The
                    musical is one of the great art forms of the 20th century.
                    This 4-CD set, liberally illustrated, with both vintage and
                    modern recordings excerpts, traces its history from its origins
                    in light opera and operetta in Paris, Vienna and London through
                    to its transformation in the hands of the great American
                    song composers and lyricists. These included: George M. Cohan
                    the father of the modern musical, and Jerome Kern whose Showboat, marked
                    the coming of age of the musical; plus the classic stage
                    and screen musicals of Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Rodgers
                    and Hammerstein and Lerner and Loewe etc. CD4 takes the story
                    forward to today’s productions through the works of Leonard
                    Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, Lionel Bart and Andrew Lloyd-Webber. 
                
                 
                
                
                The
                    story begins with John Gay’s The Beggar’s Opera produced
                    in London in 1728, and we hear a short excerpt sung by Sylvia
                    Nelis and Frederick Ranslow with an orchestra by Frederick
                    Austin, recorded in 1919, of ‘Where I Laid on Greenland’s
                    Coast’ with the tune instantly recognisable as ‘Over the
                    Hills and Far Away’. The story continues, covering just about
                    every significant composer and musical through to the company
                    of Les Miserables singing ‘The People Song’. Along
                    the way, especially for older listeners like myself, there
                    are so many treasures, bringing a lump to the throat, a tear
                    to the eye, on hearing long-forgotten recordings like Mary
                    Ellis singing ‘I Can Give You the Starlight’ from Ivor Novello’s The
                    Dancing Years, that concludes CD2 as the history approaches
                    World War II. As Kim Criswell remarks “the war years saw
                    the curtain ring down on the old romantic operetta-style
                    musicals;” and of Mary Ellis she recalls, “sang with Caruso,
                    and was the original Rose Marie. And she lived to
                    see in the new millennium.”
                
                 
                
                Kim
                    Criswell who starred in the title role of Annie Get Your
                    Gun, belted out her songs, in the tradition of Ethel
                    Merman, in Bernstein’s Wonderful Town and starred
                    in so many other classic musicals such as Anything Goes and On
                    the Town, is the committed and enthusiastic narrator.
                
                 
                
                A
                    most enjoyable history that would have gained a place in
                    my top recommendations for the year had it arrived sooner.
                
                 
                
                    Ian Lace