The New Sondheim Cast Album Remasters Are a Revelation | 半岛体育

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Cast Recordings & Albums The New Sondheim Cast Album Remasters Are a Revelation

With new clarity and a 360-degree surround sound, these iconic Broadway albums suddenly sound like they were recorded yesterday.

Cast

I have a confession to make. I have never liked Into the Woods鈥� original Broadway cast album.

Now, 测辞耻鈥檙别 a 半岛体育 reader, so you likely know how dangerous such statements can be. So let me add some context. I love Stephen Sondheim鈥擨 can talk about his musicals endlessly, as any of my friends and colleagues can tell you emphatically. And most importantly, Into the Woods鈥攁nd specifically its original Broadway cast鈥攚as seminal to my development as a devout theatre nerd.

Like many theatre kids of my generation, the PBS filmed stage performance of the original Broadway production was life-changing, genuinely. I had been a fan of the big British mega-musicals like Phantom and Les Mis茅rables since I was a kid鈥攖hose were my entr茅e into musical theatre. Then they released that stage film of Cats, and the very idea of a stage musical being available for me to watch from my house, on my TV in the suburbs of Dallas, Texas, really blew my mind.

I hopped on the then-somewhat nascent internet to find out if that had ever happened before, and quickly came across Into the Woods. One holiday wishlist later and a VHS copy was my new prized possession. It opened my mind to an entirely different type of musical, one less reliant on soaring melodies and impressive sets and more focused on complex and nuanced storytelling. It鈥檚 no surprise that Into the Woods is the Sondheim gateway drug for so many. It鈥檚 not just artfully put together; it鈥檚 also funny, surprising, edgy, and fabulous (Bernadette Peters! In capes! And sparkly hair pieces!). The plot, a mash-up of Grimms鈥� fairy tales told with a more modern and introspective lens, is immediately accessible to people of all ages. It鈥檚 also why you regularly find the show on the list of most-produced high school musicals, which couldn鈥檛 have been what Sondheim and book writer James Lapine could have had in mind when they conceived it.

Into the Woods was, and is, very important to me鈥攂ut specifically via that stage film. Ever the thoughtful consumer out for the most bang for my buck, I chose to get the original London cast album when it came time to get a cast recording of the show since I鈥檇 already heard the Broadway cast in the film. (Sidebar, the London cast album is really worth seeking out. Preeminent U.K. Sondheim interpreter Julia Mackenzie makes a fantastic witch, and later Harry Potter and The Crown star Imelda Staunton is The Baker鈥檚 Wife!)

Bernadette Peters in the original Broadway production of Into the Woods

Once I got around to hearing the Broadway album a few years later, I was disappointed. The film is so vital and sharp and funny, but the album sounded echoey and hollow鈥攍ike it was happening a million miles away and with half the energy of the filmed performance. And thus, my interest was more than piqued last month when we got the surprise announcement from Sony Masterworks Broadway that a new edition of the Into the Woods Broadway album鈥攁long with Company, Sweeney Todd, and Assassins鈥攚ere hitting streaming services.

Remasters are nothing new or novel鈥攂y the dictionary definition of that term, labels can advertise any album available in a new format as a remaster. Some remasters are really comprehensive and offer pristine listening experiences that weren鈥檛 possible in earlier mediums. Others sound like they transferred the vintage master tape to a new format and put it on sale, warts and all.

These 鈥攃o-produced by Didier C. Deutsch and Sondheim Foundation archivist Peter E. Jones, and worked on by mixing engineer Ronald Prent and remastering engineer Darcy Proper鈥攑romise a lot. Press notes tease a "360-degree Reality Audio" format from Sony, available on Amazon Music Unlimited and TIDAL HiFi, that creates a surround sound experience. There鈥檚 also Dolby Atmos editions on Apple Music, Amazon Music, and TIDAL, that have sound channels designed to go up and make an even more enveloping experience.

And I am happy to report that this is not just a marketing gimmick. I have maybe never been as shocked by a remaster as when I threw on a pair of headphones and started the Into the Woods Broadway album, honestly expecting the same experience but with some new surround sound elements added in. I was scarcely a second or two into the 鈥淧rologue鈥� track when I could immediately tell how much of an upgrade had happened here. That echoey, far-away sound? Gone. Tom Aldredge and the rest of the original Broadway cast suddenly sound like they鈥檙e right there with me.

And somehow the sound upgrade also massively impacts the energy of the recording. Listening to the new remaster honestly sounds like it鈥檚 a completely new album when it鈥檚 actually just a re-mix of the original. Suddenly what I used to find low energy and dull is just as bright, vital, and sharp as that filmed stage performance I love so dearly.

Beyond the vocal performances, there鈥檚 lots to be said to what this newfound clarity adds to Jonathan Tunick鈥檚 orchestration as well. As a former music director who has conducted productions of Into the Woods during my career, I know that orchestration pretty well. But this new remaster adds such clarity that now I鈥檓 hearing all kinds of details in the instrumentation that I鈥檝e never heard before. Whether it鈥檚 physical things like the scratch of a bow in that iconic fairy tale sextet or woodwind lines formerly relegated to a distant background, it adds a complexity that is really refreshing. Even with more modern recordings of the score available, this 360-degree mix might just make the original the definitive.

And don鈥檛 worry鈥擲ondheim was consulted on this project, most of which happened before he died in 2021. He reportedly heard and approved the final mixes for Into the Woods, Sweeney Todd, and Company. And Assassins was executed according to plans made in consultation with the Broadway legend.

Angela Lansbury and Len Cariou Martha Swope/漏NYPL for the Performing Arts

My experiences with Sweeney Todd, Assassins, and Company were less mind-blowing, but that鈥檚 because I already loved those albums. So much so that I was nervous to listen to them after hearing how dramatically Into the Woods鈥� had been transformed. But that nervousness was misplaced. There was nothing wrong with the original mixes of the other three albums, but they鈥檝e benefitted from newfound clarity here, too. The difference isn鈥檛 quite as dramatic as with Into the Woods, but ultimately, all of the new remasters make these albums sound more vital and present than they鈥檝e ever sounded before. 

In the case of Company, we also got some new material (unfortunately it鈥檚 just a few extra seconds of drum ticks in 鈥淭ick Tock鈥� that were cut from the previous releases).

The remasters are so good, in fact, that it makes me want the same treatment to be given to lots of earlier albums. Let鈥檚 get the quadraphonic (an early version of surround sound released on special vinyl LPs) versions of The Wiz and Candide converted to the more modern 360-degree format. Let鈥檚 rescue other echoey, distant-sounding albums and give them the same vitality found with these Sondheim albums. In a press quote, Jones says he thinks Sondheim would 鈥渂e pleased with how splendid this first series has turned out,鈥� which does at least leave open the possibility that more remasters could be in the works.

Even if 测辞耻鈥檙别 someone who already loved the old version of Into the Woods鈥� Broadway album (i.e. you're not a musical theatre monster like me), you still might find the new remaster to be a revelation as I did. And if 测辞耻鈥檙别 a musical theatre monster who only listens to the newer revival albums of these shows, now is an especially good time to check in on the originals. Their new editions make them sound like they were recorded yesterday, and all of them capture iconic performances in Broadway history.

As Sondheim taught us, children will listen. And now they can listen to that sentiment in a recording that's better than ever before. Musical theatre nerds, rejoice.

A Look Back at the Original Broadway Production of Into the Woods

 
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