jacobsnchz14 said: "If I didn't know better, that leaked image of the Glinda costume on page 36 of this thread really looks like that final product from EW.
Wonder if the others end up being "real" or similar.
I'm glad to hear they're releasing an album, and also that they're using the Peter Pan model over the Sound Of Music one. Even though the arrangements are evidently going to be mostly the movie I'm sure it'll still make a fun listen and it will be nice to have a full recording of the score.
A full recording? Did I miss the announcement that all of the songs are being included? I know it's a 3 hour broadcast but at this point I'm kind of skeptical that some of the original songs that didn't make it onto the OBC recording like "Who Do You Think You Are" and "A Rested Body" are being included in this version.
bestbarrs, as far as I am concerned The Wiz is a musical based on L Frank Baum's children novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, so it falls into that category of family shows.
I think that more effort needs to be put in the marketing department. The released promos aren't impressive and they really need to put something that features the sets which are going to be used on Dec 3rd, rather than computer generated drawings.
Whatever happens I only hope that Williams will go on to a promising career after this, since she has a beautiful voice.
CATSNYrevival said: "A full recording? Did I miss the announcement that all of the songs are being included? I know it's a 3 hour broadcast but at this point I'm kind of skeptical that some of the original songs that didn't make it onto the OBC recording like "Who Do You Think You Are" and "A Rested Body" are being included in this version.
All of the songs from the broadway musical remain intact. Except born on the day before yesterday
I know that The Wiz had to be modified for TV - at least expanded to fill 3 hours (including commercials) - but the original excitement on this board was to see the 1970s The Wiz. As with any show, I will continue to hope for the best. However this show turns out, I'll still have my memories of being absolutely entranced by the stage show at the Ahmanson with Ren Woods and the Cast Recording - and this broadcast will do nothing to those memories. I've survived youth theatre productions (at least three, maybe more?).
And if Ms. Williams can soar on those final notes of "Home" and the music swells - and she clicks her heels and Toto runs out and jumps in her arms, I might just start to cry with joy as I did so many years ago.
Well a great thing (at least for me) has come out of this decision to mount a live TV production of THE WIZ. Universal who owns Motown Records has dug into their vaults to give WIZ and Diana Ross fans what they have been wanting to hear for a very, very long time: the aborted 1979 companion album, DIANA ROSS SINGS SONGS FROM THE WIZ.
With the passage of time, annual holiday showings on BET and other networks, and the deaths of most of the principal cast (including Michael Jackson in 2009), the theatrical version of The Wiz is viewed differently today. As NBC readies a December 3 live broadcast of a new production of the musical, Motown Universal has dusted off and remastered Ross’ original 1978 recordings. “Diana Ross Sings Songs From The Wiz” will be released, for the first time, on November 27.
This album is one of the most dynamic of Ross’ 50+ year career. The new release includes a beautiful booklet with never-before-published photos of Ross, and a new essay written by the reissue’s producers Andrew Skurow, George Solomon, and Harry Weinger.
The original album was produced by Ross herself, veteran Motown executive Suzanne de Passe, and Grammy and Emmy Award-winning producer and arranger Lee Holdridge, who had written the arrangement for her #1 smash “Do You Know Where You’re Going To?”. Holdridge told me he was surprised to hear that the songs he produced for Ross almost 40 years ago are finally being released.
“I remember doing the tracks for her,” Holdridge recalled by phone. “As was so common at that time, we did rhythm tracks first and then she came in and put her voice down. I had pleasant conversations with her, and she was a joy to work with. But there was some craziness going on between her and the record company, she wasn’t happy about a lot of things, and she was in a terrible mood when we recorded those songs.”
If the Academy Award-nominated Ross was in a snit when she recorded the songs for “Diana Ross Sings Songs From The Wiz”, it’s a testament to her acting ability that you’d never know it by listening to the album. The legend delivers bravura performances of many of the songs that were more restrained on the soundtrack, like “Is This What Feeling Gets?” and “Can I Go On?”, while lending her legendary voice for the first time to songs like “He’s The Wizard” and “Don’t Nobody Bring Me No Bad News.”
On some of the album’s songs, like the Trio Medley including “You Can’t Win”, “Slide Some Oil To Me”, and “I’m A Mean Ol’ Lion”, Ross almost inhabits the characters of the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion, respectively. In other cases, like “Be A Lion” and “Believe In Yourself”, Ross outdoes her own impressive work on the original soundtrack, with the former song featuring a gospel-inspired trio accompaniment as the singer delivers a stunning vocal.
The album’s version of “Is This What Feeling Gets?” features a stripped down, exposed and vulnerable Ross with a solo piano accompaniment, and hearing the recording for the first time gave me chills. Similarly, Ross’ alternate take on The Wiz’s showstopper, “Home,” is nothing less than breathtaking.
The “lost” album also includes a bonus track of sorts: the previously-unheard “Wonder Wonder Why”, which was written for the original Broadway production but cut from the show before its opening night in 1975. It’s long been rumored that Ross recorded the song for The Wiz, but until now it’s never seen the light of day. Ross gives “Wonder Wonder Why” her all, and the results are Grammy-worthy.
According to longtime Ross biographer J. Randy Taraborrelli, no one should be surprised to hear Ross give everything she had on “Diana Ross Sings Songs From The Wiz”.
“The first time I heard these recordings,” Taraborrelli reminisced, “I was blown away by them because they sounded like completely unrestricted Diana Ross performances. She didn’t have to adhere to the parameters of her character in the movie or of the Quincy Jones productions on the soundtrack, or to any parameters. That’s what fans are going to love about this album: it’s a full-on, unrestricted, unfettered Diana Ross performance that’s never been heard by the general public.”
Speaking of Quincy Jones, he would agree with Taraborrelli about Ross’ performance of the songs from The Wiz. At the time of the movie’s release he wrote of Ross’ work on the soundtrack “She was singing a minor third higher than she’s ever sung in her life. Diana Ross is the hardest working performer I’ve ever worked with and just as beautiful a person. I really think that…Diana’s moving reading of the songs…[supplies] the moments we needed for the film.”
“Diana Ross Sings Songs From The Wiz” is a stunning addition to any Ross, Motown, R & B, pop, or musical theater fan’s music collection. But more than that, it’s a previously forgotten, unheard project from one of entertainment’s true icons. I asked Taraborrelli whether we could look forward to more of Ross’ unheard treasures, or those of other Motown legends.
“I actually know what’s in store, but I can’t share,” Taraborrelli teased. “But I can say this: there’s a lot of stuff! There are Diana Ross & the Supremes songs in the vaults that fans have not heard yet, and the same holds true for pretty much all of the artists at Motown. If the fans continue to demand the material, and be vocal about it, then it will surface.”
“Some Motown fans are against the notion of digital releases,” Taraborrelli continued. “They demand CD releases, and they’ve made an issue of this by saying that they’re not buying any product that’s not released on CD. That’s not the position to take. By not supporting this album, or any of the other digital releases that have come out of Motown, the message that’s being sent is that nobody wants this stuff.”
“Those of us of a certain age are going to just have to surrender to the fact that CDs are on the way out, and there’s nothing we can do about that,” Taraborrelli continued, “the same way we had to surrender to the fact that we weren’t going to be able to get our vinyl or our cassette tapes. If we draw a line in the sand and say we’re not buying digital releases, we’re not going to get ANY releases.”
If “Diana Ross Sings Songs From The Wiz” is indicative of the quality of previously-unreleased material we have to look forward to from Motown, I couldn’t care less WHAT format they’re released in! If you’re a fan of the 1978 film, or you want something new to listen to as you wait for the December 3 live broadcast of NBC’s new production, download a copy of this album on November 27 and prepare to have your mind blown by the original diva.
“Diana Ross Sings Songs From The Wiz” will be available via iTunes, Amazon and all digital platforms on November 27.
Liza's Headband said: "If that's the case, then your statement of "All of the songs" is a complete lie. STOP SHILLING FOR THIS BROADCAST. We know you are part of the team.
You know what i meant. I meant that all of the songs from the broadway musical except for born on the day before yesterday will be in this. And i am not apart of the team, i am just a person who does his research
No. You have been hired by NBCUniversal to obsessively defend a broadcast that hasn't even happened yet. If you are telling the truth and not part of the team, then you have no insider access which means 90% of the crap you're spewing cannot be verified!!!
Liza's Headband said: "No. You have been hired by NBCUniversal to obsessively defend a broadcast that hasn't even happened yet. If you are telling the truth and not part of the team, then you have no insider access which means 90% of the crap you're spewing cannot be verified!!!
What are you talking about?i have never been hired by them. Honestly
From what we have seen, looks like ingredients that Disney uses on their materials. Lavish costumes and set designs. So far I loved some of the costume deigns and I predict that it will go well with families.