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    The Woman in White

    The Woman in White
    Creators: Steve Rossell, Julia Graham, Tony Woollard, Richard Addison, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Simon Lee, Matthew Draper, Andrew Findon, Dave Lee, Richard Ashton, Julian Poole, Ian Rathbone, Richard Cookson, Andrew Keelan, Angela Christian, Christopher Connah, Edward Petherbridge
    Label: Angel Records
    Category: Music

    List Price: $19.98
    Buy New: $9.94
    You Save: $10.04 (50%)



    New (34) Used (13) from $7.77

    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 57 reviews
    Sales Rank: 68073

    Format: Cast Recording
    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 2
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.7 x 0.4

    MPN: 41911
    UPC: 094634191128
    EAN: 0094634191128
    ASIN: B000BGR128

    Release Date: November 8, 2005
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      Disc 1
      • Prologue
      • I Hope You Like It Here
      • Perspective
      • Trying Not To Notice
      • I Believe My Heart
      • Lammastide
      • You See I Am No Ghost
      • A Gift For Living Well
      • The Holly and the Ivy
      • All For Laura
      • The Document
      • Act One Finale

      Disc 2
      • If I Could Only Dream This World Away
      • The Nightmare
      • Fosco Tells Of Laura's Death/The Funeral/London
      • Evermore Without You
      • Lost Souls
      • If Not For Me For Her
      • You Can Get Away With Anything
      • The Seduction
      • The Asylum
      • Back To Limmeridge
      • Finale
      • You Can Get Away With Anything (BONUS TRACK - Opening night performance)

    Similar Items:

      • The Pirate Queen (2007 Original Broadway Cast)
      • The Beautiful Game (2000 Original London Cast)
      • Whistle Down The Wind (1998 Original London Cast)
      • Curtains (2007 Original Broadway Cast)
      • Aspects of Love (Remastered 1989 Original London Cast)

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    The Woman in White, Andrew Lloyd Webber's first musical in four years, debuted in London in September 2004. "Freely adapted" from Wilkie Collins's gothic mystery-romance, it tells the story of a young art teacher, Walter Hartright (Martin Crewes), who encounters a mysterious woman dressed in white desperate to tell a secret. But she disappears, and Walter continues on to his assignment teaching a pair of sisters, Marian Holcombe (Maria Friedman) and Laura Fairlie (Jill Paice). Romance develops, but is threatened by the arrival of some shady characters, Sir Percival Glyde (Oliver Darley) and Count Fosco (Michael Crawford).

    The score, featuring lyrics by David Zippel (City of Angels), recalls the composer's Aspects of Love, Phantom of the Opera, and Sunset Boulevard, as well as Victorian-themed shows Sweeney Todd and even The Mystery of Edwin Drood. It has some lovely moments, such as "Trying Not to Notice," "All for Laura," "Evermore without You," and "If Not for Me for Her," though for sheer beauty it's no Light in the Piazza. And as with any ALW nearly through-sung musical, a number of the themes recycle themselves to the point where you'll dread the mere mention of certain characters' names. Friedman and Paice give the strongest performances, while Crawford--in his much-anticipated reunion with Lloyd Webber after Phantom--doesn't have a lot to do other than the muggy showpiece "You Can Get Away with Anything." Note that The Woman in White was recorded before a live audience, but "You Can Get Away with Anything" had to be rerecorded in a studio because it was the only number with an audible audience reaction. Crawford's original live performance, however, is included as a coda at the end of the second disc. It's great to have the complete libretto, except that it specifies scene titles while the CD packaging shows track listings and song titles, which means that figuring out where you are takes some detective work. When The Woman in White opened on Broadway in November 2005, Friedman, Paice, and Angela Christian (Anne Catherick) reprised their roles from the London production, while Michael Ball replaced Crawford. --David Horiuchi

    Album Description
    Andrew Lloyd Webber's sensational new musical. Lloyd Webber has again joined forces with Trevor Nunn, the internationally renowned director responsible for staging some of the most successful musicals of all time, including Cats, Starlight Express, Les Mis rables and, most recently, the London revival of Anything Goes. EMI Classics. 2004.

    Album Details
    Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber's Musical Sensation Premiered at the Palace Theatre on 15 September 2004. "Freely Adapted" from the Classic Wilkie Collins Novel, this is Another Grand Production of Lloyd Webber's Really Useful Company. The Principles Include Maria Friedman, Angela Christian, Martin Crewes, Jill Paice and the Original "Phantom", Michael Crawford! Unlike Past Cast Albums, this One was Recorded Live on Opening Night, Thanks to the Presence of a Full Recording Studio Actually in the Palace Theatre! all the Passion of the Live Performances Are Captured on this Set, Sans the Applause. Only the Final Scene and Crawford's Performance of "You Can Get Away with Anything" were Re-recorded Due to Extraneous Noise, However, Crawford's Actual Live Performance Has Been Added as a Bonus Track to the Set. It's Another Monumental Lloyd Webber Extravaganza, Sure to Please Theatre Goers around the Globe! Includes the Complete Libretto!


    Customer Reviews:   Read 52 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars A dark and interesting score...   November 30, 2004
    Andrew J. Yarrows (New York, NY)
    84 out of 93 found this review helpful

    ...but flawed, as most of Lloyd Webber's scores since "Sunset Boulevard" have been. Granted, every score, regardless of the composer, has its flaws, but I have noticed a trend with Lloyd Webber, starting with "Whistle Down the Wind," that continues here, where several strong songs are diminished by lesser ones and occasionally dull recitative dialogue sequences.

    "The Woman in White" is in some ways the most complex and interesting score composed by Lloyd Webber since "Sunset Boulevard," which I found as thoroughly enjoyable as "The Phantom of the Opera" in many respects. Here, we have a dark setting, an air of mystery, quite a few intriguing characters and many opportunities for dramatic scoring and romantic performances, all of which add up to a generally winning end result. The opening sequence is memorably spooky, and the cast's vocals shine throughout, particularly on songs like "I Believe My Heart," "Evermore Without You," and my personal favorite, "All For Laura," which is absolutely electrifying.

    There are many more good tunes in the score, as well as plenty of skillfully executed recitative dialogue, but there is also quite a bit of bland recitative (the kind where you can't really put your finger on any melody, a situation not helped by occasionally medicore lyrics) and less memorable songs.

    Also, it's impossible not to notice that Lloyd Webber has (yet again) ripped off his own "Jeeves" score ("By Jeeves" to those who know its reincarnated version better) as well as "Whistle Down the Wind." Numerous times you can hear the original bridge section of "Half a Moment" from "Jeeves" (a.k.a. the introduction to "Half a Moment" in "By Jeeves"), a clear and direct lift. This is made worse by the fact that Lloyd Webber had already stolen it and used it as the bridge to "As If We Never Said Goodbye" from "Sunset Boulevard," and made even worse, yet again, by his turning around and stealing it back for a revised "Half a Moment" in "By Jeeves." In other words, this melody has been recycled twice too many times... time to dig up a new melody! You will also hear, several times, a musical passage from "Whistle Down the Wind" (it's the one near the climax of "Whistle" where Swallow sings to the pseudo-Jesus/escaped convict: "No one's ever looked at me... the way you're looking at me now..."). And I cannot put my finger on it (yet), but you can definitely hear one or two "inklings" of "Aspects of Love" in this score, although these instances are less obvious than the others.

    Maria Friedman gives a stellar vocal performance on this recording (and given her rather excellent track record on the stage, might she soon inherit Elaine Paige's throne?), as do the other female principles. Michael Crawford is good as Count Fosco, but his role is not as juicy as it could have been and he seems to have far too little to do. The male villain and male romantic/hero lead handle their roles well.

    In all, I very much like the score to "The Woman in White." It's not as satisfying as I had hoped, but considering the hit-or-miss nature of the scores to "Whistle Down the Wind" and "The Beautiful Game"--both strong scores I liked--where a few gorgeous songs were surrounded by somewhat lesser material, this seems like a step in the right direction.



    5 out of 5 stars Wonderful new Gothic musical   June 6, 2005
    Lady Blakeney (USA)
    24 out of 29 found this review helpful

    Andrew Lloyd Webber's musicals have never been popular with the critics, but as box office records show, audiences eat them up with a spoon. They are meant to serve as entertainment, and entertain they certainly do.

    "The Woman in White" is not much different from standard Lloyd Webber fare, as the dialogue is still sung through and filled with melodies that repeat over and over and over again. While this might seem annoying, Lloyd Webber manages to get away with it because if there's one thing he can do, it is create pleasant tunes that you don't mind encountering more than once. There are not as many memorable melodies as you might find in "The Phantom of the Opera", but the "Woman in White" theme, "I Believe My Heart", and "You Can Get Away With Anything" are definitely standouts.

    The plot is "freely adapted" from the novel by Wilkie Collins, and is very easy to follow. Though it's a touch simplistic and perhaps even a wee bit predictable, it is executed in such a way that it propells you on to see what the outcome will be.

    The performances on the CD, recorded live on opening night, are perfect across the board. Michael Crawford, who originated the title role in "The Phantom of the Opera", is at his villainous best as Count Fosco, the obese Italian who pairs with the sinister Sir Percival Glyde (Oliver Darley). Marian and Laura, the half-sisters caught in the middle of the mystery (Marian Friedman, Jill Paice) are wonderful to listen to, and the eponymous Woman in White (Angela Christian, "Miss Dorothy" in the OBC of "Thoroughly Modern Millie) simply breaks your heart.

    The musical is expected to make the leap from the West End to Broadway soon. Hopefully "The Phantom of the Opera" will continue to run for years, but if not then "The Woman in White" looks to be a worthy successor.



    4 out of 5 stars 4.5 Stars for Andrew Lloyd Webber's latest attempt   August 11, 2005
    University of Virginia Guy (Virginia Beach, VA)
    13 out of 17 found this review helpful

    ALW, one of mine and many other's favorite musical composer, has written a new, but not completely original, mega-musical. First of, if you did not like the Phantom of the Opera, JC Superstar, Evita, and/or Aspects of Love, this is not for you.

    Many of his songs here are derivative of his other musicals, most notably from Aspects of Love. "I Believe my Heart, "for instance, though beautiful, is reminiscent of Aspects of Love's "Seeing is Believing," but the score is nonetheless quite good (especially if you don't think about his previous works as you listen). Many parts (as the Prologue) are dark and mysterious, which add to the drama, as does POTO's "I Remember There Was Myst..." It is almost entirely sung, as is POTO, which draws the question whether ALW is too shy to compose operas, for many of his works can easily transfer to the lyric opera genre. That, however, is beside the point, but is part of another relevant inquiry.

    The character development in this musical is considerably better than in other ALW works. We really learn the motivations of Marian, Laura, Fosco and Walter. The music conveys each character, and there are leitmotifs (sort of) for certain characters and themes; therefore, in the sense of putting the right music to the right context, ALW does a superb job.

    The singing could almost not be better, considering this is still technically of the "musical theatre" genre. The strongest singing comes from Jill Paice's Laura. Maria Friedman's Marian and Martin Crewes's Walter are not far. Oliver Darley as Glyde has a beautiful tenor voice but a small role in comparison with Michael Crawford's Fosco. We remember Michael Crawford, with his nasal and technique-lacking singing, as the first Phantom. Here he is better vocally (but not close to the others) and very good dramatically (or comically), as always.

    My only real complaint is the choice of instruments for this recording. The electric keyboard dominates many parts of the score, with "I Believe My Heart" first coming to mind. It makes those parts sound popish, dull, childish, and just weird. Otherwise, however, this particular recording of this musical (currently the only one) has interesting and catchy music, a very good plot, and very good singing and acting. I give it a 4.5 due to its derivative composition of Webber's earlier works (at least they are HIS own works he is copying!!!). If you are Webber fan, you won't be disapointed but rather pleased with this new soon-to-be mega-musical.



    5 out of 5 stars Medicore? Flawed? What!! The best musical in years!   August 23, 2005
    A. Knepper (Maryland)
    13 out of 17 found this review helpful

    If Phantom's a 10, Woman in White is a 9. Woman in White has a chillingly good story (not perfectly adapted, but it suits the stage), above average lyrics, a haunting, sometimes funny, but ultimately moving score, and a great cast, including the indispensable Michael Crawford and the always-excellent Maria Friedman.

    The story is far too complicated to sum up in a review, but the cut-and-dry version is: A man, Walter Hartright, on his way to instruct 2 art students, Marian and Laura, spies a woman dressed in white on his way to catch his train who says she has a secret to tell. Once he arrives, the three get caught in a web of deceit and lies...(Ominous! ^_^)

    It comes nicely packaged with a libretto and a book with a note from Andrew Lloyd Webber, the production information, an overview of scenes and songs, a few photos, and the orchestra information.

    It's got much more than what the tracklisting indicates -- the ENTIRE show, all the music and all the dialogue -- is on here. And thanks to technology, it's a live recording of the opening night performance, which makes the performances on the CD all the better. You can't even tell they're live! They sound like very good quality studio tracks -- but with the passion and emotion of a live performance. How they pulled it all off flawlessly is quite an amazing feat.

    The music itself is just plain incredible. Forget the hype you've heard surrounding newer shows like "Wicked" "Light in the Piazza" or others, if you're looking for a good operetta in the tradition of "Phantom" or "Les Miserables," look for WOMAN IN WHITE...

    GRADE: A
    PURCHASE?: Absolutely!!



    1 out of 5 stars Boring! Boring! Boring!   July 16, 2005
    D. Dimopoulos
    11 out of 33 found this review helpful

    What is going on on this CD? It almost seems there's no key change on the score, it constantly plays in B-oring! And to think that at this point Amazon offers it together with Light in the Piazza, which IS musical theatre!

    The one star I gave was only given, because I had to rate this crap!



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