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             Cole PORTER (1891-1964)   
              Anything Goes (1934)  
                
              Reno Sweeney - Kim Criswell  
              Billy Crocker - Cris Groenendaal  
              Hope Harcourt - Frederica von Stade  
              Moonface Martin - Jack Gilford  
              First Girl - Judy Green  
              Second Girl - Rebecca Caine  
              Evelyn - Simon Green  
              Four Sailors - Bryan Landrine, Michael B. Wailing, Bruce Hubbard, 
              Del-Bourree Bach  
              Captain - Phil Ossafee  
              Purser - Dustin Stacks  
              Ambrosian Chorus  
              London Symphony Orchestra/John McGlinn  
              rec. 17-19 August 1988, CTS Studios, Wembley, Middlesex, UK.  
              Song texts not included  
                
              EMI AMERICAN CLASSICS 9489442 [74:22]   
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                I came late to John McGlinn’s Broadway recordings, welcoming 
                  the reissue of Annie Get Your Gun (review) 
                  and the Jerome Kern Treasury (review). 
                  Painstaking research and reconstruction, a roster of good singers 
                  – opera stars among them – and sassy, loose-limbed playing from 
                  the London Sinfonietta combine in recordings of real spirit 
                  and charm. Canny collectors will be pleased to discover that 
                  EMI’s big Broadway box – 13 CDs in all – can be had for under 
                  £20 online. In a market already awash with such sets, this must 
                  be one of the best bargains around.  
                   
                  In the meantime, EMI – past masters at the art of repackaging 
                  – have seen fit to reissue these discs separately, albeit at 
                  super-low prices. The downside is that the paperwork is skimpy 
                  and artwork uninspired; transfers are sometimes on the bright 
                  side too, but that matters little when the music-making is as 
                  infectious as this.  
                   
                  Cole Porter’s Anything Goes certainly had a difficult 
                  gestation, but the end result is a show with more than its fair 
                  share of classic numbers. The overture has all the fizz and 
                  frolic one expects from McGlinn and his big bands – the LSO 
                  trombones are especially fine, rhythms as catchy as one could 
                  hope for. It never ceases to amaze me what chameleons our best 
                  orchestras are, switching easily between core classics and the 
                  exhibitionism and extravagance of American musicals. The shipboard 
                  shenanigans get under way with Kim Criswell’s delectable rendition 
                  of ‘I get a kick out of you’ – how embraceable that burbling 
                  tune is made to sound – and a rousing, streamer-filled ‘Bon 
                  voyage’ from the Ambrosian Singers.  
                   
                  It’s so easy to surrender to this music, Cris Groenendaal and 
                  Frederica von Stade’s ‘All through the night’ full of stars 
                  and velvet skies. One of the hallmarks of this McGlinn series 
                  is the occasional use of opera singers – Thomas Hampson in Annie, 
                  for instance – a crossover that works pretty well; certainly, 
                  von Stade makes an attractive Hope Harcourt, the oh-so-distant 
                  object of Billy Crocker’s affections. But the ensemble pieces 
                  are even more delightful, the sailors’ shanty-inspired ‘There’ll 
                  always be a lady fair’ wonderfully warm and witty. It’s good 
                  to hear the late-lamented Bruce Hubbard among them – he made 
                  a real impact in McGlinn’s Show Boat and Rattle’s Porgy 
                  and Bess.  
                   
                  So, any nits to pick? No, not really. The cast is uniformly 
                  good, the playing is beyond reproach and the recording has sparkle 
                  and space. I’m not always keen on Criswell’s delivery though, 
                  her Mermanesque bawl and tendency to snarl under pressure a 
                  tad wearying after a while. In the meantime, there’s a conveyor-belt 
                  of great tunes, ‘You’re the top’ and ‘Anything goes’ dispatched 
                  with commendable zest. The trombones in the latter – so suggestive 
                  of Glenn Miller and the big bands of the next decade – are just 
                  superb, McGlinn upping the tempo in the most natural way.  
                   
                  The second act is no less enjoyable, from the knee-bending G&S 
                  pastiche of ‘Public enemy number one' – to von Stade’s dreamy 
                  take on ‘What a joy to be young’. Turn down the lights, kick 
                  back and just wallow in those languid rhythms, the mood judged 
                  to perfection. And for once Criswell’s bugle-like tones pay 
                  off in ‘Blow, Gabriel blow’. That’s followed by Broadway and 
                  Hollywood veteran Jack Gilford’s strangely vulnerable rendition 
                  of Moonface Martin’s ‘Be like the bluebird’. A real trouper, 
                  Gilford died of stomach cancer just two years later.  
                   
                  But I just can’t end on a blue note, for there’s still the mock-sultriness 
                  of von Stade’s ‘The gypsy in me’ and three excised items in 
                  the shape of ‘There’s no cure like travel’, ‘Kate the great’ 
                  and ‘Waltz down the aisle’. You know, with so many of these 
                  glorious McGlinn discs still to cross my desk I’m more tempted 
                  than ever to buy that big box. Really, so much fun shouldn’t 
                  come this cheap.  
                   
                  Dan Morgan 
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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