I remember hearing that the guy who wrote Oliver! couldn't read music and simply sang the music to someone and they would transfer it to sheet music. Is there any other broadway shows with composers like that?
EDIT: wickedfan you reminded me that it was Lionel Bart who couldn't read music. I must have gotten Annie and Oliver! mixed up. Two musicals about orphans, it's an easy mistake.
Updated On: 7/22/09 at 05:42 PM
No. All other Broadway writers went to Juliard in composition, actually. Most studied with John Corigliano.
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/16/07
William Finn is one, isn't he? I always wondered if that's why all his music is so robotic and bland.
Mel Brooks might count. But then, it's debatable whether he *truly* counts as a composer or not. I'll leave that particular can of worms to everyone else. XD
Claude-Michele Schonberg.
I think Lionel Bart couldn't read music.
I believe reading that Jerry Herman doesn't read music.
Claude-Michele Schonberg
Really?
Dolly Parton does not read or write music. I believe she said she plays by ear and someone else transposes. I also remember in the documentary "Show Business" that the one dude who wrote Avenue Q said he doesn't read or write music and Lopez had to actually write the music down.
Yeah, Claude-Michel Schönberg talked about that in his downstage center interview.
Lionel Bart, the composer of "Oliver!" could not read or annotate music. He would hum the tune he conceived in his head to a pianist arranger who would then translate it and write it out as music annotation.
Irving Berlin could not read music very well and also used collaborators to get his wonderful songs in musical form on paper.
Chorus Member Joined: 7/4/09
John Bucchino can't read music. He plays on a keyboard and the computer writes it down.
Barbra Streisand can't read music.
wtffffff
I always assumed every established singer and at the very least every composer could read music. It almost seems pathetic.
Broadway Legend Joined: 2/20/04
Irving Berlin and Harvey Schmidt. Both learned to play by ear, and had copyists write down what they played.
Berlin could only play piano in the key of F sharp (or G flat). When he bewcmae rich, he had a cusom made piano with a lever that allowed him to change keys by moving the keyboard to the left or right.
I know a lot of people at least choose not to transcribe it straight away. If you look at music by JRB and Duncan Sheik from early in the writing/rehearsal process. It's just a melody line with chords (lead sheet).
I always assumed every established singer and at the very least every composer could read music. It almost seems pathetic.
OT: but it's certainly not uncommon. You can add Paul McCartney to that list. I'd also bet that historically the vast majority of popular singers didn't learn their songs by reading sheet music until printing presses were able to churn out popular music widely and cheaply.
"I remember hearing that the guy who wrote Annie couldn't read music and simply sang the music to someone and they would transfer it to sheet music. Is there any other broadway shows with composers like that?"
Wrong. Charles Strouse is a very skilled musician.
I am assuming the person that mentioned Sondheim was kidding. Sondheim not only can read music but is also very knowledgeable about music theory.
Oh, the internet.
I heard a story that Sondheim didn't know how to read/notate music, and hired ALW to do it for him. But Sondheim found his melodies weren't hummable, so he had to learn to read/write music himself.
As mentioned, Irving Berlin. Probably the most influential American song composer of the 20th century, writing "hit songs" for over fifty years. Fifty. Couldn't read music.
These are lies! They all studied with John Corgiliano! Eric Whitacre is the future!!!
Jerry Herman doesn't read music.
Also, composers are "who"s, not "that"s. Composers *who* can't read sheet music.
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