The Cradle Will Rock: Original 1985 Cast Recording (+ Bonus CD) [Cast Recording]

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Marc Blitzstein's The Cradle Will Rock is now remembered mainly for its dramatic opening night, immortalized in Tim Robbins's film of the same name. (Circumventing a ban on the show, director Orson Welles led the cast into an impromptu performance, with Blitzstein himself at the piano.) But this essential recording, only the second of Cradle in its entirety (along with the 1994 Los Angeles cast recording), reminds us that Blitzstein had written a grand, passionate show, one that brilliantly wove musical and spoken narratives into vignettes that formed a vibrant attack on capitalist greed and exploitation. This isn't your traditional escapist fare, but the story is truly gripping and still resonates today. Patti LuPone's heartwrenching interpretation of "The Nickel Under Your Foot" easily ranks among her finest moments. --Elisabeth Vincentelli

The Cradle Will Rock: Original 1985 Cast Recording (+ Bonus CD), Music, Marc Blitzstein, Cast Recordings, Pop, Showtunes / B'way, Soundtrack
The Cradle Will Rock: Original 1985 Cast Recording
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • History Professor on Blitzstein and the Rise of Populous infused Music
  • The left wing "Oklahoma"
  • Outdated and Overrated
  • More "Cradle" than you think
  • Best recording of this work to date, better than the film
The Cradle Will Rock: Original 1985 Cast Recording
Marc Blitzstein
Manufacturer: Jay Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Musicals | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
Traditional Vocal PopTraditional Vocal Pop | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Soundtracks | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Cradle Will Rock
  2. Cradle Will Rock: Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack
  3. Cradle Will Rock: The Movie and the Moment (Newmarket Press Pictorial Movie Book)
  4. A Little Night Music (1973 Original Broadway Cast)
  5. Marc Blitzstein: Musical Theatre Premières

ASIN: B00000IXJH
Release Date: 1999-05-04

Tracks:

  1. Introduction - John Houseman

Tracks:

  1. Moll's Song (Scene One)
  2. Moll And Gent
  3. I'll Show You Guys
  4. Richard Speaking
  5. Come To The Rescue (Scene Two)
  6. Solicitin'
  7. Hey Virgil
  8. Oh What A Filthy Night Court
  9. Hard Times -- The Sermon (Scene Three)
  10. Order In The Court Room
  11. Croon Spoon (Scene Four)
  12. Do We Disturb?
  13. The Freedom Of The Press
  14. Let's Do Something
  15. Honolulu
  16. Order In The Court Room (Scene Five)
  17. Drugstore
  18. Summer Weather
  19. Dialogue
  20. Love Duet (Gus And Sadie)
  21. Don't Let Me Keep You (Scene Six)
  22. Ask Us Again
  23. Art For Art's Sake
  24. The Nickel Under Your Foot (Scene Seven)
  25. Which Of You Guys?
  26. The Cradle Will Rock
  27. The Cradle Will Rock (Speech)
  28. Order In The Courtroom
  29. Faculty Room (Scene Eight)
  30. It's Not Going To Hurt (Scene Nine)
  31. Ella's Entrance
  32. Joe Worker
  33. Final Scene (Scene Ten)

Amazon.com

Marc Blitzstein's The Cradle Will Rock is now remembered mainly for its dramatic opening night, immortalized in Tim Robbins's film of the same name. (Circumventing a ban on the show, director Orson Welles led the cast into an impromptu performance, with Blitzstein himself at the piano.) But this essential recording, only the second of Cradle in its entirety (along with the 1994 Los Angeles cast recording), reminds us that Blitzstein had written a grand, passionate show, one that brilliantly wove musical and spoken narratives into vignettes that formed a vibrant attack on capitalist greed and exploitation. This isn't your traditional escapist fare, but the story is truly gripping and still resonates today. Patti LuPone's heartwrenching interpretation of "The Nickel Under Your Foot" easily ranks among her finest moments. --Elisabeth Vincentelli

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars History Professor on Blitzstein and the Rise of Populous infused Music.......2007-03-29

I absolutely recommend this beautifully recorded, and championed piece of music. This said I heartily sway anyone who is contemplating Blitzstein to also consider Bertholt Brecht, composer, songwriter, and storyteller behind THE THREE PENNY OPERA. It is important to state that Brecht's piece is easily considered one of the first pieces of Populous inspired music, and this rise of a proletariat form of entertainment inspired Blitzstein.

This said, if you are into catch numbers, cutsie stories, and any rubbish that is considered "popular" musical theatre, then I strongly recommend you run away quickly, and take "dramadude's" advise and watch the painfully sexist and racially motivate THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE, or say, any of a dozen Hollywood film recently converted into Broadway. I believe I even saw a billboard in Boston recently that advertised FOOTLOOSE ON ICE at the Schubert, so that might be of interest.

However, if you like RENT, URINETOWN, LES MISERABLES, Sondheim or any number of names dropped in RENT's own anthem LA VIE BOHEME, then you will enjoy THE CRADLE WILL ROCK.

So here's the liner note: Imagine, say, if every news pundit, or media junky who supported the president were all thrown into the slammer, and forced to see the people the assail, or in our case ignore, face to face. In the case of THE CRADLE WILL ROCK that is the situation. A handful of corporate lackeys (ie. artists, ministers, journalists, doctors, strikejumpers) are force into jail. They trust their boss, Mister Mister, will release them. He never comes.

They judge the other inmates. One is a whore, so they treat her and her cellmates as whores. By the end, however, you will discover, as do the characters, that because of their association with Mister Mister they are the whores.

In the end at a time of post Wilson WWI surveilance, the birth of the FBI, and the early attempts by Conservatives to overturn the changes of the Progressive era, Blitzstein, sounding an awful lot like HENRY DAVID THOREAU, teaches that if our leaders are wrong then we have a right to CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE. This musical, the first of its kind in American History, in its day was cause to take to the streets. It makes one question... what do motivations do we have to do the same?

So buy this, and while your at it... buy Brecht, then ask as you listen to them these questions: 1) why were they both banned at one point. 2) Why is CRADLE still impossible to buy a script for under $200.00 3) Why are American versions of both subsequently abridged.

(On a sidenote, Sondheim refers to CRADLE WILL ROCK as his impetus.)

5 out of 5 stars The left wing "Oklahoma".......2006-08-15

"The Cradle Will Rock" has actually, as noted below, been rediscovered many, many times. Anti-union tactics may have become more sophisticated than just blowing someone up, but the theme is if anything more jermaine today than it was in the late 30s (or as much so). If Blitzstein wrote it today, he would reference out-sourcing and computer vote theft. This was the real precusor of "Rent" and "Urinetown". I've heard the full orchestra score, which is very good given Blitzstein was a fully trained classical composer (unusual for a Broadway composer, Sondheim for instance doesn't orchestrate his own scores) but the piano score used here is perhaps slightly preferable given the story, a plainess suits it (the full orchestra score should be recorded, of course). Even with Brecht's invaluable advice inspiring the creation of the show, the book is lumpy - librettos were Blitzstein's Achilles heel, over and over. But Lupone is a wonderful Moll, the rest of the cast are very effective actors singing and it's very simply and tautly directed. It's fun to hear the original Welles recordings with Blitzstein but for the best recording this is it. That first CD with Houseman's memories is nice, but they might have added Blitzstein's recording of his version of the opening night, given the available space.

In opposition to the reviewer suggesting this should be left out of any Broadway collection, it is a seminal work that is less dated than "Oklahoma" if deliberately less melodic. It belongs in every collection, and if it were it wouldn't have to be rediscovered every five to ten years.

1 out of 5 stars Outdated and Overrated.......2004-05-17

I'm really not a hard guy to please when it comes to show music. Of the dozens of musical theatre CDs I own, there are maybe one or two that I regret buying. Unfortunately, "The Cradle Will Rock" is one of them.

Where to begin with the problems of this show? First off, the score is maddeningly unmelodic. Not one of the songs manages to stay with you, a must for any good theatre score. They simply aren't hummable or memorable, and on top of that they are vocally bland. The majority of songs don't even span an octave, and there is absolutely no chance for some of the very talented singers to strut their stuff. When a performer like Patti LuPone can't manage to make her songs anything more than vaguely pleasant, you know there's a problem.

Furthermore, the show itself is a creaky reminder of what happens when musical theatre tries to be too political. Now, I'm all for musicals that say something, that examine society or humanity and point out flaws or trends. But above all, character should be paramount, for that is the element which takes a show written for a specific moment in history and makes it speak to all time. This is where "Cradle" falls flat. As the generic names of leads like Larry Foreman and Mr. Mister indicate, the characters are all two-dimensional representations of some aspect of 1930s society. They have none of the emotional depth or complexity which would keep them relevant to today's audiences, and the whole message of unionization is woefully outdated in today's times.

In short, this musical just isn't in any way, shape, or form remotely appealing. Bland music, boring characters, and a preachy, outdated message about unionization put this musical among the ranks of shows best left in the past.

5 out of 5 stars More "Cradle" than you think.......2004-01-22

There have been many successful revivals of this work than many think. Bernstein did it with piano in the late forties, then conducted the first production with Blitzstein's full pit later. Another recorded production (1964: MGM Records) most may have forgotten because it is out of print was one directed by Howard DaSilva (the original Larry Foreman) done with piano with none other than Jerry Orbach as Larry: who better to play Larry Foreman than Lenny Brisco. The great Micki Grant, Joe Bova, and Laurie Peters are also in it. Alas, hard to find but this is NOT a newly re-discovered work by any stretch.

4 out of 5 stars Best recording of this work to date, better than the film.......2000-12-12

This excellent recording is a document of the 1985 Acting Company production that was directed by John Houseman, who provides a 12-minute spoken introduction to the recording on a separate CD. Houseman's introduction has much less interest on the second and later listening, and it seems to be a waste to leave that CD with only that short amount of recorded time. The second CD contains all the music of the play, some 79 minutes.

Patti Lupone is an intriguing casting choice for Moll, for Lupone has all the range and stamina and charisma necessary to carry a leading role. However, the role of Moll is a key minor character that Lupone reveals in this recording a full dimensionality that is not available in the other recordings of Cradle Will Rock: not just the tough cookie paradigm of the prostitute, but also the naïf in the midst of wolves, down on her luck.

And such a lot of wolves there are, fully revealed in this recording: Reverend Salvation's costume covers another form of prostitution; Cops stand everywhere with a palm ready for greasing; Editor Daily acts not only as a publisher but also as a pimp and procurer. The performances make the characters full of life and their personalities more rounded than one would expect from their generic names, Dr. Specialist; Jr. Mister; and the rogue above all, Mr. Mister. It is easy to assume the entire script is included in the recording, as smooth editing has obliterated any breaks. One indication that cutting may have occurred is the late appearance of Larry Foreman, in Scene Seven, à la Waiting For Godot.

Miking of the cast is very satisfactory, especially in comparison to the recording of the original Broadway Cast. All vocal lines are distinct. As in the other recordings, a simple piano accompaniment is retained from the original performance, even though a careful listening reveals clearly that the original was scored for a small orchestra.

The performances are a good blend of musicality and character. The accompaniment shows Blitzstein's familiarity with classical music, Sprechstimme, the musical theatre of Weill/Brecht, and, of course, popular song. This recording strengthens the artistic concept that Blitzstein had developed, and it provides reason for our sense of loss with Blitzstein's relative absence from the concert stage and theatre revivals. Perhaps we will be always lucky to have other composers like Stephen Sondheim, who must have been familiar enough with "Art For Art's Sake" (Scene Six) to use it as an inspiration for "Putting It Together" of Sunday In the Park With George. Too bad that Andrew Lloyd Weber hasn't the same awareness of good precursors.

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