Scene: Now you've got to look out for this label glue...
Scene: Oh, hello, Pasquale...
I Like Ev'rybody
Scene Five Opening
Scene: Isn't it wonderful?...
I Love Him
Scene: Easy now...
Like a Woman Loves a Man
My Heart Is So Full of You
Scene: Hey, paesan!...
Hoedown
Scene: Rosabella! What's-a matter?
Mamma, Mamma
Happy to Make Your Acquaintance
Happy to Make Your Acquaintance
Big D
How Beatuiful the Days
[Scene]
Young People
Warm All Over
Track Listings (43) - Disc #3
Prelude
Abbondanza Reprise
Scene: Fellas? Hey, fellas...
I Like Everybody
Scene: Folks! Before the party begins...
Song of a Summer Night
Scene: Carissima! What's-a matter...
Please Let Me Tell You
Scene: Ma che c'e'?
Scene: So you're finally getting' out of town...
She Gonna Come Home Wit' Me
I Made a Fist
Scene: He's gonna be Tony's bambino...
I Canno' Leave You Money
Finale
Exit Music
House and Garden (Bonus Track)
Tony and Marie Duet / Nobody's Gonna Love You Like I Love You (Bonus Track)
Eyes Like a Stranger (Bonus Track)
Is It Fair? / Warm All Over / Old People Gotta Sit Dere an' Die (Bonus Track)
I'll Buy Everybody a Beer (Bonus Track)
Wanting to Be Wanted (Bonus Track)
CD 3: Act Three Prelude
Abbondanza
[Scene]
I Like Everybody
[Scene]
Song of a Summer Night
[Scene]
Please Let Me Tell You
[Scene]
[Scene]
She Gonna Come Home Wit' Me
I Made a Fist
[Scene]
I Canno' Leave You Money
Finale
Exit Music
House and Garden
Tony and Marie Duet/Nobody's Gonna Love You Like I Love You
Eyes Like a Stranger
Is It Fair?/Warm All Over/Old People Gotta Sit Dere An' Die
I'll Buy Everybody a Beer
Today The Most Happy Fella may not be as well known as Guys and Dolls or How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, but with this lavishly imagined "musical musical" Frank Loesser left us one of the finer nuggets fr... more »om the golden age of 1950s musical theater. Its story line may not have dated so well, but the show's many-leveled examination of the nature of love and bonding is timeless. Tony is a rich, aging Italian vintner who dupes the object of his affections--the beautiful young Rosabella--into marrying him. And despite Tony's initial deceit, Rosabella eventually does fall in love with him, but not before a sudden romance with Tony's handsome worker Joe leaves her pregnant. As in Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, complications are swept away through the healing power of forgiveness, and the musical ends in the truly classic sense of comedy. For this installment in its Original Masterworks Editions series, JAY Records has pulled out all the stops. This CD presents the first complete recording of Most Happy Fella and includes not only an illustrated booklet with notes but a separate full libretto (also published for the first time): a completist's dream even if you already own the 1956 OBC recording or the fine 1992 revival (economically scaled down for two pianos). There is a considerable amount of underscored dialogue, so listening to the three CDs here really is like a night out, encouraging you to produce the show in the theater of your mind; six bonus tracks make the picture even fuller. The Most Happy Fella is often described as on the "operatic" spectrum of musical comedy, and this applies as much to the lushly orchestrated, harmonically dense fabric of Loesser's score (intricately performed by London's National Symphony Orchestra) as to the big, juicy vibrato of its vocal style. Completed just before his sudden death, Louis Quilico's performance as the titular lead is warm and big-hearted, full of personality but able to blend in the show's wonderful assembly of ensemble numbers. Loesser's widow Jo Sullivan Loesser (the original Rosabella) makes a special cameo appearance, while daughter Emily Loesser brings to her own Rosabella enough fire and sexual chemistry with Richard Muenz's Joe to help counterbalance the character's sentimental passivity. Love of detail makes many of the smaller roles--such as Tony's sister Marie (played by Nancy Shade)--particularly vivid. It's a rich package for lovers of vintage musical theater. --Thomas May« less
Today The Most Happy Fella may not be as well known as Guys and Dolls or How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, but with this lavishly imagined "musical musical" Frank Loesser left us one of the finer nuggets from the golden age of 1950s musical theater. Its story line may not have dated so well, but the show's many-leveled examination of the nature of love and bonding is timeless. Tony is a rich, aging Italian vintner who dupes the object of his affections--the beautiful young Rosabella--into marrying him. And despite Tony's initial deceit, Rosabella eventually does fall in love with him, but not before a sudden romance with Tony's handsome worker Joe leaves her pregnant. As in Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, complications are swept away through the healing power of forgiveness, and the musical ends in the truly classic sense of comedy. For this installment in its Original Masterworks Editions series, JAY Records has pulled out all the stops. This CD presents the first complete recording of Most Happy Fella and includes not only an illustrated booklet with notes but a separate full libretto (also published for the first time): a completist's dream even if you already own the 1956 OBC recording or the fine 1992 revival (economically scaled down for two pianos). There is a considerable amount of underscored dialogue, so listening to the three CDs here really is like a night out, encouraging you to produce the show in the theater of your mind; six bonus tracks make the picture even fuller. The Most Happy Fella is often described as on the "operatic" spectrum of musical comedy, and this applies as much to the lushly orchestrated, harmonically dense fabric of Loesser's score (intricately performed by London's National Symphony Orchestra) as to the big, juicy vibrato of its vocal style. Completed just before his sudden death, Louis Quilico's performance as the titular lead is warm and big-hearted, full of personality but able to blend in the show's wonderful assembly of ensemble numbers. Loesser's widow Jo Sullivan Loesser (the original Rosabella) makes a special cameo appearance, while daughter Emily Loesser brings to her own Rosabella enough fire and sexual chemistry with Richard Muenz's Joe to help counterbalance the character's sentimental passivity. Love of detail makes many of the smaller roles--such as Tony's sister Marie (played by Nancy Shade)--particularly vivid. It's a rich package for lovers of vintage musical theater. --Thomas May
CD Reviews
Not perfect, but a must-buy nonetheless
Michael A. Benedetto | New York, NY USA | 08/10/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Given how much is wonderfully right with this recording, it's a shame that enough is wrong with it to deny it the fifth star. The problem lies mainly in the casting. Everyone sings beautifully, as one might expect from the albums of this series. But the book scenes rarely register with the proper impact because of the lack of chemistry between the leads and the lack of suitability of the leads for their roles. (Tony winner Karen Ziemba comes across as sweet and winsome, for instance, where the role of Cleo requires a genuine force of nature.)Still, the album is gorgeous from start to finish. The fine singing, the luminous stereo sound, the numerous restored cut songs (one performed by original Rosabella Jo Sullivan Loesser), the thick and elaborate booklets (essays, photos and libretto), and the signatures of both Loesser women (available to the first 100 people to buy the album through Amazon) are all major pluses. Emily Loesser is radiant as Rosabella, and the recently deceased Louis Quilico offers an excellent take on Tony.This album cannot replace the definitive and very complete original cast album, which stands as perhaps the best representation of a classic score as it appeared in a show. But it is still an invaluable supplement to that album; people familiar with the original will want to hear a longer and sonically superior take on it, and people unfamiliar with it might find the newer one a better place to start."
God bless Jay Records and the Loessers
Michael A. Benedetto | 08/17/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I waited over a year for this recording to come out, since I first heard that Jay was going to make it. So, obviously, my expectations were quite high, and I am happy to say that the finished product met every expectation and then some. The late Louis Quilico shows great passion and emotion. His voice can make you feel whatever Tony is feeling. This recording is a great final work for a great voice that will be sorely missed. Emily Loesser gives a vibrant freshness to Rosabella that is as equal to her mother's in the original production. And the added bonus track of "Wanting to be Wanted," sung by Jo Sullivan Loesser is a great bonus that brings the whole shows history back around to its beginnings. Frank would be very proud to know that his show has been so brillianly preserved the way it should be heard."
BRAVO!
Peter Prainito | Lombard, IL USA | 09/10/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Loving Guys and Dolls as much as I do I wanted to familiarize myself with this other Frank Loesser hit. I knew some of the songs (such as Standing on the Corner; Joey, Joey, Joey; and Big "D"), but never in the context of how they pertained to this musical. What a revelation! The story is about how an older vineyard owner deceives a much younger mail-order bride into marriage, with the usual consequences. I found The Most Happy Fella to be both joyous and touching. This new Jay recording possesses wonderful sound and superb singing from the entire cast. The generous libretto that is provided greatly enhances the enjoyment of the music and story. Oh how I wish a film was made of this masterpiece, like what was done for Guys and Dolls. Am I the only person who has observed a similarity between "The Most Happy Fella" and a wonderful 1950's movie called "Wild is the Wind", starring Anna Magnante and Anthony Quinn? HIGHLY RECOMMENDED, 10 STARS!"
Worth the Wait.
michael a. willhoite | 08/09/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The Most Happy Fella is unique in all the musical theatre. It hits a happy medium, possessing the weight of opera and the sparkle of musical comedy. The new recording, while not replacing the previous ones, is now itself irreplaceable. What a masterful production this is! The casting is successful all the way, but the real surprise is Emily Loesser as Amy. Her voice is perfection, a high, bright instrument incapable of a false note. All the voices are just right, though Quilico's Tony is a bit unshaded. He's a superb singer, no doubt about it, but the earlier Tonys, Weede and Malas, were far better actors. For this is a role requiring a brilliant singer-actor. No matter: just settle back and enjoy the rich singing.The producers of this fine set have given us a bouquet of goodies at the end, comprised of deleted music and scenes. They're all wonderful, but the cream on top is Jo Sullivan's rendition of "Wanting to be Wanted." It's a revelation. One can easily see why the more lyrical "Somebody, Somewhere" was substituted, but this song of naked longing is harrowing, and most welcome. I expect to play it again and again. Her singing, by the way, is just as fresh and light as it was forty-four years ago.This is, in short, a recording not to be missed. Abbondanza!"
A great CD
Mark Falconer | New York, NY | 12/25/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Of course, I guess any full recording of this great score would be worth owning, as long as the cast members aren't completely awful. Of course, it's not the OBCR, but what is? Louis Quillco has a darker timbre than Robert Weede, but that's not a problem. The biggest problem with Quillco's performance is that he fails to delve sufficently into Tony's character arc - this is a man whom we are told is shy and easily intimidated at first, but by the third act's "She's Gonna Go Home With Me," Tony is forceful and commanding. Quillco hit all the right notes of the character, but his choices seem completely seperate. It's like he understands each scene, but not how one leads to another. This doesn't make the ending as powerful as it could be. Emily Loesser, in her mother's role of Rosabella, is quite good, I think. For never having played the character, she seems to coalesce right into this group of actors and she generally finds new and interesting character choices. She doesn't have that powerful lonliness that Jo Sullivan had - her "Somebody Somewhere" doesn't match her mother's at all. But for the rest of the show, I think she does quite nicely, especially after she realizes she loves Tony. Her "Warm All Over" is quite distinctive and very good. Karen Ziemba has been criticized as being too nice as Cleo, but personally, I think this makes Cleo a more human character and less "comic relief." I don't quite understand a few of her choices, but overall, I really like her. She seems to have real chemistry with Don Stephenson, too. Although their "label scene" is, I think, a little too over-the-top. I like Stephenson's Texas twang, and he's committed to the part. "Standing On The Corner" is kind of slow, though, and the harmonies are oddly balanced (the bass part is a lot louder than the melody.)
Now we come to the worst and best cast members. Worst: Richard Muenz. Sorry, I love you, but you are far far far too old for Joe, and you sound it. I really do think that Muenz is terrific in the '79 video, but he sounds like an old man, which really makes a lot of the ending of the first act silly. He used to have a bright, brilliant baritone, and now he quavers on the top notes of "Joey Joey Joey." Not his fault, but they should've used a younger actor. Best: Nancy Shade. She plays Tony's sister Marie, and she is the only cast member on this recording that surpasses the original, Mona Paulee. The liner notes talk about how Marie is often played as an unhappy spinster, and to my ears, Paulee does just that. Also, it's slightly unbelievable to hear her completely American accent contrasting with her "brother"'s heavily accented English. Shade uses a slight accent, but her real triumph is using her desperate love for Tony and her real belief that Rosabella will never love Tony as well as she does. This makes the final confrontation in Act Three powerfully moving.
Of course, Shade has a secret weapon: the bonus tracks. Three of the bonus tracks are cut sequences for Marie that work together to create a fully three-dimensional character. Loesser's original first Tony and Marie sequence, that culminated in "No One Is Ever Going To Love You," is incredible. When I heard it, I immediately went back and listened to it again. And then I did it again. BRILLIANT. That man is brilliant, and that song is brilliant, and this show is brilliant. That 50$-plus CD is worth it alone for that one bonus track. And the CD ends on an up note: Jo Sullivan's recording of "Wanting to be Wanted," the song that "Somebody Somewhere" replaced. "Somebody Somewhere" is a better song, but Jo Sullivan sounds so good for her age! Possibly, even better than she sounded back in the 50s (I always thought she was a bit shrill on the OCR), and her acting is just as amazing now as it was then."