CD Shopper
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home > Music > General > Anything Goes (1988 Studio Cast) - Cole Porter  
Categories
Music
DVD Movies
Video Games
Audio & Video
Books
Computers

Anything Goes (1988 Studio Cast) - Cole Porter

Anything Goes (1988 Studio Cast) - Cole Porter

zoom enlarge 
Artists: Cole Porter, Kim Criswell, Bruce Hubbard, Frederica Von Stade, John Mcglinn, London Symphony Orchestra
Label: EMI Classics
Category: Music

List Price: $16.98
Buy New: $9.97
You Save: $7.01 (41%)



New (29) Used (22) Collectible (1) from $2.99

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 62592

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

MPN: 49848
UPC: 077774984829
EAN: 0077774984829
ASIN: B000002RRA

Release Date: May 8, 1990
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Overture
  • I Get A Kick Out Of You
  • Bon Voyage
  • All Through The Night
  • There'll Always Be A Lady Fair
  • Where Are The Men?
  • You're The Top
  • Encore: You're The Top
  • Reprise: There'll Always Be A Lady Fair
  • Anything Goes
  • Finale Act One
  • Entr'Acte
  • Public Enemy Number One
  • What A Joy To Be Young
  • Blow, Gabriel, Blow
  • Be Like The Bluebird
  • Buddie, Beware
  • The Gypsy In Me
  • Finale Ultimo
  • There's No Cure Like Travel
  • Kate The Great
  • Waltz Down The Aisle

Similar Items:

  • Anything Goes - The New Broadway Cast Recording
  • Anything Goes
  • Anything Goes (1962 Off-Broadway Cast)
  • Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific (The New Broadway Cast)
  • Anything Goes

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Along with Kiss Me, Kate, 1934's Anything Goes is usually thought to be Cole Porter's finest show. Even without a young belter named Ethel Merman as the lead, the show's parade of hits ("I Get a Kick Out of You," "All Through the Night," "You're the Top," and "Blow, Gabriel, Blow") would have secured it a place in Broadway's pantheon. This recording is the first one to use the original 1934 arrangements, painstakingly reconstructed with the help of one of the original arrangers, Hans Spialek, and it also includes three songs cut from the original production. And the excellent cast does the London Symphony Orchestra and conductor John McGlinn proud: Kim Craswell is her usual powerhouse as Reno Sweeney (if only a little brittle around the edges sometimes), while mezzo Frederica von Stade smoothly adapts to musical theater as Hope Harcourt. All musical-theater lovers should have Anything Goes in their collection, and this recording is quite a worthy one. --Elisabeth Vincentelli


Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars The Original, but not the Better   January 30, 2007
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

This CD is quite a classic, as it is Anything Goes, but in as close to its original form as possible. The other recordings of Anything Goes have been altered significantly with dropped and added songs. This CD also is very much in the classical musical theater style. This seems to be an ensemble piece, with big chorus numbers mixed in equally with love duets, and the occasional ballad. After listening to a few tracks, you will surely have a tune stuck in your head, but the nice thing is none of these are annoying tunes. The singers (save one) are great; the lyrics are decent, although sometimes predictable, and the orchestration is out in full grandeur. I would suggest this for collectors, older listeners, or listeners of the older musicals. This is not one for the newer listeners who are captivated with the likes of Wicked and Tarzan. For the newer listeners I would suggest getting the 1962 Off-Broadway Cast, it has a much fresher feel to it, and I prefer it to this one. Favorite Song: "Anything Goes"


5 out of 5 stars Anything Goes - Cole Porter   March 18, 2006
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'm too young to have heard this music when it was originally released, but heard some of the songs on the radio as part of a Cole Porter feature and liked them. I looked up the details on the BBC website and tried to find the same recording on-line. The only way I could get it was ordering from Amazon America, which I did. No problems - delivery within 2 weeks and (including postage) same cost as a full price CD in UK.

If you know any of these songs and want to hear them recorded with original orchestration, without anything added or taken away, and sung by very good singers, then this will fit the bill.

Orchestration is very good, nothing too lush or fancy, it just fits the words perfectly. And beautifully recorded.

The singers are all very good except for Jack Gilford who I personally thought was awful - but he only features once. Kim Criswell is exceptional.

With the CD comes a very informative booklet, giving full text of the lyrics, background to how the musical came to be written, and an explanation of the context of the topics covered by the songs.

I'm very glad I went to the trouble of getting this CD. If you want to hear Cole Porter's musical as it sounded originally, then get this!



5 out of 5 stars An excellent additionto the Cole Porter fan's collection.   September 22, 2005
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

If you like Cole Porter and/or musical comedies, don't miss this item. The performances are outstanding. The entire production is faithful to the original production. Also included is a very thorough booklet, which even has a glossary explaining Porter's allusions in his lyrics.


4 out of 5 stars A PLEASANT SURPRISE . . .   August 7, 2005
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

My introduction to ANYTHING GOES was the 1962 revival on LP. (Remember LPs? Remember when vinyl meant music and not imitation leather?) With it I became an Eileen Rodgers fan and remain so to this day. (Would someone please re-issue the original Broadway cast recording of TENDERLOIN so Broadway fans may hear Ms. Rodgers belt "Little Old New York" as only she can? I was fortunate to purchase the Angel Broadway CD before Capitol dropped it, along with many other fine cast recording. Shame!!!) Anyway, I like this version and highly recommend it, especially for its restored original orchestrations and for the excellence of its three leads. Yes, the Ambrosian Singers are too well trained and "proper" to sing "Broadway" and the bits of dialogue reveal how the "book" played second fiddle to the music in those days. Thankfully, this would change with SHOW BOAT, and John McGlinn's EMI recording of the complete score with dialoge - although not my favorite - is an invaluable document and needs to be in any serious collection of Broadway show recordings.

I truly appreciate the authenticity of this (ANYTHING GOES) project. I only wish McGlinn and company had not approached the show with kid gloves, because it lacks the energy and immediacy of a good Broadway cast recording. There were times, when listening, I felt as I often do in a museum. The piece of art is a classic and much to be admired, but don't get too close. And you mustn't touch! Nevertheless, I highly recommend this recording. Kim Criswell deserves to be on your shelf along with Eileen Rodgers and Patti LuPone.



5 out of 5 stars As close to the original 1934 performance as we'll ever get!   October 23, 2004
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Of the many ANYTHING GOES recordings, this is the ONLY one to recreate the score as it was heard on opening night in 1934.

The later stage revivals (1962 and 1987) dropped some of the original songs and added other Cole Porter standards. While these versions play well on stage, there is something to be siad for hearing the original text and orchestrations. While no one can replace Ethel Merman's original star performance, it was not preserved because "original cast" albums were not being done in 1934. She did record some of the songs over the years but never with the original orchestrations. (Just think if EMI had made this set in the 1960s and brought Merman into the studio to record her interpretations! What a missed opportunity.) That said, Kim Criswell brings the requesite belt to Reno Sweeney's songs. Cris Groenendaal brings a pleasant light tenor to Billy Crocker's songs, and Frederica Von Stade (one of the few opera singers whose voice seems well suited to american musical theatre repretoire) is well suited to Hope's short musical scenes. As an ingenue, she doesn't get to sing all that much!

Not all is perfect. Jack Gilford was too old and frail having little voice left for Moonface Martin's number. And the Ambrosian singers sing correctly without having the proper "broadway" sound. Nevertheless, John McClinn conducts with precision, and the thick booklet is full of fascinating facts about the show, a detailed synopsis, all the lyrics and an amusing glossery explaing some of the obscure references in Porter's original lyrics.



Copyright 2006 - CD Shopper