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Hair

The New Broadway Cast RecordingMP3 Download
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)

Price: $11.99
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Album Savings: $35.74 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: May 26, 2009
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Artist Time Price  
Play   1. Aquarius Sasha Allen;Tribe 3:17 $1.29 Buy Track  - Aquarius
Play   2. Donna Will Swenson;Tribe 2:08 $1.29 Buy Track  - Donna
Play   3. Hashish Tribe 0:54 $1.29 Buy Track  - Hashish
Play   4. Sodomy Bryce Ryness;Tribe 0:58 $1.29 Buy Track  - Sodomy
Play   5. Colored Spade Darius Nichols;Tribe 1:13 $1.29 Buy Track  - Colored Spade
Play   6. Manchester England Gavin Creel;Tribe 1:11 $1.29 Buy Track  - Manchester England
Play   7. I'm Black/Ain't Got No Darius Nichols;Bryce Ryness;Will Swenson;Gavin Creel;Sasha Allen;Tribe 1:05 $1.29 Buy Track  - I'm Black/Ain't Got No
Play   8. Sheila Franklin/I Believe In Love Caissie Levy;Tribe 1:13 $1.29 Buy Track  - Sheila Franklin/I Believe In Love
Play   9. Ain't Got No Grass Tribe 1:49 $1.29 Buy Track  - Ain't Got No Grass
Play 10. Air Kacie Sheik;Allison Case;Sasha Allen 1:29 $1.29 Buy Track  - Air
Play 11. Kama Sutra/The Stone Age Will Swenson 0:46 $1.29 Buy Track  - Kama Sutra/The Stone Age
Play 12. I Got Life Gavin Creel;Tribe 3:02 $1.29 Buy Track  - I Got Life
Play 13. Initials Tribe 0:49 $1.29 Buy Track  - Initials
Play 14. Going Down Will Swenson;Tribe 2:02 $1.29 Buy Track  - Going Down
Play 15. Hair Gavin Creel;Will Swenson;Tribe 3:16 $1.29 Buy Track  - Hair
Play 16. My Conviction Andrew Kober 1:46 $1.29 Buy Track  - My Conviction
Play 17. Easy To Be Hard Caissie Levy 3:04 $1.29 Buy Track  - Easy To Be Hard
Play 18. Don't Put It Down Will Swenson;Bryce Ryness;Tommar Wilson 2:03 $1.29 Buy Track  - Don't Put It Down
Play 19. Frank Mills Allison Case 2:00 $1.29 Buy Track  - Frank Mills
Play 20. Hare Krishna/Be-In Tribe 3:56 $1.29 Buy Track  - Hare Krishna/Be-In
Play 21. Where Do I Go? Gavin Creel;Tribe 3:06 $1.29 Buy Track  - Where Do I Go?
Play 22. Electric Blues Steel Burkhardt;Andrew Kober;Megan Lawrence;Nicole Lewis 2:50 $1.29 Buy Track  - Electric Blues
Play 23. Oh Great God Of Power/Manchester England [Reprise] Tribe;Gavin Creel 1:38 $1.29 Buy Track  - Oh Great God Of Power/Manchester England [Reprise]
Play 24. Black Boys Megan Reinking;Jackie Burns;Kaitlin Kiyan;Darius Nichols;Brandon Pearson;Tommar Wilson 1:27 $1.29 Buy Track  - Black Boys
Play 25. White Boys Sasha Allen;Nicole Lewis;Saycon Sengbloh 2:22 $1.29 Buy Track  - White Boys
Play 26. Walking In Space Sasha Allen;Caissie Levy;Kacie Sheik;Tribe 4:41 $1.29 Buy Track  - Walking In Space
Play 27. Minuet/African Drums Broadway Cast 0:23 $1.29 Buy Track  - Minuet/African Drums
Play 28. Yes I's Finished On Y'All's Farmlands Darius Nichols;Ato Blankson-Wood;Brandon Pearson;Tommar Wilson 0:55 $1.29 Buy Track  - Yes I's Finished On Y'All's Farmlands
Play 29. Four Score/Abie Baby Saycon Sengbloh;Ato Blankson-Wood;Darius Nichols;Brandon Pearson;Tommar Wilson 1:37 $1.29 Buy Track  - Four Score/Abie Baby
Play 30. Give Up All Desires/Hail Mary/Roll Call Megan Lawrence;Bryce Ryness;Caissie Levy;Allison Case;Allison Guinn 2:01 $1.29 Buy Track  - Give Up All Desires/Hail Mary/Roll Call
Play 31. Three-Five-Zero-Zero Tribe 3:04 $1.29 Buy Track  - Three-Five-Zero-Zero
Play 32. What A Piece Of Work Is Man/How Dare They Try Paris Remillard;Maya Sharpe;Gavin Creel;Tribe 2:28 $1.29 Buy Track  - What A Piece Of Work Is Man/How Dare They Try
Play 33. Good Morning Starshine Caissie Levy;Tribe 2:29 $1.29 Buy Track  - Good Morning Starshine
Play 34. Aquarius Goodnights/Ain't Got No/Yip Up The Sun Gavin Creel;Tribe 1:49 $1.29 Buy Track  - Aquarius Goodnights/Ain't Got No/Yip Up The Sun
Play 35. The Flesh Failures/Eyes Look Your Last/Let The Sun Shine In Gavin Creel;Caissie Levy;Bryce Ryness;Sasha Allen;Kacie Sheik;Allison Case;Jackie Burns;Tribe 4:26 $1.29 Buy Track  - The Flesh Failures/Eyes Look Your Last/Let The Sun Shine In
Play 36. Curtain Call: Hair [Reprise] Tribe 1:35 $1.29 Buy Track  - Curtain Call: Hair [Reprise]
Play 37. Curtain Call: Let The Sun Shine In [Reprise] Tribe 1:47 $1.29 Buy Track  - Curtain Call: Let The Sun Shine In [Reprise]
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Customer Reviews

39 Reviews
5 star:
 (20)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (8)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A worthy successor, June 25, 2009
By 
Terry Serres (Minneapolis, MN United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
The success of this revival of HAIR comes as no surprise. HAIR has never struck me as a period piece ... and even if it were, a well-conceived period piece can make for convincing art. The heart of any musical has to be original music that speaks the souls of its characters, and HAIR has always been secure in that strength.

I haven't seen the show and probably won't have the opportunity to. This vigorous recording amply compensates. It seems to be the first musical in ages where the vocalism isn't infected by American Idolitis -- You know what I mean: that insidious combination of Mariah-like fluttering, Celine-like caterwauling, premature and overworked climaxes, and general lack of subtlety that provides a virtuosic but hollow gloss.

The singing here is joyous and lively. The recording team -- performers, arrangers, engineers -- catches all the energy of the show but contains the chaos. One advantage over the 1967 OCR of the original production is certainly that you can here the orchestration, the Tribal chorus, and individual vocal lines a lot better. Shining the spotlight on the band in the first curtain call was a welcome inspiration.

One of the best things about HAIR is that it has always been its own creature. Its plot structure and its musical language were not of the theater, its themes put the concerns of the day before theatrical tropes. These qualities give the show a compelling integrity that shines through even though in 2009 the concerns of today may be different (but not terribly). It's a show that demands to be heard on its own terms, and either you get it or you don't.

I have the occasional nit to pick here and there, but that's part of the pleasure of having a worthy successor to the original. As with the "Actors Fund Benefit" disc, the reading of "My Conviction" is impossibly arch -- the song should make its point without such an exaggerated characterization. Every once in a while a reading sounds off the mark but overall the aim is true. The main performers (Sasha Allen, Gavin Creel, Caissie Levy) are all vibrant and strong ... Once in a while their performances sound a little underpowered, especially Creel in "I Got Life", which pales in comparison to the James Rado original and Treat Williams on screen -- the number should raise the roof (as the title song effectively does). Also, I didn't really care for the "soft jazz" take on "Easy to Be Hard" (synth, sax) ... this is a soul-baring torch song. On the other hand, the rockabilly twist on "Don't Put It Down" is a success. Overall, there is a greater emphasis on the ensemble, which certainly enhances the overall experience and makes the sequence "Black Boys" / "White Boys" / "Walking in Space" a real standout.

It's marvelous to have the full score here on disc, including some fragments that I hadn't heard before like the funky guitar riff that ushers in the reprise of "Ain't Got No (Grass)."

Forty-two years on, it's hard to recognize the revolutionary qualities of HAIR ... Other musicals have followed where it goes, though few as boldly and with as much raw energy and grace.

The new recording allows us to hear this remarkable score with fresh ears. Resoundingly recommended.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE SUN STILL SHINES IN, June 29, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
"Hair" opened on Broadway amidst the turmoil dividing the country in 1968 and knocked behind-the-times Broadway on its' ear. "Hair" was a breath of fresh air and it saved Broadway but it nearly destroyed it. Soon a flock of wanna-be Hairs traipsed into town and soon belly-flopped and traipsed out of town. The reason for the belly flop? "Hair" got there first.

Structurally "Hair" was an unwashed mess, more a party than theatre, but what a party it was and the party has started anew and shaken the town again. The wispy thin story, like a single strand of hair involves Claude a young hippie and somewhat leader of his bell-bottomed, love-beaded friends has received his draft notice and that's the story. Will he avoid the draft or will he join the army? Will he? Won't he? Will he? Won't he? He does and the result is tragic. The bulk of the show is ideas, social issues and attitude swirling around like a tornado gone beserk. None of the actors playing the hippies or tribe as their called here, stand-still for a moment and even spill out into the audience, frightening the blue-haired matrons who have strolled in to check out the latest rage.

Gavin Creel sings sweetly as Claude, the would be draft dodger and when you see his picture in the booklet you have to smile and say, "Someone should feed that boy a sandwich or three". Will Swenson as Berger sings well but he lacks the shaggy dog manginess of Gerome Ragni-the original Berger.

What other show could get away with a second act that is 90 percent an extended LSD trip. And come morning when the trip is over, Claude leaves his friends for the army. Soon Claude reappears, hair shaven dressed in army fatigues. The tribe cannot see or hear him even as he calls out to them. The tribe knows that somethig is horribly wrong but they sing a song of hope as they leave the stage and the only one left is Claude lying at rest draped in an American flag.

Anyone who may read this review will notice that up to now I have not mentioned the score. After all this is supposed to be about the CD and not the show.

To me the score is like a sandwich. The opening "Aquarius" and the ending "Let The Sunshine In" are like two slices of bread holding together the tasty filling in-between.

And don't think I have forgotten about Sasha Allen-with her powerhouse voice, she is the baker of those two slices of bread.

Galt MacDermots music and the lyrics of Gerome Ragni and James Rado still shines in 2009 as it did back in 1968 and just as we were back then when we were neck deep in war-in 2009 we are still at war. Some things never change and for better or worse-neither has "Hair" and at least for that we can rejoice.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic Recording of a Fantastic Show, June 23, 2009
The New Broadway Cast Recording of "Hair" captures the magic of the current smash
Broadway revival. The ground-breaking show about a tribe of hippies in New York's
East Village contains classics such as "Aquarius," "Good Morning Starshine," "Let
the Sun Shine In," and the title track. The current cast sounds as vibrant as they
do live on stage. Examples include, Sasha Allen's soaring "Black Boys," Will
Swenson's joyous "Donna," Caissie Levy's heartwrenching "Easy to Be Hard" and
Gavin Creel's outstanding "Where Do I Go?" Executive Producer, Bill Rosenfield
along with, Galt MacDermot, Hair's original musical composer, include songs that
weren't on the show's Original Cast Recording, some of the show's dialogue and
both of the show's encores. The current show's Musical Director, Nadia
DiGiallonardo, makes MacDermot's music sound fresher then ever by using top-of-the-
line musicians. Gerome Ragni's and James Rado's lyrics are as relevant as ever on
songs such as "Air"("Welcome, sulphar dioxide/Hello carbon monoxide/The air, the
air is everywhere.") and "I Believe in Love" ("I believe that now is the time/for
all good men/To believe in love.") Their songs are philosophical("What a Piece of
Work Is Man") and provocative ("Sodomy"), but also funny ("My Conviction") and
heartbreaking,("Frank Mills"). The New Broadway Cast Recording of "Hair" reminds
us that not only is this the right time to experience its latest revival but to
also hear its timeless songs.-BobsViews






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