CD Review- Sweeney Todd, 2005 revival album
Rifty, on host 66.32.150.149
Sunday, February 5, 2006, at 23:51:44
I like Michael Cerveris. Did a good job as John Wilkes Booth in Assassins, and he did a decent job here as well, except that he can't seem to pick an accent and stick with it. Len Cariou, who played the original Todd (and probably the better of the two- I'm not gonna comment on George Hearn, cause I haven't heard him) stuck with a nonBritish accent, which is fine with me. His gravelly bass was enough to pull it off. Cerveris seems to switch from British to American, to southern American (his Booth voice) through the course of the album.
Patti Lupone is not any worse than Angela Lansbury as Mrs Lovett, but she is a very different Mrs Lovett. Lansbury was a playful kind. Lupone is definitely more seductive and sensual. Course, to be fair, she's got that voice that just lends itself so easily to be sensual and seductive. That being said, there are a few moments where she doesn't quite reach to Lansbury's freneticism.
All told, the cast in general just isn't as energetic as the original '79 cast. Alexander Gemigani as Beedle Bamford... completely devoid of emotion. I'm thinking specifically of the line "Ah sir, happy news indeed!" It's a line where the Beedle is (depending on your take) sucking up to Judge Turpin, or just being happy, but Gemigani completely monotones it. I don't understand why. If it's a choice it makes no sense, and if it's because he's disgruntled about something (theory on this later), GET OVER IT. You're getting paid to act. You did so WELL in Assassins, just keep it up, dude.
The rest of the cast, as I said, seems less energetic. I don't know if they had to do a lot of takes of the tracks, or if it had something to do with the fact that they were also the musicians of the show.
While we're on THAT subject, there's something to be said about splitting the cast between being onstage, and doing the music. The orchestrations, while mostly faithful to the score, were very different. Where the original was a full sweeping panorama of music, this is a barebones, let's-get-just-the-instruments-we- need kind of playing. It didn't seem as rich and full as the original.
And yes, I know it's not fair to compare the two recordings, but you know what? Life is full of unfairness. The only thing you can do is get used to it, so for once, I'm going to be unfair.
All that being said, however, the lyrics are much more easy to understand in this recording. Possibly because of better recording technology (26 years of technological advances will do that, I guess), but also because the voices are crisper. Ben Magnuson and Lauren Molina, doing my favorite part of the show The "Kiss Me" sequence, are actually UNDERSTANDABLE. For the first time, I know what they're saying, even when the Judge and Beedle join in at the reprise two tracks later.
Ben though, sounds more like he's old and fat then a young lean sailor. Lauren has a beautiful voice though.
And the Judge... oh so much better. Turpin in the original was old and raspy and gravelly. This time, he's clear and younger sounding, and oh so much better.
And I won't even go into the casting of a girl to play Signor Pirelli, which makes absolutely NO sense at all. I mean, yes, I know that girls can (sometimes) play guys better than guys do (two examples spring to mind immediately), but Pirelli is SUPPOSED to be a big guy. It's important that he be a big guy, cause, according to mrs Lovett, "what a nice plump frame whatshisname has...had...has..."
Anyway, moving on to the songs.
The first act is MOSTLY okay. No Place like London and Barber and His wife were combined into one track, which is fine with me. There's also more dialogue thrown in then in '79, which fleshes out a story that, honestly, didn't need to be fleshed out that much. At least in the soundtrack.
Anyway, the only really rocky parts were Pirelli's Miracle Elixir where they cut out the entire bit about Todd and Lovett taunting and exposing Toby. They cut out the best part- the transition from PME to The Contest- Toby going "Talk to him!" The Contest was cut extremely short, which is fine with me because
1. I don't like the Pirelli character that much and 2. I especially don't like Pirelli as a girl playing a guy.
That being said, however, they cut out the best part of the contest, as well- the toothpulling part of the contest- wherein one man volunteers for a toothpulling free without charge, and Pirelli, unable to find a second volunteer, and being faced with forefeiting the contest, grabs Toby, who strenuously objects that he doesn't have the slightest pain. Pirelli punches him hard in the mouth and says "You do now!"
Other than that, though, Kiss Me/Ladies in their Sensitivites rocks, except for the above mentioned part with the Beedle being monotonic.
Pretty Women is great. The difference between an old raspy judge and a younger clear judge is what makes the difference.
Epiphany is different, since Todd doesn't get really angry about anything until near the end of the song. The whole thing is supposed to be performed in an ecstasy of rage, in my opinion, which provides the catalyst for Todd going along with Lovett's plan so easily in...
A Little Priest. I would imagine this song has been done badly, but it's not here. Cerveris and Lupone are mre playful with each other then Lansbury and Cariou are, and it works a little better. Mostly what's lacking in this song is the orchestration, but I can overlook that. They did one of my favorite songs very well, and for that, I'm grateful.
The first act was mostly pretty good.
The second act though...
The second act should be wrapped in wax paper and sold $1.95/pound, cause it got BUTCHERED.
God, That's Good, the song that got me started on Sweeney Todd in the first place, because of the bit where Lovett and TOby and the customers are shooting back and forth, just before the first "God, that's good!"...
slashed. Gone. No more.
Johanna, Sweeney's Reprise is slower, and missing the door and chair sound effects, but I think it's more effective that way. without the effects I mean. It still could have been a little faster paced.
Not While I'm Around is much better in this recording than in the original. There's more song, and more dialogue, and it's really the last bright spot in the soundtrack, because after that...
The Wigmaker Sequence, in which Anthony learns how to rescue Johanna, and we learn why the Judge goes back to Todd's...
GONE.
Parlor Songs, the Beedle's big moment, where he really gets to have fun...
GONE. That's my personal theory on why Gemigani is so depressed everywhere else. He doesn't get his due. This is his song, his moment, and it was cut. That isn't nice.
Final Sequence... cut up. The whole first half plus a little bit more... GONE. But they leave the bit with the Judge, and the mad woman, and mrs lovett and Toby... and it is extended a little, but STILL.
So all told, it's a good soundtrack. I think that having the actors do the acting and the music was a mistake, and it cuts down on part of the beauty that is Sondheim's score, and the cuts they made on the soundtrack totally killed the second half, but all in all, it's Sweeney Todd, and that redeems it a little bit.
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