Finian's Rainbow [Original Broadway Cast] [Bonus Tracks] [Remaster]Original 1947 Broadway Cast
Release Date: 05/30/2000
Original Release:
2000
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 102005_CD
UPC # 696998920828
Label: Columbia (USA)
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Disc: 1
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Performer: Original 1947 Broadway Cast
Engineer: Harold Chapman Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: Music composed by Burton Lane. Lyrics written by E. Y. Harburg. Principal cast includes: Ella Logan (Sharon McLonergan); Donald Richards (Woody Majoney); David Wayne (Og); Albert Sharpe (Finian McLonergan); Anita Alvarez (Susan Mahoney); Tom McElhany (sheriff); Robert Pitkin (Senator Billboard Rawkins); Sonny Terry (Sunny); Eddie Bruce (Buzz Collins); Augustus Smith, Jr. (Henry); Elayne Richards (Honey Lou); William Greaves (Howard); Dolores Martin (singer); Diane Woods (Diane); Jane Earle (Jane); Roland Skinner (John); Arthur Tell (Mr. Robust); Royal Dano (Mr. Shears). Producer: Mitchell Ayres. Reissue producer: Thomas Z. Shepard. Recorded at Liederkranz Hall, New York, New York on March 30, April 3, 7, & 10, 1947. Includes liner notes by Andrew Velez. Digitally remastered by Charles Harbutt, Robert Wolff. Lyricist: E.Y. "Yip" Harburg. Personnel: Sonny Terry (vocals, harmonica); Maude Simmons, Delores Martin, Donald Richards, Eddie Bruce, Ella Logan, Anita Alvarez, Jerry Laws, Louis Sharp, Robert Eric Carlson, Alan Gilbert , Lorenzo Fuller (vocals); Richard Leonard, Burton Lane (piano). Liner Note Authors: Didier C. Deutsch; Andrew Velez. Recording information: Liderkranz Hall, New York, NY (04/03/1947); Liederkranz Hall, New York, NY (04/03/1947). Lyricist/co-librettist E.Y. Harburg's complicated original plot for the 1947 Broadway musical Finian's Rainbow conflated two stories: one about an Irishman who immigrates to the American South with his daughter after stealing a crock of gold from a leprechaun who pursues them to get it back; the other about a bigoted Southern Senator who gets a taste of his own Jim Crow policies when he is magically turned into a black man. The show worked because it gave greater attention to the first plot than the second, and because Harburg and composer Burton Lane's Irish-tinged score was so tuneful. The hit of the piece was "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?," the daughter's homesick reminiscence of her birthplace, but "Old Devil Moon" also got into the pop charts, and "Look to the Rainbow," "If This Isn't Love," and "When I'm Not Near the Girl I Love" all attained the status of semi-standards. In some of the wittier, lesser-known songs, such as "That Great-Come-and-Get-It Day" and "The Begat," Lane included gospel and R&B influences, while Harburg snuck in topical criticisms of the D.A.R. (Daughters of the American Revolution) and "the misbegotten GOP." (No wonder he was blacklisted soon after.) The show ran a year-and-three-quarters on Broadway in its original production. Columbia Records jumped into the original cast album sweepstakes for the first time, in competition with Decca and RCA Victor, by recording Finian's Rainbow a couple of months after it opened and releasing it as a six-disc 78 RPM album. The collection was dominated by Ella Logan, who played Sharon McLonergan, the daughter, and sang six leads or duets among the 12 songs. Logan had a rich voice and a charming Irish accent that helped her put across songs like "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?" David Wayne, as Og the leprechaun, was also winning, especially on "When I'm Not Near the Girl I Love." Though it was a somewhat under-produced recording, this first performance of Finian's Rainbow on records remained the definitive one. The album marked another first for Columbia when the label used it to introduce its new LP format in June 1948. There were numerous reissues over the years, then in 1988, the album came out on CD. On May 30, 2000, a second CD version appeared that represented a sonic overhaul, going back to the original acetates. Reissue producer Thomas Z. Shepard added a different take of "That Great Come-and-Get-It Day" that restored the song to the second act finale, and he substituted a livelier take of "The Begat." On three more bonus tracks at the end of the disc, Harburg was heard discussing the writing of "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?" and "When I'm Not Near the Girl I Love" before singing them, and he also performed "Don't Pass Me By," a song cut from the show. ~ William Ruhlmann
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