I would have to agree wholeheartedly with the Stephanie Mills note in "The Wiz." I love it!
Also, Melba Moore singing "I Got Love" from Purlie is pretty spectacular. She hits multiple notes which give me the chills, but I think the best part is in the beginning when she sings "Love, love, love, etc." and hits the really high Love note. Beautiful!!
You know, the straightest note on Broadway was probably Barbra Streisand's last "dance" at the end of "The Music That Makes Me Dance." (I think it's a B natural.) Take that, vibrato thread! lol
As much as everyone hate this show, I loved Michael Ball's B-flat at the end of Love Changes Everything in Aspects of Love, and it's NOT easy to sing (believe me i've performed it a couple of times). I also, LOOOOOVE, the way Andrea Burns starts Carnaval del Barrio, not a high note, just a whole lot of damn power behind the two vocal notes that start that song.
Even though I dont think Wicked is the greatest show ever..seeing Idina sing Wizard an I live was amazing. The last note just hung in the air as it echoed through the theater.
Only other time I was that amazed was when You heard Randy Graff sing I dreamed a Dream live.
I agree with pretty much everything, but have to add the following: -Sutton's highest yodel in "Roll In the Hay." Not only is it great to hear her head voice, which we don't get enough of, but how the girl can support and hold that note while bouncing up and down on a rickety hay cart baffles me. -Not technically Broadway, but Julia Murney in Evita: "Just listen to that, the voice of Argentina. We are adored; we are loved!" Some of the best placement and belting done by her in the show. Practically my favorite moment.
I can't believe it's been almost four years since I started this thread! Wow, how time flies. But I saw "Newsies" last night, and I have to say that Jeremy Jordan's last note before the intermission (the "Santa Fe" reprise) deserves to be on this list, IMHO. (Is it an A, maybe?) I'm wondering, what else has happened in the last four years that may be the Best Note on Broadway Ever? OR anything from the past that we forgot before. Discuss!
"I KNOW!" - Love Can't Happen (David Carroll) "Don't be aFRAID!" - Everybody Says Don't "Before my PAST" - Meadowlark "All the things you are *BEAT* ARE MINE!" - All the Things You Are "When I GO" - Cabaret "Now I underSTAND" - Moments in the Woods (Joanna Gleason) "And SUddenly, nothing is the same" - He Touched Me "Sarah come DOWN TO ME" - New Music "Take a look at my eyES" - Petrified "Mama, mama, maMA" - The I Love You Song
It's perhaps not the best note ever, but I always enjoy listening to someone sing Barret's Song from Titanic. When he builds at the end.."For the record speed I believe we srtive. For the madien ship that's too hard to drive when you push her faster than seventy-five!" I love when they hit seventy-five and the whole song drops immediately to a softer ending.
It's not on Broadway yet, but I have played the second-act title number from "Rebecca" far too many times on repeat just to hear Mrs. Danvers' BIG note at the end again, and again. There's a video of the Stuttgart cast performing songs from the show on what appears to be the facade of a big, pretty building (is it the theatre?). In that video, Pia Douwes hits that note like it's NOTHING. I don't know how to describe it. When I listen to the original cast recordings, I can tell it's the money note moment, but when I hear Pia sing it in that performance it simply...happens. Like breathing. Nothing in her face or stance says (to me, at least) that the note is coming. She just opens her mouth and it falls out.
Part of Your World (reprise) from The Little Mermaid always final "world" always gives me goosebump...In my opinion TLM has one of the most beautiful scores of ALL TIME...what a shame the stage production turned into such a mess. I would pay top dollar to see a concert production of The Little Mermaid with a full orchestra.
THE RINK. That friggin' note Chita hits when she sings "scratch my back" during The Apple Doesn't Fall Very Far From The tree. Surely it's the lowest note ever hit by a female in Broadway history?
Part of Your World (reprise) from The Little Mermaid always final "world" always gives me goosebumps as well as Sherrie Renè Scott's Poor Unfortunate Souls (not faith prince who spoke through it I want a full belt) ...In my opinion TLM has one of the most beautiful scores of ALL TIME...what a shame the stage production turned into such a mess. I would pay top dollar to see a concert production of The Little Mermaid with a full orchestra, Sherrie Reneè Scott, and no costumes or props.
So someone finally mentions "Gethsemane," and they have to rely on Steve Balsamo's wimpy falsetto. I say, buzz off, Balsamo. Only one guy owns this role for me, and contrary to popular opinion, I insist he got better with age. His voice gained depth, and had a gritty texture to it that gave the high notes extra punch. Whenever I saw him, the years fell off of him like scales.
It's always the same vowel that gets me with Ted Neeley.
In "The Temple": "MYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY temple should be a house of prayer..." In "Gethsemane": "WHYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY should I die?"
I agree with g.d.e.l.g.i. Neeley's "myyyy" and "whyyy". I don't know that he ever did it on Broadway..but there's the movie and what, 2000? other times all over the country.
I agree with so many of these. I want to add that I love the final three notes in 'Rosemary' from the 1995 revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. It always gives me chills.