Bounce [Original Cast] Original Cast Recording

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CD

  • Release Date: 05/04/2004
  • Sales Rank: 81,227
  • Label: NONESUCH
  • UPC: 075597983029
 
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Editorial Reviews

Bounce, Stephen Sondheim's first new musical since 1994's award-winning Passion, is the always-adventurous composer's return to more accessible, traditional musical comedy. Closer in spirit here to Merrily We Roll Along than to Sweeney Todd, Sondheim turns this true-life tale of two very different brothers, Addison and Wilson Mizner -- whose sprawling entrepreneurial ambitions involve them in events ranging from the Alaskan gold rush of the 1890s to the Florida land boom of the 1920s -- into a metaphor for 20th-century American manifest destiny. To this end, he employs a wide variety of indigenous musical styles -- ragtime, bluegrass, Tin Pan Alley, Dixieland, among them -- to underscore the point. Character-driven and plot-specific, Bounce's two dozen songs benefit from Jonathan Tunick's beautiful and lush orchestrations, as well as the septuagenarian composer's seemingly inexhaustible supply of inventive melodies and peerless wordplay. The musical, which received its premiere in Washington, D.C., in 2003, is a stunning return to form for the maestro as well as a valedictory reunion, after more than two decades, with the legendary Harold Prince, director of Sondheim's greatest triumphs on Broadway (Company, Follies, A Little Night Music). A superb cast of Rialto veterans including Howard McGillin, Richard Kind, Michele Pawk, and 1950s MGM film goddess Jane Powell (as the brothers' favorite-playing mother), bring this entertaining and first-rate addition to the Sondheim canon to vibrant life. David Cohen, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

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A golden piece of Sondheim historyby scenic_topher

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October 27, 2008: It's been a rough road for this little show. The musical has been through a lot, and when it finally opens for previews on Oct. 28, 2008, it will be for the fourth time. Previously titled "Gold!," "Wise Guys," the production recorded here, "Bounce," and now as "Road Show," Sondheim has been tweaking this pet project for more than a decade, a show he says he's wanted to write since he was in his twenties. Through it all, from less-than-beaming critics' reviews, to lawsuits, to Sondheim's stubborn tenacity to rewrite again and again, we're left with this 'foot print' in musical history.
What's on this recording is a rare look into the evolution of a broadway show written by a truly great composer. Engaging in it's own right, knowing that there's another retooled version of the same show to come makes this one especially intriguing to hear. This score is a little more accessible than many of Sondheim's other scores. While many of his musicals are far less single-song based and difficult to remember as individual cues you might walk away humming, this show is full of catchy stand-alone tunes, a unique departure from much of his previous work.
Add to it a story that spans enormous leaps in time and location, following the Mizner brothers through their whole lifetimes, traveling from California to Alaska, Hawaii to Florida, even brief stints in Heaven, and it becomes apparent that this show was big undertaking even before it got onto Sondheim's page, let alone to the theatre.
I guess even the greats can find struggles in their work, but rarely do we have the privilege to witness the process, the growth of something that the public usually only sees in its final state. Don't believe that this isn't worth your attention just because it's only a part, an 'unfinished' part, of the road to a new musical. It's absolutely worth it. Consider it at least a really well fleshed-out behind-the-scenes document. And if you're a Sondheim fan, witnessing his creative progression makes it all the more valuable and enjoyable. Bumps in the road aren't usually this fruitful.