Queen Music:

George C. Wolfes Harlem Song Original Apollo Theater Cast Recording




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'George C. Wolfes Harlem Song Original Apollo Theater Cast Recording
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Queen Music:
George C. Wolfes Harlem Song Original Apollo Theater Cast Recording



Music
George C. Wolfe's Harlem Song (Original Apollo Theater Cast Recording)
by Array

George C. Wolfe
List Price: $18.98Label: Sony

Salesrank: 259493

Released: November 26, 2002
Our Price: $23.74
Used Price: $1.98
Media: Audio CD

George C. Wolfe's Harlem Song (Original Apollo Theater Cast Recording) Track Listing:
1. Here Comes My Daddy Now
2. Late One Night
3. Well Alright Then
4. Drop Me Off in Harlem
5. Tarzan of Harlem
6. Shakin' the Africann (Intro)
7. Shakin' the Africann
8. For Sale (Intro)
9. For Sale
10. Drop Me Off in Harlem (reprise)
11. Doin' the Niggerati Rag
12. Take the "A" Train
13. Depression Chant
14. Hungry Blues
15. Miss Linda Brown
16. Here You Come with Love
17. King Joe
18. A Fable of Rage in the Key of Jive
19. Uptown Jazzmen
20. A Dream Deferred (Intro)
21. A Dream Deferred
22. Shake
23. Tree of Life
24. One Word

Editorial Review:
There are many things to like about Harlem Song, its unabashed boosterism first among them. The show was conceived by writer-director George Wolfe as a love letter-cum-tourist attraction for Harlem and that neighborhood's famed Apollo Theater. Today, most people know the Apollo for the televised, raucous It's Show Time at the Apollo, but when Harlem Song opened there in August 2002, it was a way for Wolfe to remind us about Harlem's central place in the history of American popular music. As for the other things to like: well, the revuelike show is packed with good songs, and the hot cast latches onto them with energy, good humor, and chops to spare. Wolfe has focused his efforts on music from the first half of the 20th century (no surprise from the man behind Jelly's Last Jam). This means that while James Brown recorded a famous album at the Apollo, you won't hear much '60s soul and funk; rap is ignored altogether. But then, the numbers you do get were made famous by the likes of Count Basie, Cab Calloway, and Jimmie Lunceford. How can you go wrong? --Elisabeth Vincentelli


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