Marc Blitzstein

The Cradle Will Rock (Live)

Price: € 32.95
Format: CD
Label: Bridge
UPC: 0090404951121
Catnr: BRIDG 9511
Release date: 07 September 2018
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Label
Bridge
UPC
0090404951121
Catalogue number
BRIDG 9511
Release date
07 September 2018
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
DE

About the album

The opening night of Marc Blitzstein’s The Cradle Will Rock was one of the most infamous in history. The attempt to shut down and censor the production resulted in an improvised performance with Blitzstein playing his score on the piano, which has influenced performances of this American masterpiece for decades. Now, this First Complete Recording of The Cradle Will Rock - recorded live at Opera Saratoga in July 2017 - restores Blitzstein’s brilliant original orchestrations to their full glory. Under the baton of conductor John Mauceri and direction of Lawrence Edelson, this remarkable production of the fable of Steeltown USA, corrupted at every social level by the predations and capitalist cupidity of its boss-man, Mr. Mister, was hailed by the Philadelphia Inquirer as having “no polite veneer to soften Blitzstein’s social outrage, with a cast that had the scrupulousness of opera but the theatricality of Broadway.”
Die Premiere von Marc Blitzsteins ‚The Cradle Will Rock‘ war eine der bekanntesten in der Geschichte. Der Versuch, die Produktion abzuschalten und zu zensieren, führte zu einer improvisierten Aufführung mit Blitzstein am Klavier, die die Aufführung dieses amerikanischen Meisterwerks seit Jahrzehnten beeinflusst. Diese erste Gesamteinspielung von The Cradle Will Rock - live in der Oper Saratoga im Juli 2017 aufgenommen - stellt Blitzsteins brillante Originalorchestrierungen in voller Pracht dar.

Artist(s)

Marc Blitzstein

Born in Philadelphia in 1905, Marc Blitzstein showed musical promise as a pianist at a young age. He began composing lieder and short piano pieces in his teens, before going on to study composition at the Curtis Institute from 1924-1926, and then briefly in Europe with Nadia Boulanger and Arnold Schoenberg. Through his involvement with the Composers Collective of New York and the New York Composers Forum-Laboratory (two groups known for their left-leaning political viewpoints), Blitzstein came in contact with the preeminent composers of the New York new music scene of the 1920s and 30s, including Aaron Copland, Henry Cowell, Hanns Eisler, and Charles Seeger. In 1939, he met and formed a close friendship with Leonard Bernstein, who became one...
more

Born in Philadelphia in 1905, Marc Blitzstein showed musical promise as a pianist at a young age. He began composing lieder and short piano pieces in his teens, before going on to study composition at the Curtis Institute from 1924-1926, and then briefly in Europe with Nadia Boulanger and Arnold Schoenberg. Through his involvement with the Composers Collective of New York and the New York Composers Forum-Laboratory (two groups known for their left-leaning political viewpoints), Blitzstein came in contact with the preeminent composers of the New York new music scene of the 1920s and 30s, including Aaron Copland, Henry Cowell, Hanns Eisler, and Charles Seeger. In 1939, he met and formed a close friendship with Leonard Bernstein, who became one of the most vocal proponents of Blitzstein’s music. The influence of these colleagues proved invaluable in his early development as a composer and formed the basis of many lifelong friendships within this circle of contemporaries. Throughout his life, he contributed extensively, through published writings and lectures, to the ongoing discourse over developments in American music and theater.

Blitzstein achieved his first notable success with his one-act opera Triple Sec (1928), which ran on Broadway as part of Garrick Gaities in 1930. His compositional style took on a simpler and more direct musical language in the mid-1930s, as he set aside high modernist style and turned more and more to musical theater as a means of political commentary. Most exemplary of this style, and Blitzstein’s most well-known work, is his 1937 agitprop musical The Cradle Will Rock, a pro-union political satire, which lampoons corporate greed and champions the every-man, average “Joe Worker”. Commissioned by the Federal Theatre Project, Cradle created a sensation on the night of its premiere when, hours before curtain, authorities from the FTP attempted to shut it down, citing the show’s anti-government message.

Blitzstein composed in all genres, but the theater gave him his greatest successes—Cradle; Regina, an opera for Broadway (1949); and an English adaptation of Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera (1954)—and failures—Reuben Reuben (closed out of town, 1955) and Juno (1959). His best-known orchestral work, The Airborne Symphony, premiered under Bernstein in 1946. At the time of his unexpected and tragic death in 1964, much of his work was left unfinished and unpublished, leaving behind a legacy that has been largely overlooked in the ensuing decades.


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John Mauceri (conductor)

Composer(s)

Marc Blitzstein

Born in Philadelphia in 1905, Marc Blitzstein showed musical promise as a pianist at a young age. He began composing lieder and short piano pieces in his teens, before going on to study composition at the Curtis Institute from 1924-1926, and then briefly in Europe with Nadia Boulanger and Arnold Schoenberg. Through his involvement with the Composers Collective of New York and the New York Composers Forum-Laboratory (two groups known for their left-leaning political viewpoints), Blitzstein came in contact with the preeminent composers of the New York new music scene of the 1920s and 30s, including Aaron Copland, Henry Cowell, Hanns Eisler, and Charles Seeger. In 1939, he met and formed a close friendship with Leonard Bernstein, who became one...
more

Born in Philadelphia in 1905, Marc Blitzstein showed musical promise as a pianist at a young age. He began composing lieder and short piano pieces in his teens, before going on to study composition at the Curtis Institute from 1924-1926, and then briefly in Europe with Nadia Boulanger and Arnold Schoenberg. Through his involvement with the Composers Collective of New York and the New York Composers Forum-Laboratory (two groups known for their left-leaning political viewpoints), Blitzstein came in contact with the preeminent composers of the New York new music scene of the 1920s and 30s, including Aaron Copland, Henry Cowell, Hanns Eisler, and Charles Seeger. In 1939, he met and formed a close friendship with Leonard Bernstein, who became one of the most vocal proponents of Blitzstein’s music. The influence of these colleagues proved invaluable in his early development as a composer and formed the basis of many lifelong friendships within this circle of contemporaries. Throughout his life, he contributed extensively, through published writings and lectures, to the ongoing discourse over developments in American music and theater.

Blitzstein achieved his first notable success with his one-act opera Triple Sec (1928), which ran on Broadway as part of Garrick Gaities in 1930. His compositional style took on a simpler and more direct musical language in the mid-1930s, as he set aside high modernist style and turned more and more to musical theater as a means of political commentary. Most exemplary of this style, and Blitzstein’s most well-known work, is his 1937 agitprop musical The Cradle Will Rock, a pro-union political satire, which lampoons corporate greed and champions the every-man, average “Joe Worker”. Commissioned by the Federal Theatre Project, Cradle created a sensation on the night of its premiere when, hours before curtain, authorities from the FTP attempted to shut it down, citing the show’s anti-government message.

Blitzstein composed in all genres, but the theater gave him his greatest successes—Cradle; Regina, an opera for Broadway (1949); and an English adaptation of Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera (1954)—and failures—Reuben Reuben (closed out of town, 1955) and Juno (1959). His best-known orchestral work, The Airborne Symphony, premiered under Bernstein in 1946. At the time of his unexpected and tragic death in 1964, much of his work was left unfinished and unpublished, leaving behind a legacy that has been largely overlooked in the ensuing decades.


less

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Disc #1
01.
The Cradle Will Rock: I. Scene One – Street Corner: Moll’s Lament (Moll)
01:41
02.
The Cradle Will Rock: II. “Hello, baby.” (Gent, Moll, Dick, Cop, Liberty Committee)
06:29
03.
The Cradle Will Rock: III. Scene Two – Nightcourt: “Gosh it’s cold in here...” (Harry Druggist, Clerk, Liberty Committee, Cop, Moll)
03:40
04.
The Cradle Will Rock: IV. “We’re the most respectable families in the city!” (Liberty Committee, Dick, Cop, Harry Druggist, Moll, Clerk)
02:53
05.
The Cradle Will Rock: V. “I wonder if I hadn’t better phone Mrs. Mister?” (Liberty Committee, Cop, Clerk, Harry Druggist)
02:53
06.
The Cradle Will Rock: VI. Scene Three – Mission: “My dear Missus Mister!” (Reverend Salvation, Mrs. Mister, Harry Druggist, Liberty Committee, Chorus)
08:20
07.
The Cradle Will Rock: VII. “Order in the Courtroom!” (Clerk, Editor Daily, Cop, Harry Druggist)
00:35
08.
The Cradle Will Rock: VIII. Scene Four – Lawn of Mr. Mister’s Home: Croon-Spoon (Junior Mister, Sister Mister, Mr. Mister, Editor Daily)
02:51
09.
The Cradle Will Rock: IX. Freedom of the Press (Mr. Mister, Editor Daily)
03:50
10.
The Cradle Will Rock: X. “I agree with you absolutely, Mr. Mister” (Editor Daily, Mr. Mister)
00:58
11.
The Cradle Will Rock: XI. “Let’s do something!”… Honolulu (Junior Mister, Sister Mister, Editor Daily, Mr. Mister)
03:55
12.
The Cradle Will Rock: XII. Flashback to Nightcourt: “Order in the courtroom!” (Clerk, Harry Druggist, Cop)
00:28
13.
The Cradle Will Rock: XIII. Scene Five – Drugstore (Harry Druggist, Steve, Bugs, Gus, Sadie)
06:19
14.
The Cradle Will Rock: XIV. Duet: “Why don’t my Sadie tell me she gonna have baby?” (Gus, Sadie, Steve, Harry Druggist)
03:17
15.
The Cradle Will Rock: XV. Scene Six – Hotel lobby: The Rich (Yasha, Dauber)
04:01
16.
The Cradle Will Rock: XVI. “Ah, there you are, you two!”… Art for Art’s Sake (Mrs. Mister, Dauber, Yasha)
04:52

Disc #2
01.
The Cradle Will Rock: XVII. Scene Seven - Nightcourt: Nickel Under the Foot (Moll)
04:01
02.
The Cradle Will Rock: XVIII. “Which of you guys wanted to see the man who made the speech?” (Cop, Liberty Committee, Larry Foreman, Moll)
02:24
03.
The Cradle Will Rock: XIX. Leaflets (Larry Foreman, Moll)
01:47
04.
The Cradle Will Rock: XX. The Cradle Will Rock… “Do you think we don’t know what that fight tonight’s about?” (Larry Foreman, Liberty Committee, Harry Druggist, Moll, Clerk
05:01
05.
The Cradle Will Rock: XXI. Scene Eight – Facultyroom (President Prexy, Mr.Mister; Professors Mamie, Scoot and Trixie)
07:07
06.
The Cradle Will Rock: XXII. Scene Nine – Dr. Specialist’s Office: “It’s not going to hurt?” (Mr. Mister, Dr. Specialist)
04:01
07.
The Cradle Will Rock: XXIII. “Hello, Doctor” (Ella Hammer, Dr. Specialist, Reporters)
02:22
08.
The Cradle Will Rock: XXIV. Joe Worker (Ella Hammer)
03:05
09.
The Cradle Will Rock: XXV. Scene Ten – Nightcourt (Full Company)
08:37
10.
The Cradle Will Rock: XXVI. “Listen! The boilermakers are with us!”… Reprise: The Cradle Will Rock (Full Company)
01:59
11.
Appendix: Marc Blitzstein Discusses The Story of The Cradle Will Rock
13:57
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