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What musicals would you absolutely want to play in the pit orchestra for?

Hey guys! This here is a pit orchestra-related question: what musicals would you absolutely want to play in the pit for, even if the musical hasn't been made available for licensing yet? Here are my top ten (in no particular order):

1) You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
2) Hairspray
3) Avenue Q
4) Footloose
5) Ragtime
6) Jersey Boys
7) Wicked
8) Crazy For You
9) Bye Bye Birdie
10) A Chorus Line
 
Depends on who is doing the production. There are some companies you couldn't pay me enough to be involved with regardless of what the show is.

I can't really think of any show I'd that I'd get that excited about playing. Much of it depends on what part/parts I'd be playing and the time commitment with rehearsal expectations and commuting time/expense.
 
West Side Story, of course. Provided they give me a bass sax to play. (And provided I could still play, that is.)

There are a whole lot of musicals I wouldn't mind singing for -- again, provided I could walk around the stage for the entire show without keeling over -- but I've not really known too many musicals that have an excellent score that are just wonderful to play. It's mainly just good accompaniment for the singers. Just an observation.

EDIT: you mention Avenue Q. A lot of good songs in that one.
 
I'm up for playing just about anything orchestrated by Jonathon Tunick. Most of Sondheim's shows fall into this category.

This is of course, based on the assumption that the full orchestration is used.

I don't want to play an emasculated version of any musical. You'd have to pay me a lot for that.
 
I'm up for playing just about anything orchestrated by Jonathon Tunick. Most of Sondheim's shows fall into this category.

This is of course, based on the assumption that the full orchestration is used.

I don't want to play an emasculated version of any musical. You'd have to pay me a lot for that.

Thinking about it, I wouldn't mind playing some Sondheim, preferably Into the Woods and West Side Story. If I could play Andrew Lloyd Webber, my preference would be his earlier works and not his later orchestral ones like Phantom. I'd play Wizard of Oz again too. That was some great music
 
One of my spring shows...

...is going to be Into The Woods. I haven't heard about the other two options yet - last year all three were scheduled on the same weekend, a real bummer.

In a good year, I play all three of them - tight scheduling when you are working full time, but easy as pie now that I am retired.

One of the problems that I face with shows is that all of my current contacts are at Lutheran high schools, made through the sidemen in my band. Unfortunately, the religious nature of these schools cuts out a lot of Broadway stuff - no 3¢ Opera (whores and extramarital sex), no Assassins (assassination) no Cabaret (whores and an abortion), no Evita (a whore turned politician), no Company (dope smoking, on stage sex scene), no Mame (extra marital sex, unwed mother) and so forth. It really cuts down the available field.

Whereas some of the schools here in town (the Episcopalian one, for example) do the shows seen above, my Lutheran friends are way too straight laced. Hell, the show doctor at one school cut the hinting at philandering union rep out of most of the scenes in The Pajama Game - too risque for those Lutheran elders...)

When I was young and working ten hour days with Uncle Sam, I used to spend my winter evenings playing shows at the American Theater and with the St. Louis Repertory Theater in Saint Louis. That's where I amassed most of my experience. Imagine 3¢ Opera with hot chicks from the 1960s in the female roles...

The pay was better too.

Ah, youth...
 
Thinking about it, I wouldn't mind playing some Sondheim, preferably Into the Woods and West Side Story. If I could play Andrew Lloyd Webber, my preference would be his earlier works and not his later orchestral ones like Phantom. I'd play Wizard of Oz again too. That was some great music

Into the Woods would be fun too.

As for WSS - it's only Sondheim lyrics in that one. Bernstein wrote the tunes.
 
I'd much rather see the show than be in the pit these days....
 
I'd much rather see the show than be in the pit these days....

Sometimes the best view is from the pit. I remember doing Sweet Charity with the bar for the dancers across the front of the stage. It was a happy pit, and we were glad to be there too.
 
West Side Story, of course. Provided they give me a bass sax to play. (And provided I could still play, that is.)

There are a whole lot of musicals I wouldn't mind singing for -- again, provided I could walk around the stage for the entire show without keeling over -- but I've not really known too many musicals that have an excellent score that are just wonderful to play. It's mainly just good accompaniment for the singers. Just an observation.

EDIT: you mention Avenue Q. A lot of good songs in that one.

There are a lot of great songs in Avenue Q. There's a lot of good songs in musicals! You Can't Stop the Beat (Hairspray), Happiness (You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown), Purpose (Avenue Q), Make Them Hear You (Ragtime), and tons more! I would love to play these songs in the pit!
 
I usually know I'm going to enjoy playing a show if it's orchestrated by any of my favorites:
Ralph Burns
Jonathan Tunick
Robert Ginzler
Everything they touch is golden.
 
I must say that since I've listened to the 2nd revival of How to succeed, this might just have ranked as my 1st choice in this list.

The new arrangements sound really fun, plus, their lead alto has such intonation !

But I guess these new arrangements will never make it to MTI and we might never have a chance to play them...

Still, the original version is very high on my list :D
 
Brigadoon. I'd much rather be in the pit in a pair of pants than onstage in that goshdarned kilt getup.
 
As a geezer, and still a music student (taking bass clarinet lessons at present), I would like to play in almost anything.

But, having been an opera fan since I was but a tad - I was converted by hearing Callas on a Saturday MET radio broadcast in the early 1950s - and since then have always dreamed of being in the Metropolitan "pit band." There's no chance of that of course, but I do buy opera scores and 'arrange' arias/etc for my saxophones (range appropriate, of course, from sopranino through bass) and inflict them on unsuspecting friends who, for whatever reason, seem to be fewer and fewer in number these days. I have been encouraged by listening to Joe Lovano's "Viva Caruso" and a number of Branford's classics - although they are in no way to blame for my efforts.

As to operas in which I'd give an eye tooth to play for - too many to list, but Magic Flute, La Fille du Regiment, Barber of Seville, and Il Trovatore for sure.
 
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