The Gospel at Colonus [Original Cast] Original Broadway Cast

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1988
  • Sales Rank: 22,219
  • Label: NONESUCH
  • UPC: 075597919127

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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The Gospel at Colonus [Original Cast]

1LISTENLive Where You Can 4:40
2LISTENFair Colonus 1:44
3LISTENStop Do Not Go On 4:19
4LISTENWho Is This Man 0:40
5LISTENHow Shall I See You Through My Tears 4:35
6LISTENA Voice Foretold 6:26
7LISTENNever Drive You Away 4:10
8LISTENNumberless Are the World's Wonders 4:42
9LISTENLift Me up (Like a Dove) 3:55
10LISTENSunlight of No Light 2:43
11LISTENEternal Sleep 3:32
12LISTENLift Him Up 7:34
13LISTENNow Let the Weeping Cease 3:22

Editorial Reviews

Playwright Lee Breuer and composer Bob Telson had an idea: Retell the story of Oedipus using a gospel choir and soloists as the storytellers. The result was The Gospel at Colonus, which had a very successful theatrical run and produced the extraordinarily beautiful song suite presented here. Telson made the inspired decision to allow much of the weight of the enterprise to be borne by the enormous talents of Clarence Fountain & the Five Blind Boys of Alabama and the J.D. Steele Singers, featuring the absolutely incredible voice of Jevetta Steele (who would have a bit of a hit with the title song from the film Calling You). Some of the songs are priceless: "Stop Do Not Go On," with its heartfelt vocal urgings from Sam Butler, is a showstopper of its own, but it's followed by "How Shall I See You Through My Tears," a devastating number with Steele singing in a voice possessed of positively unearthly beauty. Intriguingly, not only can Breuer's lyrics be read as either traditional gospel text or pertaining to the story of Oedipus, but they can also often be heard as love songs from the R&B tradition. There's not a weak song on the record. Telson, a one-time member of the Philip Glass Ensemble and an associate of numerous jazz musicians (Lenny Pickett and John Hagen are in the ensemble here, for instance), successfully sublimates these influences and manages to create a remarkably authentic pop-gospel hybrid by entrusting the interpretation of his pieces to the artists who deeply know the genre. When the entire cast converges for the penultimate "Lift Him Up," the effect is nothing short of electrifying. Highly recommended not only for fans of gospel music but also for anyone interested in the diverse directions of contemporary music in general. ~ Brian Olewnick, All Music Guide All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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Gospel at Colonus [Original Cast]by Anonymous

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March 18, 2003: I have also been in love with the soundtrack and the play since I first saw it on PBS. I had a it on VHS and have lost it! I found the CD last year and I play it constantly. If there is any way to get the VHS back into circulation I'm sure it would sell quickly. I know I want to get a copy for myself.

Gospel at Colonus [Original Cast]by Anonymous

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August 04, 2001: I saw this show five times in 1987 in Minneapolis; I have the music on cassette, vinyl (LP) and CD; I also have a cherished copy of the PBS broadcast. When it did a 10 year revival in 1997, I took 15 people to see it. Do I like it? I can't even begin to accurately describe what this show did for me. You will listen to the CD fifteen times and will only hear half of what the story is about. It's a wonderful adaptation of a Greek Tragedy, told in the setting of a Black Pentacostal church. The performances were transforming and transcending.