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Cast recording
Music Sound
Cast recording
A cast recording is a recording of a
musical that is intended to document the songs as they were
performed in the show and experienced by the audience. An original
cast recording, as the name implies, features the voices of the
show's original cast. A cast recording featuring the first cast to
perform a musical in a particular venue is known, for example, as an
"original
Broadway cast recording" or an "original London cast recording".
Cast recordings are (almost always) studio recordings rather than live
recordings. The recorded song lyrics and orchestrations are identical (or very
similar to) those of the songs as performed in the theatre. Like any studio
performance, the recording is of course an idealized rendering, more glossily
perfect than any live performance could be, and without audible audience
reaction. Nevertheless, the listener who has attended the live show expects it
to be an accurate souvenir of the experience.
Prior to the development of original cast recordings, there had of course
been recordings of songs from musicals, and collections of several such songs,
and recordings of songs performed by cast members; but they were recordings of
songs, not recordings of a musical. For example,
Danny Kaye made a set of recordings of songs from Lady in the Dark. Even though
Danny Kaye was a member of the cast, this was certainly not an original cast
recording—not merely because the arrangements and presentation were different,
but because in this recording, Danny Kaye performed Gertrude Lawrence's songs!
The first original cast recording as we know it was probably
Decca's 1943 recording of Oklahoma!. Earlier candidates exist, such as Marc
Blitzstein's 1938 recordings of songs from The Cradle Will Rock. The Decca
album, however, was a huge commercial success and was systematically followed up
by further recordings from Decca, and, soon, all the other record companies.
Cast recordings were particularly well suited for the then-new Columbia Records
LP and in the early 1950s Columbia, guided by Goddard Lieberson, ascended to leadership and Columbia's cast recordings
came to define the genre.
A 1970 documentary by D. A. Pennebaker, Original Cast Album—Company gives a straightforward view of the making of a
cast recording. It shows how the recording studio looks, how performers are
arranged, and how the director behaves. The cast feels the pressure of
delivering a definitive performance, with a degree of perfection beyond that
ever required on stage, under a time limit imposed by the high cost of studio
time.
Vinyl LP cast recordings were usually released as single discs, and it was
not rare for compromises to be made to fit the recording within the
forty-to-fifty-minute time limit. For example, obscure songs might be not be
included. In the 1980s, the rise of the
Compact
disc with its 74-minute recording capacity (which was increased to 80
minutes in the 1990s) resulted in improvements in cast recordings, which were
now usually capable of including all songs, the full overture and entracte, and,
when appropriate, lead-in dialogue to the songs.
See also
Home | Up | List of albums | Boxed set | Cast recording | Compilation album | Concept album | Copy Control | Demo | Discography | DualDisc | Enhanced CD | Live album | Remix album | Super Audio CD | Soundtrack album | Split album | Tribute album | Debut album | Double album | Gatefold | List of EPs | Sampler album | Sophomore album | Studio album
Music Sound, v. 2.0, by MultiMedia
This guide is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
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