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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Quite an enjoyable CD
Being a fan of Mr. Gordon's, I couldn't wait until this CD came out. And I was not disappointed. The music is a cross between classical art songs and standard Broadway fare. Perhaps most enjoyable are the tracks sung by Audra McDonald, some of which were previously released on her first solo album, Way Back to Paradise, but which were supplimented with some additional...
Published on May 19, 2001 by Andee G

versus
5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An acquired taste.
Art songs are somewhat like opera in a sense. They are an acquired taste. Having an affinity for the work of Michael John LaChiusa, I was interested in hearing a cross-section of work by Ricky Ian Gordon. Three of the tracks here were orginally released on Audra McDonald's first solo outing, "Way Back to Paradise".

I'm fascinated by the process of poetry...

Published on April 25, 2001 by Eric L. Magnus


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Quite an enjoyable CD, May 19, 2001
This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
Being a fan of Mr. Gordon's, I couldn't wait until this CD came out. And I was not disappointed. The music is a cross between classical art songs and standard Broadway fare. Perhaps most enjoyable are the tracks sung by Audra McDonald, some of which were previously released on her first solo album, Way Back to Paradise, but which were supplimented with some additional tracks that really suit her dramatic voice and extensive range. Two other highlights include "Afternoon on a Hill", "Souvenir", and "Once I Was", which demostrate clever writing on the part of the composer, as well as true understanding of the texts on the part of the performers...I feel that Mr. Guettel performs well on this disc. It may appear that he does not have the vocal training that others do, however, his interpretive skills as well as his clear understanding of texts and emotions make his tracks poignant, and his voice is quite pleasant. My only complaint would be that Darius De Haas was included on the disc instead of Billy Porter, who I have seen performing these songs live, and quite well. Mr. De Haas is quite adequate, I simply prefer the power and exultation that Mr. Porter displays when he sings the compositions. Overall, however, this is a wonderful inclusion to anyone's collection, especially anyone who is a fan of anyone writing new, sophisticated theatre music.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gordon Fan, November 1, 2008
This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)


A heavenly recording

Talented singers interpret the songs of Ricky Ian Gordon

Audra McDonald (left) and Darius de Haas flank composer Ricky Ian Gordon. (by Alice Arnold)

by Greg Varner

Seven talented singers lend their voices to Bright Eyed Joy (Nonesuch), a superb collection of songs by Ricky Ian Gordon. The composer himself provided text for two of these pieces; the others are his settings of poems by Langston Hughes, Dorothy Parker, Edna St. Vincent Millay, W. S. Merwin, and James Agee.

Any gathering of singers that includes Audra McDonald, Dawn Upshaw, Darius de Haas, and Judy Blazer, among others, is something to celebrate; these are some of the most beautiful and distinctive voices you'll hear anywhere. And they are matched to the material with uncanny precision. Who else but Dawn Upshaw could sing Gordon's setting of Dorothy Parker's "The Red Dress" so perfectly? The purity and classicism of Upshaw's soprano make her a stellar interpreter of Parker's lyric -- especially in Gordon's setting, which gives Parker's lament a fullness and contemplative sweetness it lacks on the page. (This composer enhances and augments his texts with remarkable delicacy, never becoming intrusive or trampling on the poet's original intent. Still, it would be interesting to hear a man sing "The Red Dress"!)

Judy Blazer's jazzy delivery is just right for Gordon's inspired meshing of three short verses by Parker, "Resumé," "Wail," and "Frustration." This deathly cackle is reminiscent of Jacques Brel, and Blazer puts a wicked spin on lines like "Love has gone a-rocketing. That is not the worst; I could do without the thing and not be the first." When she sings a zinger, Blazer simultaneously gives it more sting and more fun. Baritone Chris Pedro Trakas joins Blazer, singing of his frustration at not being able to murder his enemies while she bemoans the obverse, equally cruel fate that leaves one with no enemies at all. Gordon's deft counterpoint of "Wail" and "Frustration" is wittily bookended by "Resumé," a brief ode to frustrated suicidal impulses.

If choreographer Mark Morris's work famously unites the sister arts of dance and music, then Gordon joins music with its other sister, poetry. He has composed literally hundreds of art songs as an act of homage to poems that move him. His work finds a home in the neutral territory between classical and theatrical music, sometimes speaking with one accent, sometimes with another.

The poet most often represented on this album is Langston Hughes. Audra McDonald, who recorded a handful of Gordon's songs for her debut CD, Way Back to Paradise, is heard here on three of those previously released tracks, as well as on a handful of newly recorded works. In her hands, Gordon's setting of Hughes's "The Dream Keeper" is a song both of consolation and of mourning. The composer's deft use of a sudden rise in pitch emphasizes the singer's startled response to the "too-rough fingers of the world," and McDonald's bereft concluding cries are eloquent, though wordless. "Daybreak in Alabama," also with text by Hughes, was a highlight of Way Back to Paradise; it remains a subversive gem, positing racial and sexual equality as attainable (and inextricably linked) ideals. Gordon's beautiful melody and orchestration can make you weep even after repeated listening; "Daybreak" shimmers with hope and restrained passion.

McDonald is joined by the marvelous Darius de Haas, who played her brother in Broadway's Marie Christine, for Hughes's "Love Song for Lucinda," rendered by Gordon as a jazz waltz. The text advises caution in the face of love's blandishments; the singers easily capture its ambivalence. De Haas and McDonald, like the other performers on this record, are also skillful actors: Given Gordon's sterling settings, they interpret these compelling texts for all they're worth. In Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Wild Swans," for instance, you feel Dawn Upshaw's terror when she sings of being in a "house without air."

With her achingly sweet soprano, Theresa McCarthy seems a natural choice for "Run Away," a song Gordon wrote after a younger boyfriend left him reeling. The folksy, slightly forlorn quality of McCarthy's voice is what made her so memorable as Nellie, the sister of the doomed miner in the musical Floyd Collins; on this disc, she also interprets other selections, including "Afternoon on a Hill." In Gordon's cascading melody, the exuberant descent anticipated by Edna St. Vincent Millay's poem is nicely emphasized.

With the voice of an openhearted choirboy, Adam Guettel brings an attractive "everyman" quality to his selections. (Guettel is also a talented composer; he wrote Floyd Collins.) He may be most effective here in W. S. Merwin's "A Contemporary" -- his unassuming warmth offsets the relative unfamiliarity of the music (Gordon gives the piece what sounds like an Asian accent) -- and Merwin's text is a little more abstract than some of Gordon's other choices.

The album's title comes from its finale, "Joy," another short lyric by Hughes: "I went to look for Joy ...[......], laughing Joy ... And I found her driving the butcher's cart in the arms of the butcher boy!" Whether or not Hughes meant this as a coded [......] reference, the suggestion clearly would not have been lost on Gordon, who has said that an important factor in his aesthetic is his sense of being different. (Growing up on Long Island, Gordon was taunted with [......].)

Darius de Haas gets the whole disc off to a promising start with yet another Hughes lyric, "Heaven." His soaring performance sets the bar early, and the rest of the record is just as heavenly. This album is so good it's a miracle. The only problem with Bright Eyed Joy is that it wasn't made a double CD, so that listeners could enjoy more of Gordon's beautiful work.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great New CD, May 1, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
Any CD with Audra and Dawn are reason to buy in my mind, and they probe it again in this CD. Theresa is also very good (as are all the vocalists), but Adam Guettel seems a little untrained and pales in comparison. I would definitely recommend this CD, even though it probably will take some getting used to. Nonetheless, the talent is obvious and the music is great.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible, June 2, 2001
This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
This is an incredible CD, from the sparkling orchestrations which are chamber but in the way they are mixed everything dances out at you, to the vocal interpretations which are so innovative for a recording of this type...settings of poetry but sung by regular, albeit, extraordinary regular people (except people like Dawn Upshaw and Audra McDonald who have already established themselves as major vocal artists)so that the songs feel personal. There is about this CD an incredibly meaningful air...moving, magisterial, powerful...straight from "Heaven" to "Joy" Gordon takes us on an inexorable journey through life towards transcendence and he and his brilliant players and performers succeed...Nonesuch does it again...Superb! Kudos all around. Gordon is a REAL composer, with a deep understanding of poetry as well as a fabulous gift for writing words himself!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Phenomenal!, September 26, 2001
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This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
Ricky Ian Gordon is a very talented composer and poet, and the songs on "Bright Eyed Joy" display his magnificent gifts. There is not a contemporary composer who has his talent of fitting text to music, and the singers on this disc bring his compositions alive. Track 17, "Once I Was," will make you weep!
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5.0 out of 5 stars A voice not recorded often enough, June 22, 2011
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This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
In a perfect world, every Ricky Ian Gordon score would be recorded and the shows would be produced regularly around the world. Until we arrive at that perfect world, this wonderful CD will have to suffice. The songs and performances are both excellent. For anyone interested in both musical theater and avant-garde 20th century composition (Benjamin Britten, Stravinsky, etc.), this CD is for you.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Ricky Rocks, November 7, 2009
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This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
I love the work of this composer and to have a whole CD of his imaginative songs makes every day I listen to it full of (as the title says) Bright Eyed Joy!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stephen Holden's NY Times Review of "Bright Eyed Joy" at Lincoln Center, November 7, 2008
This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
March 15, 2001
CABARET REVIEW
Ricky Ian Gordon: Bursting With Effervescence, Skipping Among Genres
By STEPHEN HOLDEN

If the music of Ricky Ian Gordon had to be defined by a single quality, it would be the bursting effervescence infusing songs that blithely blur the lines between art song and the high-end Broadway music of Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim.

A composer versed in the harmonic idiom of Samuel Barber and Benjamin Britten, Mr. Gordon also has a knack for witty theatrical pastiche. Many of his lighter songs pluck vintage theatrical echoes from their 1920's and 30's niches and dress them up with bold chord changes that catapult them in new directions.

Mr. Gordon's music was the focus of the third and final season concert of Lincoln Center's American Songbook series at Alice Tully Hall on Tuesday evening. Befitting a musician whose songs defy category, the event brought nine singers -- some from opera, others from Broadway -- to the stage to perform more than two dozen numbers. While the majority were Mr. Gordon's settings of poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay, Dorothy Parker, Langston Hughes, Jane Kenyon and others, six songs had words by the composer whose lyric style might be described as fancifully romantic.

Accompaniment was provided by a nine-member ensemble playing arrangements mostly by the composer. The concert was organized around five appearances by Cherry Jones to read poems, which were immediately followed by the composer's elaborations. A musical extrovert who reveres his material, Mr. Gordon never tries to insert an opposing point of view. He takes the emotions of a poem at face value and sharpens and deepens them.

Lately, Mr. Gordon, along with Adam Guettel (who sang two numbers), Michael John La Chiusa, Jason Robert Brown and others, has been saddled with the role of potential artistic savior of the Broadway musical. But don't expect an imminent coronation. As accessible as it is, Mr. Gordon's music is sophisticated even by the standards laid out by Bernstein and Mr. Sondheim. It's caviar for a world gorging on pizza.

With a couple of glaring exceptions, the casting of material to singer was impeccable, as was the ensemble playing under the direction of Ted Sperling. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson brought a quiet wisdom to settings of two Jane Kenyon poems, "Otherwise" and "Let Evening Come," and Kristin Chenoweth brought a sassy verve to "Run Away" and "Just an Ordinary Guy."

Monique McDonald and Camellia Johnson infused "Summer," a gorgeous swatch of Sondheimesque impressionism, with a voluptuous warmth. Mr. Guettel's tender reading of "We Will Always Walk Together," a transcendent hymn to friendship from the 1996 musical "Dream True," underscored its stature as an all-seasons ballad redolent of "Somewhere," from "West Side Story," via Schumann.

Ms. McDonald lifted "Stars," a dreamy lullaby by Hughes, to the stratosphere. Two other Hughes poems, "Heaven" (sung by Billy Porter) and "Joy" (by the company) echoed the evening's title, "Bright- Eyed Joy," by hitting notes of pure exhilaration.

Following the American Songbook's solid tribute to Arthur Schwartz, "Bright-Eyed Joy" was the latest encouraging sign that the troubled series has found its footing. In branching out beyond a musty hall-of-fame format, the concert also struck a positive blow for the future of American song.
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An acquired taste., April 25, 2001
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This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
Art songs are somewhat like opera in a sense. They are an acquired taste. Having an affinity for the work of Michael John LaChiusa, I was interested in hearing a cross-section of work by Ricky Ian Gordon. Three of the tracks here were orginally released on Audra McDonald's first solo outing, "Way Back to Paradise".

I'm fascinated by the process of poetry set to music, but I'm afraid that Gordon's ability, although plentiful, makes too many of these pieces sound musically the same. Where LaChiusa's unique style still managed to tell the story, (i.e. "The Wild Party", "Marie Christine", "Hello Again"), Gordon doesn't have any story line to hang on to, thus the similarities of the musical sound in the pieces. It reminded me a lot of Adam Guettel's "Myths and Hymns", which I found difficult to listen to at times as well.

The singers are all very good, although Adam Guettel's vocals seem less trained and on target. However, when you are singing on the same CD with the likes of Audra McDonald, Theresa McCarthy and Dawn Upshaw from the world of opera, and Judy Blazer and Darius de Haas from musical theatre, you are bound to suffer by comparison.

The three stars rate the time, effort, and talent that went into the recording. It's probably not one that will finds its way into my CD changer time after time.

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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Great Debut from An Old-timer already, April 27, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD)
Ricky Ian Gordon has been on the verge of fame for years and now, with this stunning CD, he is probably finally going to get there. Influences here are clear -- Britten, Blitzstein, Sondheim, Barber -- but Gordon has more heart than most of these composers. The music is thrilling and utterly original and he's got the best singers in the world to sing them.
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Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon
Bright Eyed Joy: The Songs of Ricky Ian Gordon by Ricky Ian Gordon (Audio CD - 2001)
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