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What I find most woeful is what was done with Jonathan Tunick's astounding orchestrations. A case in point: the glorious brass of the title song is replaced by a pathetically synthesized sound. Those brass sections of that song are among the most thrilling sounds I've ever heard on a cast recording: strident, angry, a clarion call to take Frank back to his past. Unfortunately, on this recording, the tinny sound doesn't drive itself inside your mind and inside your heart, and you don't feel as though Frank is being driven to relive his past by something he cannot control.
Second only to the orchestrations in what I find problematic are the vocalists. Now, they are a cast with impressive credentials, and equally impressive voices: Malcolm Gets, Michele Pawk, Adriane Lenox, and Cass Morgan are the names that stand out. But they *don't* have what it takes to carry this score. On the original Broadway cast recording, those youths had a raw, edgy sound, in much the same way as aforementioned brass was raw and edgy. The pain, anger, and frustration that drove the score in the OBC recording are gone, replaced by smoothly polished, well-refined singing voices - and it *kills* the emotional content. I was most disappointed by the rendition of "Franklin Shephard, Inc." here: the anger and bitterness of Lonny Price on the OBC recording is here replaced by the ho-hum delivery of Adam Heller. Again, I'm not saying he's not a good singer, but rather that he's not the *right* singer for this role.
I suspect the OBC had an added benefit - not only were they young and raw, but the show had closed the day before they recorded the album after a sixteen-show run. No doubt their pain and anger and frustration from that was poured out into their recording.
Don't bother with this recording: it's slick, it's neat - and it's soul-less.
The 1981 version is muted and the sound quality is so poor it sounds like you are listening through a tin can down a really dark and hollow tunnel.
Fortunately, this version is clear as a bell and all the changes made to the much edited score and script are all for the better here. "The Hills of Tomorrow" framework was totally unecessary and I don't miss it or the song for a second. Michele Pawk as Gussie and Malcolm Gets as Frank are stand-outs vocally and while Adam Heller and Anne Bobby may not be the strongest singers, their acting ability comes through in their vocals, something that I think adds a great depth to Charlie and Beth, my favorite characters in the show anyway.
The best tracks on this one are "Good Thing Going" and "Our Time". They have a sense of purpose and longing that are perfectly in tune with Sondheim's creative flair. They make me wish I had actually seen this production live.
I've had the 1981 OCR for many years now and have always liked the score, but now with this version I feel I am listening to the score anew, and liking it even more! This recording adds something hard to describe, perhaps a sense of time, a smoothness, a unity that wasn't present in the OCR.
Totally worth every cent!