
There are three books I am 99 percent sure my beloved John has in his library: The Joy of Music by Leonard Bernstein; Apple of My Eye by Helene Hanff; and Instrumentally Speaking by Robert Russell Bennett, orchestrator of the music of Richard Rodgers. Bennett was the primary orchestrator for the following Rodgers & Hammerstein stage musicals, all now part of the foundation of modern American musical theater:
- Oklahoma, 1943
- Carousel, 1945 (entracte above)
- Allegro, 1947
- South Pacific, 1949
- The King and I, 1951
- Cinderella, 1957 (entire show here)
- Flower Drum Song, 1958
- The Sound of Music, 1959
…which pretty much makes him the true architect of “The Broadway Sound”. The sonic lines of his work can still be heard in every screen enhancement and stage revival of these classics, no matter how offbeat or “reimagined” the productions—listen to Daniel Kluger’s clever but correct re-orchestration of the title song for 2019 Broadway’s Oklahoma!
As you probably know, faithful readers, John previously recorded Oklahoma! a couple years ago and won some sort of award for it…so of course it was only a matter of time before he got on to R&H’s second classic score. Whether this means that the powers-that-be intend for my bonny to conduct the entire R&H+Bennett catalog I do not know. Personally, since he’s already batting 3 for 3 when it comes to his performance repertoire and my old boss Rouben Mamoulian‘s classic stage productions, I’d love to hear his complete George Gershwin opera, Porgy and Bess.
Actually, what I’d REALLY love, John, is a new recording of a work that even Richard Rodgers himself admitted was 10 percent Rodgers and 90 percent Robert Russell Bennett—Victory at Sea! Oh, I’d sooo love to hear you do something with this:
EXTRA! Some tunes from Carousel covered elsewhere on this blog:
- “June Is Bustin’ Out All Over” John and his JWO on Chandos
- “You’ll Never Walk Alone” John and his JWO on Chandos by request
- “You’ll Never Walk Alone” on Cheers, season 1 episode 15 my favorite
- “Soliloquy” from The Ed Sulllivan Show (1952) which includes the “when I have a daughter” bridge

John my love, if conducting this incredibly hot number (
Above the man of my desire:
Above: Lyricist-Composer Stephen Sondheim, Baritone/Host Earl Wrightson, Orchestrator-Conductor Irwin Kostal. Again,
Directed by Sidney Lumet, whose first film was about another dozen people meting out justice, 12 Angry Men (United Artists, 1957). Above Jean-Pierre Cassel:
What do you do when you’re a passionate actress still in love with a wounding bastard who’s a screen genius? You make the damn movie.
John and The JWO are okay, but just okay. I suppose when he was 28 my bonny’s loftiest ambition was to be the next 
