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Post by richey on Mar 8, 2017 13:28:30 GMT
Surprised no-one's mentioned the gems of the Joseph Megamix and Philip Scofield's Close Every Door!
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Post by anthony40 on Mar 8, 2017 13:44:27 GMT
Everyone's forgetting how huge West Side Story was, not only as a stage show, movie and recording and how long it stayed in the charts at the time.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2017 13:49:27 GMT
We also can't forget Rent and If/Then both being in the Top 10, as well as Dear Evan Hansen!
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2017 13:59:33 GMT
They didn't chart, but Frances Ruffelle released 'Stranger To The Rain from Children Of Eden which i had on a cassette single and who could forget 'Who Are You' from 'the people's musical 'Bernadette'.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2017 15:27:51 GMT
She also released an slightly more percussive version of On My Own. Had that on 45rpm too!
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Post by kathryn on Mar 8, 2017 15:47:29 GMT
I was just about to say that 'Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)' by Jay-Z was a more recent hit, and then checked when it actually came out - 1998!!
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Post by kathryn on Mar 8, 2017 16:09:47 GMT
Even successful stuff like "No matter what" had to be changed to the typical boyband sound of the 90s to become a chart success. That was actually a bit of an accidental hit. There was a misunderstanding - ALW thought he was getting Boyzone when he was actually only getting Stephen Gately. The original version Gately recorded was much more traditionally musical theatre. But Boyzone were doing a charity gig - IIRC it was for Capital, it was definitely broadcast on the radio - and they ended up doing a group version of it. Not sure how it came about - it might have just been that the performance was meant to promote the musical - Tina Arena was on too I think - and they'd booked Boyzone, not Stephen Gately, or it might have been down to ALW's misunderstanding. It was meant to be a one-off thing - the song wasn't on their current album at all, and it was pretty obvious what album track was meant to be the next single. But Capital loved it and started playing the version they'd recorded at the gig, calling it 'Boyzone's next single' - which of course no-one else was playing, because no-one else had a copy of it. They were playing it pretty much every hour. The band realised pretty sharpish they had a hit on their hands and decided they should record and release it, and re-issue the album with it on.
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Post by johartuk on Mar 8, 2017 16:17:09 GMT
Surprised no-one's mentioned the gems of the Joseph Megamix and Philip Scofield's Close Every Door! Any Dream Will Do also had a re-release in 2007, by Lee Mead. What I Did For Love from A Chorus Line and This Is The Moment from Jekyll & Hyde seem to have been covered quite a few times by quite a few people.
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Post by viserys on Mar 8, 2017 16:48:26 GMT
Even successful stuff like "No matter what" had to be changed to the typical boyband sound of the 90s to become a chart success. That was actually a bit of an accidental hit. There was a misunderstanding - ALW thought he was getting Boyzone when he was actually only getting Stephen Gately. The original version Gately recorded was much more traditionally musical theatre. Ah, interesting. I had no idea. I do have the CD single though (and the CD single of Hannah Waddingham's "Our kind of love". And the maxi vinyl of Frances Ruffelle's "Stranger to the rain" ... and other stuff that was meant to chart, like Barbra Streisand's "With One Look" before Sunset Boulevard came out. I think that today's musical producers have perhaps given up trying to get a "hit song" to chart by creating an extra version with a famous singer/band, even when it would be easy/obvious like Gary Barlow releasing a single with a big song from The Girls...
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Post by musicallady on Mar 8, 2017 19:56:43 GMT
Frances Ruffelle released 'Stranger To The Rain from Children Of Eden which i had on a cassette single I have that on 45 vinyl. Memories! I have it on CDS.
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Post by richey on Mar 9, 2017 10:38:23 GMT
Coincidently on this morning's Popmaster on Radio 2 there's been a bonus round "hits from the Musicals" and there were a few more to add to the list. Kenny Ball performing March of the Siamese Children, Harry Secombe singing If I Ruled the World and Shirley Bassey with a lovely rendition of Climb Ev'ry Mountain
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Post by ukpuppetboy on Mar 9, 2017 11:45:13 GMT
Seems like this is predominantly an ALW marketing tool which has been replaced by numerous reality tv casting shows. The man is not daft.
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Post by madsonmelo on Mar 10, 2017 0:43:50 GMT
Mika and Ariana Grande with Popular Song
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Post by groupbooker on Mar 11, 2017 0:11:37 GMT
Love the musical Finding Neverland but the "Album" that was brought out before the cast album is DIRE!!
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Post by joem on Mar 11, 2017 0:14:52 GMT
These days hits spawn musicals, rather than the opposite.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 7, 2023 18:34:15 GMT
Was just watching Linda Lewis singing the Evita song on YouTube which reminded me of this thread. Six years later…. Have we seen any more songs from musicals get into the charts? Or did we miss any the first time around?
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Post by TallPaul on Mar 7, 2023 18:46:05 GMT
Blimey! Even I don't remember this thread.
We Don't Talk About Bruno is sort of from a musical. It did very well in the hit parade.
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Post by saral on Mar 7, 2023 21:21:22 GMT
Taylor Swift's Beautiful Ghosts from the Cats film, not sure if that counts?
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Post by WireHangers on Mar 7, 2023 22:36:16 GMT
Was just watching Linda Lewis singing the Evita song on YouTube which reminded me of this thread. Six years later…. Have we seen any more songs from musicals get into the charts? Or did we miss any the first time around? Mika and Ariana Grande’s version of Popular?
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Post by marob on Mar 7, 2023 22:45:29 GMT
Would we include The Greatest Showman in this? Hugely popular musical, but not theatre.
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Post by viserys on Mar 8, 2023 6:58:35 GMT
Would we include The Greatest Showman in this? Hugely popular musical, but not theatre. But did it spawn a single "big" hit that topped the charts and was known to everyone, not just theatre circles? I think the chart-topping stuff died off in the 90s. For me this was also the decade when musical theatre disassociated itself from mainstream music with a flood of subpar Les Mis-style weepies, while pop music became more beat driven and indie rock had a revival with the Britpop wave. If anything, shows like Hamilton and Six have bridged the widening gap between pop(ular) music and musical theatre again, but not with single outstanding songs, just as a whole that reaches a younger generation beyond the typical theatregoer. Even massive stars can't really help when the product doesn't reach the masses, see Taylor Swift and Beautiful Ghosts (which wasn't a great song to begin with). And while some of the movie adaptations of popular musicals have been moderately successful, none were REAL smash hits at the box office. Some of the movie musicals like The Greatest Showman and A Star Is Born did better, but have they really made a lingering impact? I loved the songs from A Star Is Born like "Shallow" and have them in my playlists to this day, but I don't think they came anywhere near the long lasting success of either the big classics from the Golden Age or the big ALW chart toppers.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 8, 2023 7:38:54 GMT
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 8, 2023 7:39:48 GMT
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Post by danb on Mar 8, 2023 8:26:17 GMT
The whole chart system has been totally overhauled since the nineties though, so songs don’t ‘behave’ like they used to. Thats how we get random songs that have been sung on ‘BGT’ dipping into the chart for a week.
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Post by WireHangers on Mar 8, 2023 17:54:58 GMT
Would we include The Greatest Showman in this? Hugely popular musical, but not theatre. But did it spawn a single "big" hit that topped the charts and was known to everyone, not just theatre circles? I think the chart-topping stuff died off in the 90s. For me this was also the decade when musical theatre disassociated itself from mainstream music with a flood of subpar Les Mis-style weepies, while pop music became more beat driven and indie rock had a revival with the Britpop wave. If anything, shows like Hamilton and Six have bridged the widening gap between pop(ular) music and musical theatre again, but not with single outstanding songs, just as a whole that reaches a younger generation beyond the typical theatregoer. Even massive stars can't really help when the product doesn't reach the masses, see Taylor Swift and Beautiful Ghosts (which wasn't a great song to begin with). And while some of the movie adaptations of popular musicals have been moderately successful, none were REAL smash hits at the box office. Some of the movie musicals like The Greatest Showman and A Star Is Born did better, but have they really made a lingering impact? I loved the songs from A Star Is Born like "Shallow" and have them in my playlists to this day, but I don't think they came anywhere near the long lasting success of either the big classics from the Golden Age or the big ALW chart toppers. This Is Me went to #3 on the UK charts and was easily one of the biggest songs on the year.
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