Legrand Marguerite 2008 Original London Cast
Fine songs well served but let down by lyrics and a lack of Frenchness
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Michel Legrand
Genre:
Opera
Label: First Night Records
Magazine Review Date: 1/2009
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: CASTCD102

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Marguerite |
Michel Legrand, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra John Rigby, Conductor Michel Legrand, Composer Ruthie Henshall, Singer |
Author: Edward Seckerson
The best of this score is to be found in the ballads. “China Doll” is very beautiful, very Legrand; “The Face I See” hooks you from its first shadowy phrase and haunts the score to its final double bar-line. There are a couple of shining love duets, the first of them – “I Am Here” – sublimating in a gush of piano-led orchestration that puts the swoon back into the West End musical. Legrand and Seann Alderking have done a beautiful job ensuring that every melody fulfils its promise off the page. The orchestrations are masterly.
But one thing that bothered me in the theatre is amplified here. The show’s leading lady, Ruthie Henshall, is known for her silvery head-voice mix and the choice of keys here certainly exploits it to the full. But is that really so good for the emotional thrust of her key numbers? One longs for a climax that sits bang in the middle of her chest voice. Her Armand, Julian Ovenden, has his reach extended, too, but his ringing high baritone has plenty of heft.
For the rest, the score’s drama, such as it is – like the tritely goose-stepping “Day by Day” (definitely not to be confused with Godspell) – proves horribly generic, sub-Les Mis. Herbert Kretzmer does duty on the lyrics, of which the less said the better. Let’s just say that the allusion to Sondheim in the melodic turn of the first ensemble, “Let the World Turn”, does not extend to the words. I miss, too, real period colour and, surprisingly, Frenchness in the songs. Notwithstanding a passing Parisian waltz and one half-baked attempt at an evocative chanson, I’d have expected more from Legrand in this respect.
There is one number – “The Letter” – which comes close to achieving the requisite dramatic lift-off. In it Otto, Marguerite’s brutish German keeper, forcibly dictates her farewell note to Armand while she, in a kind of internalised counterpoint, voices the full extent of her anguish. More from where that came from might just have saved Marguerite.
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