Rating:
Genre:
Soundtrack
Release Date: 03/09/1993
Run Time: 75:30
Sony Music Entertainment celebrated the 50th anniversary of the partnership of
Richard Rodgers and
Oscar Hammerstein II in 1993 by compiling this CD-length collection of songs by the pair drawn from original Broadway cast albums and other recordings from the company's catalog, originally released in the 1940s, '50s, and '60s by
Columbia Records,
Sony's flagship label. During the era,
Columbia competed with such rivals as
Decca Records and
RCA Victor Records for the right to record original Broadway cast albums, and
Rodgers & Hammerstein did not contract with any label for more than one show at a time. So, for example, the first show that
Columbia got was
South Pacific, the fourth
Rodgers & Hammerstein production, in 1949. The label also got
Flower Drum Song in 1958 and
The Sound of Music, the final
Rodgers & Hammerstein show, in 1959, and it also released an album drawn from the
Rodgers & Hammerstein television musical
Cinderella in 1957. It did not get to handle such shows as
Oklahoma!,
Carousel, and
The King & I, but compilation producer
Didier C. Deutsch makes up for that by substituting selections from a 1952 studio cast album of
Oklahoma! featuring
Nelson Eddy and a 1964 studio cast album of
The King & I featuring
Barbara Cook.
Carousel posed more of a problem, which
Deutsch solved after a fashion by using a rendition of
"Carousel Waltz" recorded by
the New York Philharmonic in 1954 and conducted by
Rodgers himself. Still, such favorites as
"If I Loved You" and
"You'll Never Walk Alone" are missed. Nor does
Deutsch mention anywhere in his liner notes that many of the selections do not derive from the original Broadway cast albums, and the back cover of the album, which does not credit individual songs to particular performers, also obscures the point. That said, the album does feature a batch of major Broadway performers -- including
Julie Andrews and
Mary Martin -- singing some of
Rodgers & Hammerstein's best-known songs. It may not be the best possible one-disc collection of their work, but it is a very good one.
~William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide