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Friday, March 6, 2009

Music of TV, Film and Stage

Welcome to an evening of spectacle and entertainment. The theme tonight is Music from TV, Film and Stage.

* From the musical "Annie Get Your Gun"
   There’s No Business Like Show Business
   Music and Words by Irving Berlin

* From the musical "Something Funny Happened On the Way to the Forum"
   Comedy Tonight
   Music and Words by Stephen Sondheim
     (You know I wasn’t always into just piano and choir.
     “One time I tried to learn to play the violin. As it turns
     out, I just wasn’t noteworthy.
     And now Comedy Tonight.)

* From the musical "42nd Street"
   42nd Street
   Music by Harry Warren
   Music by Al Dubin
     (Harry Warren was an Italian-American composer
     and lyricist. Warren was the first major American
     songwriter to write primarily for film and had more
     hit songs than any other composer of the 20th Century.
     He also wrote “Lullaby of Broadway” and
     “Chattanooga Choo Choo.”)

* From the movie "Casablanca"
   As Time Goes By
   Music and Words by Herman Hupfeld
     Herman Hupfeld was an American songwriter.
     His composition “As Time Goes By” from the film
     Casablanca was originally written in 1931 for
     the Broadway show “Everybody’s Welcome.”)

* From the musical "Anything Goes”
   Anything Goes
   Music and words by Cole Porter
     (Cole Porter is one of the few Tin Pan Alley composers
      to have written both lyrics and music for his songs.)

* From the movie "The Pink Panther"
   It Had Better Be Tonight
   Music by Henry Mancini
   Words by Johnny Mercer
     (“I would like a rum.” “A what?” “A rum.”)
     (This song was composed for the 1963 film
     The Pink Panther. In the film, Fran Jeffries sings
     the song while slowly dancing around a fireplace
     at a ski lodge in Italy where all the principal players
     of the film are gathered. In addition to the vocal
     performance, instrumental portions of the song
     appear in the film's underscore though out the film.

* From the movie "Star Wars - Episode 1"
   Dual of the Fates
   Music by John Williams
     (The text is from a Welsh poem “Battle of the Trees”
     and then translated into in Sanskrit for this piece.
     The translation is: Under the tongue root a fight
     most dread, and another raging behind, in the head.)

* From the movie "Lord of the Rings - Return of the King"
   Into the West
   Music and Works by Fran Walsh, Howard Shore, Annie Lennox

* From the movie "Sleepless in Seattle"
   When I fall in Love
   Music by Victor Young
   Words by Edward Heyman

* ;The Music of MGM
   Arranged by Greg Gilpin
     (We end with a medley of songs that came from
     the movies produced by MGM studios.
     From the end of the silent film era through World War II,
     MGM was the most prominent motion picture studio
     in Hollywood, with the greatest output of all
     of the studios: at its height, it released an average
     of one feature film a week.)

There were over 85 people at the concert. A little less that the winter concert but I always have more attend the Christmas concert. Considering we had the hurricane hit in the fall it was a pretty good attendance. It was a great concert and the choir sounded great.

Posted by Eric at March 6, 2009 10:58 PM
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