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Finding a Musical Style:
How Do You Find the Right Sound for Your Score?

“Trust your audience, kid. They’re just as smart as you are.”
– Lorenz Hart (to a young Richard Rodgers)

Notes on Broadway: Intimate Conversations With Broadway's Greatest Songwriters

  • Leonard Bernstein talks about striking a balance between the “poetic” and “realistic” in the score for ‘West Side Story’ (pg. 15)
  • Cy Coleman values research (pg. 52)
  • Cy Coleman hits on comic opera for ‘On the Twentieth Century’ (pg. 52)
  • Betty Comden says improvisation lead to the comic opera flavor of ‘On the Twentieth Century’ (pg. 69)
  • Marvin Hamlisch starts with a rhythm (pg. 143)
  • John Kander concentrates on developing “riffs”  (pg. 198)
  • Henry Krieger finds “a different musical tone for each personality (pg. 212)
  • Charles Strouse admits to writing a hit song for ‘Annie’ that’s out of style with the rest of the score (pg. 282)
  • Jule Styne shuts out all other music to focus on writing for character (pg. 288)

The Art Of The American Musical: Conversations With The Creators

  • Betty Comden talks about when her collaborators did and didn’t write a pastiche score (pg. 65)
  • Stephen Sondheim talks about finding his “voice” in the score to ‘Company’ (pg. 195)
  • Stephen Sondheim describes how harmony can give a score “character” (pg. 199)
  • Charles Strouse does “a great deal of sketching” (pg. 225)
  • Stephen Flaherty respects tradition (pg. 2)
  • John Kander says he listens and listens to music from the era in which his show is set, and then tries to forget it (pg. 104)
  • Burton Lane sets the title of ‘On a Clear Day”,” and then it takes Alan Jay Lerner nine tries to write the rest of the lyric (pg. 129)

Ever After: The Last Years of Musical Theater and Beyond

  • Garth Drabinsky identifies his favorite style of theater music (pg. 176)
  • Adam Guettel describes finding a musical language for ‘Floyd Collins’ (pg. 119)
  • Adam Guettel focuses on giving actors a score that prompts them to give energetic performances (pg. 123)
  • Julie Taymor pieces together a score for ‘The Lion King’ from multiple sources (pg. 148)

• • •

Finding A Musical Style:
To Rhyme or Not to Rhyme?

• • •

Finding a Musical Style:
Setting Words to Music

Notes on Broadway: Intimate Conversations With Broadway's Greatest Songwriters

  • Gretchen Cryer discusses the “lyrics first” approach (pg. 78)
  • Tom Eyen and Henry Krieger experiment at the piano together to write ‘Dreamgirls’ (pg. 210)
  • Sheldon Harnick discusses the “music first” approach  (pg. 162)
  • Sheldon Harnick employs dummy lyrics to collaborate with Richard Rodgers  (pg. 166)
  • Hal David does it a phrase at a time  (pg. 91)
  • John Kander goes to Fred Ebb’s house  (pg. 197)
  • Tim Rice provides his composers with a story line to respond to musically (pg. 236)
  • Mary Rodgers recalls that Marshall Barer’s lyrics came complete with stress beats and bar lines  (pg. 245)
  • Charles Strouse contrasts working with Lee Adams, Allen Jay Lerner and Martin Charnin  (pg. 281)
  • Jule Styne steals the biggest laugh in ‘Bells are Ringing’ for the show’s eleven o’clock number  (pg. 291)