortest Day Of The Year
  • This Can't Be Love
  • Reprise: This Can't Be Love
  • Reprise: The Shortest Day of the Year
  • Finale Act I: Let Antipholus In
  • Ladies of the Evening
  • He and She
  • You Have Cast Your Shadow On The Sea
  • Come With Me
  • Big Brother
  • Twins Ballet
  • Sing For Your
  • Oh, Diogenes
  • Finale Act II: "This Can't Be Love"

Similar Items:

  • Pal Joey: 1995 Original New York Cast Recording
  • Babes In Arms (1999 City Center Encores! Cast)
  • On Your Toes (1983 Broadway Revival Cast)
  • Face the Music (2007 Encores! Cast Recording)
  • Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific (The New Broadway Cast)

Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars More Classic Rodgers & Hart   June 26, 2007
This is another show all music theatre lovers should know. This recording does it justice.


4 out of 5 stars Not Syracuse New York after all   March 6, 2006
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This famous American musical well deserves to be remounted commercially, though those familiar with Shakespeare (or the Australian musical The Venetian Twins) may find it strangely familiar. This is a terrific recreation of the style and performance of the original score and the series it is part of deserves support for giving exposure to some rarely staged shows. Not that its songs are not famous in their own right - but you do tend to hear them and think "so that's where that comes from". A must have if you are a serious music theatre fan.



4 out of 5 stars beautiful new recording of the Rodgers and Hart smash-hit!   October 28, 2003
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE is one of the more delighful offerings in the Rodgers and Hart canon. It features some of the most beloved songs ever written for the Broadway stage. This recording is from the acclaimed 1997 concert-reading from the Encores! series.

Rebecca Luker (THE SECRET GARDEN, THE MUSIC MAN), Davis Gaines (THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, SWEENEY TODD), Sarah Uriarte Berry, Julie Halston (GYPSY), Debbie Gravitte and Malcolm Gets, all superb Broadway talents, lead the strong cast.

The musical, based on Shakespeare's COMEDY OF ERRORS, originally opened on Broadway in 1938. This is the first time since then that the show has featured the original orchestrations, restored and played to perfection by the Coffee Club Orchestra, led by Rob Fisher.

Rebecca Luker dazzles and scintillates with "Falling in Love with Love"; Debbie Gravitte belts out "Oh, Diogenes" in her own grand style, whilst Davis Gaines and Sarah Uriarte Berry sing the ballad "This Can't Be Love" (later added to the film score of Rodgers and Hart's JUMBO). Luker, Gravitte and Berry also sing a dizzying rendition of "Sing For Your Supper", arguably one of the score's high-points.

This album is a must-own for fans of this gorgeous show and its candy-box score. Highly-recommended.


4 out of 5 stars A slightly dissenting opinion   June 10, 2002
 10 out of 13 found this review helpful

What is right about this album is almost enough to make me understand why everyone on this page so unreservedly raves about it. The performers are great, the women more so than the men, both seperately (Rebecca Luker in "Falling In Love WIth Love" and the reprise of "The Shortest Day of the Year," Sarah Uriate Berry in her duet and reprise of "This Can't Be Love," and Debbie Gravitte in "What Can You Do With a Man?" "He and She," and especially "Oh, Diogenes!") and together in the showstopping trio "Sing For YOur Supper". The completeness of the recording and the restored original orchestrations are a great bonus. And there is plenty of energy and fun to be found. But there isn't quite enough to disguise the fact that this score doesn't quite approach the greatness of the Rodgers and Hart scores for such shows as Pal Joey, On Your Toes, and Babes In Arms. Those shows had one great song after another, or at the very least great tunes supplemented by ones that weren't on their level but were perfectly pleasent and agreeable in their own right. This show's score has plenty of great songs, including the above mentioned as well as "Dear Old Syracuse," "You Have Cast YOur Shadow On the Sea," and the touching "Big Brother," but there are a few noticeable misses, made all the more dissapointing when one considers Rodgers and Hart's reputation and repertoire. The opening shows the pitfalls that can be encountered in the attempts to integrate a musical; is is dull exposition instead of a great song that also eases the audience into the story. "Ladies of the Evening" and "Come With Me" are one-joke songs, and Hart doesn't seem to try too hard to come up with enough of his trademark quick and clever rhymes to allow us to forgive that. And the Act I finale, "Let Antipholus In," must be extremely funny in the context of what's going on in the show (A synopsis in the liner notes would have been helpful) because just listening to the title being repeated over and over and over again drove me to distraction. It is great that Encores! is producing concert versions of vintage, rarely performed musicals such as these to allow their scores to be heard and appreciated by a new generation. Much of what is here makes for a great recording, but when one considers that we are dealing with Rodgers and Hart, the odd misfire in the score is enough to make for a less than completely wonderful experience.


5 out of 5 stars an absolute delight   April 16, 2002
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This is one of the best show recordings I've ever heard; marvelously performed and heavenly to the ear. I couldn't stop smiling, listening to it. There isn't now, nor was there ever, a song writing team that compares with Rodgers and Hart, and this recording is a perfect tribute. Wonderful.

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