Rock God X wrote:We must be back to snobbery then!
Seriously, can you say in musical terms why
Don't Cry For Me Argentina is inferior to, say,
You'll Never Walk Alone? Or how
Music Of The Night is poorer than
Younger Than Springtime?
I think that
Don't Cry For Me Argentina is one of the best things that LW has written. I think it stands up against a great many songs by a great many other composers. I think it has complexity musically and is good lyrically. It's probably fair to say it's now a 'standard' and be can sung on its own and even in stylistically different ways. Given all that, it's probably fair to say that it's on a par with
You'll Never Walk Alone.
But then I have never said that LW has never written a decent song. However, my initial point remains: there's a top song there – but where are the other songs, from the same show, that are even close in quality and memorability?
A good popular show has to be more than one song. Okay, one song might become more famous than any other, but you need more than one good song in that show.
Which takes us back to
Les Mis: a very lengthy show (as I remember it), with three memorable songs (at a pinch) and a lot of the rest that sort of blurs together.
Two pars back, I mentioned "popular" – and it was for a reason. I haven't invoked Stephen Sondheim in this discussion until now precisely because I was sticking with 'popular', as opposed to Sondheim's oeuvre, which has largely* not been aimed at the widest, most 'popular' audience, and does other things.
If you're going to write a show where you're not producing a series of striking, memorable numbers, then there has to be something else. With Sondheim, it's things like more philosophically-inclined plots and music that is also more complex. In
A Little Night Music, for instance, the entire show is written in waltz time to echo the period in which it's set. It's never boring though, as Sondheim has the ability to create enormous variety within the limits he's set himself.
His lyrics can be remarkable too – sometimes, his rhyming could leave even WS Gilbert in the shade.
When Sondheim does thru-sung, he's good enough to make it work (he doesn't use it all the time, anyway).
But as I said, Sondheim is not a popular composer in the usual understanding of what that means.
But for a really good popular composer of musicals, there has to be more than one good (or even great) song per show.
As for
Music Of The Night – I think it's overblown wannabe-opera tosh.
And if you're going to carry that off successfully, you need to be Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caballé.
*
Follies and
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum are the exceptions, I think: the former because it's a pastiche/homage to an earlier period of popular shows and the latter, because it's a pretty broad comedy (a sort of a musical
Up Pompeii).