Posted: 6/15/19 at 12:47pm
I have always been a fan of THE WIZ- it feels as if the show has been mostly forgotten about, even though it ran for 1,672 performances at both the Majestic and Broadway Theaters, and took home seven Tony Awards in 1976, including Best Musical and Best Score, AND inspired the 1978 Sidney Lumet film starring Diana Ross and Michael Jackson.
I've recently found on YouTube a series of clips of songs from the opening night performance at the Majestic- its incredible. While the sound quality is tough at times given its age, the orchestra is clear in its top form, and all the cast give 1000%, including Stephanie Mills's *incredible* "Home", and "Be a Lion". It sounds like "Brand New Day" is in the process of blowing the domed roof of the Majestic into orbit. This is in sharp comparison to the OBC cast album, which cut out most of the score (including the terrific 4.5min overture), and mixed the orchestra into the nether regions of the sound scape, bringing forward the more "Motown-sound", the rhythym section, and burying many of Harold Wheeler's beautiful orchestrations. Every song of course also has to end with the characteristic fade out of the time period. It also seems to have half the energy of other performances I've heard of this cast. Were you there? What was it like? What was the energy in the Majestic?
Even with countless regional and amateur productions of THE WIZ out there, it feels as if a lot of this score has gone forgotten- even that incredible overture. With Wheeler's lifetime achievement award given out last Sunday, will we hear this score again as it deserves to be heard?
I know this isn't the forum for this, but does anyone know where I can find that complete soundboard recording of the opening night performance from 1975? I'd love to take it and try to clean it up a bit and hear some of the incredible writing of Charlie Smalls and Harold Wheeler.
Thank you!!
