RIP Stephen Sondheim

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During my walk along La Cienega the other day.

FEkxV4LUYAAL4zS
 
There were some fantastic performances in the Zoom/Covid era - this is top 10.

 
Judy Collins’ version from around 1977 gets me every damn time. Whenever I hear that oboe (or is it an English horn?) open the song (invariably on American Top 40, like two weeks ago) it gets a little dusty in the car.

Same here.

One of the better things I’ve read on the Internet is this one YouTube commenter on the video of Collins’ version. The commenter talks about the night he graduated from high school after an unhappy time and how the song came in and he realized that he could have a fresh start in life.
 
Same here.

One of the better things I’ve read on the Internet is this one YouTube commenter on the video of Collins’ version. The commenter talks about the night he graduated from high school after an unhappy time and how the song came in and he realized that he could have a fresh start in life.
You know it doesn't cost extra here
to post what you're talking about, right?

I read it. It's pretty good. If only there were a way
to copy it and maybe, like, share it somewhere else?

This Internet stuff is hard! :cool:
 
Judy Collins’ version from around 1977 gets me every damn time. Whenever I hear that oboe (or is it an English horn?) open the song (invariably on American Top 40, like two weeks ago) it gets a little dusty in the car.




I thought bassoon but it looks like an oboe
 
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My first Sondheim musicals were in high school, playing in the pit for "A Little Night Music" and "West Side Story" (okay, lyrics only but GREAT lyrics). Then I went off to university and became a singer. Home from school in 1986 and staying at my best friend's house, she went to take a nap and I started flipping channels and hit PBS just as they began showing the original Broadway production of "Sunday in the Park with George". My friend woke from her nap to find me a weeping mess on her couch.

It remains my all-time favourite Sondheim show and "Sunday" always makes me cry. This tribute dissolved me.

https://www.broadwayworld.com/video...mes-Square-to-Honor-Stephen-Sondheim-20211128
 
The Fresh Air three day tribute of Sondheim is well worth a listen. Always respected his work, but hearing him talk about the struggle between being technically strong, and true to the story at the same time was incredibly illuminating. I figured most composers crank out some songs and make the book writer work around the lyrics for the set-ups and the segues - but hearing Sondheim talk about how he crafted Send In the Clowns for non-singer Glynnis Johns is tremendous. You could argue that the strength of the song is that it is built so well, that there is no way it can be sung in anyway other than as a lament - rather than an ode type show-stopper.
 


I thought bassoon but it looks like an oboe


English horn. Bassoon is much larger and couldn't carry that solo as well as the English horn. In contrast, it's too large to be an oboe, which looks similar to a clarinet in length (sub in double-reed for the clarinet's single reed and the slighter rounder bell on the other end).
 
I've been fortunate to see my daughter play Tobias in Sweeney Todd twice, once with a small professional company that performed the show in an actual pie shop. (The restaurant was two levels with a spiral staircase that had a platform, and they managed to fit about 60 seats for an audience. It was so fun.)

Anyway, the company spent a full month of rehearsal just on the music and harmonies before any blocking. It's probably the hardest she was ever pushed at the time musically.

She never complained once. That's the power. Even when it was work - hard, long, grueling work, and even more of it at home - the material was so good it never, ever felt like it to her.
 

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