Thursday, September 14, 2017

Sneak Peek: Listen To The Cast Album For The SpongeBob SquarePants Musical | Nickelodeon

The show’s score features original songs by Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, John Legend, David Bowie, Panic at the Disco, and more.



The cast of the SpongeBob SquarePants musical; Danny Skinner as Patrick Star, Ethan Slater as SpongeBob SquarePants, and Lilli Cooper as Sandy Cheeks; Photo: Joan Marcus

SpongeBob SquarePants, the new Broadway musical based on the hit animated Nickelodeon series, doesn’t officially arrive on Broadway until November 6, but fans can get a first listen to the show’s cast album starting today.

NPR is streaming the album that will be released September 22 from Masterworks Broadway. Click here to listen to SpongeBob SquarePants — The New Musical.

The show’s score comprises original songs by a roster of pop and rock hit-makers, including Yolanda Adams, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, Jonathan Coulton, Alexander Ebert of Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, The Flaming Lips, John Legend, Lady Antebellum, Cyndi Lauper, Panic! At the Disco, Plain White T’s, They Might Be Giants and T.I., and a song by the late David Bowie. Additional lyrics are by Jonathan Coulton.

Orchestrations, arrangements, and music supervision are by Tom Kitt.

Each song in the musical was written specifically for a moment in the plot. “All of the musicians got a brief on where their song fits in the story, so they weren’t randomly writing songs on the topic of SpongeBob,” book writer Kyle Jarrow previously told Playbill.com. “They knew where it fit in the story.”

The track listing follows:

“Prologue”
“Bikini Bottom Day” – by Jonathan Coulton
“No Control” – by David Bowie
“BFF” – by Plain White T’s
“When the Going Gets Tough – by T.I.
“(Just a) Simple Sponge” – by Panic! At the Disco
“Daddy Knows Best” – by Alex Ebert of Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros
“Hero is My Middle Name” – by Cyndi Lauper
“Super Sea Star Savior” – by Yolanda Adams
“Tomorrow Is” – by The Flaming Lips
“Poor Pirates” – by Sara Bareilles
“Bikini Bottom Boogi”e – by Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith
“Chop to the Top” – by Lady Antebellum
“(I Guess I) Miss You” – by John Legend
“I'm Not a Loser” – by They Might Be Giants
“Best Day Ever” – by Tom Kenny & Andy Paley
“Finale: Bikini Bottom Day Reprise”
“SpongeBob SquarePants Theme”


The album, which was recorded shortly after the show’s Chicago out-of-town tryout, reflects the show’s original world-premiere cast, including Nick Blaemire as Plankton.

To celebrate the SpongeBob SquarePants musical, Ethan Slater, who portrays Nickelodeon's incurably optimist and earnest sea sponge in the musical, has been treating audiences to live performances from the musical, including at the Nickelodeon All Staff Meeting in New York City's Time Square last night (9/13), and at The New York Times' Live Fall Theater Preview.

SpongeBob SquarePants will begin Broadway previews November 6 at the Palace Theatre, with an official opening night set for December 4. For tickets visit SpongeBobBroadway.com, Ticketmaster.com or call 877-250-2929.

From NPR.org:

First Listen: 'SpongeBob SquarePants: Original Cast Recording'

Not starting the SpongeBob SquarePants musical cast album with "Whoooooooo lives in a pineapple under the sea?" is like not starting an Abe Lincoln musical with "Four score and seven years ago." Okay, maybe not that. Maybe it's more like not starting an Oscar Meyer musical with "my bologna has a first name."

The Original Broadway Cast Recording Of SpongeBob SquarePants The Musical
Courtesy of the artist

Instead, after a quick prologue, the SpongeBob album gets underway with "Bikini Bottom Day," written by Jonathan Coulton. (Disclaimer: Coulton works for NPR on Ask Me Another, and I know him well enough that we say "Oh, hey!") Like nearly all the songs in the show, which opens on Broadway in November after a successful run in Chicago, "Bikini Bottom Day" is a new song brought to the stage by an established artist. In addition to Coulton, composers include Sara Bareilles, Joe Perry and Steven Tyler of Aerosmith, T.I., Alex Ebert of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes, members of Plain White T's and Panic! At The Disco and The Flaming Lips and They Might Be Giants and a bunch more. And on top of all that original music, the show includes David Bowie and Brian Eno's "No Control."

The story is cartoon-worthy, with a volcano threatening to erupt, a rock band, and a desperate need for SpongeBob and friends to save the day. You certainly do not need to understand it in order to understand the album.

What's clever, and ultimately satisfying, about the music is that all of the composers have bent their music to fit Broadway and to sound like kids' entertainment, while still sounding recognizably like themselves. "Bikini Bottom Day," for instance, has Coulton's playful rhymes and sunny melodic openness, while "BFF" has the Plain White T's' version of the pleasantly ingratiating acoustic-dude chill that's become ubiquitous since the mid-aughts. (Side note: I like to think all these post-John Mayer bands will spend their golden years in a touring nostalgia production called the Nice Capades.)

There are also some songs where the translation is less direct. There's no obvious musical similarity between Alex Ebert's "Daddy Knows Best," and his band's songs like "Home," but if you've ever seen them perform, you know that there's a certain ecstatic old-timey honk in their DNA, like they're perpetually about to tell you the tale of a feller who got himself in some trouble. "Daddy Knows Best" doesn't echo their best-known music, but it fits with Ebert's identity.

It's hard not to be delighted just by the talent that was assembled here. Yolanda Adams contributes a gospel jolt, and frankly, every musical is better with a gospel number in it, provided it comes from someone who knows what they're doing — like Yolanda Adams. The country song comes from Lady Antebellum, and the ballad is from John Legend. The screamer is from Aerosmith. In other words, you're in good hands.

There's a lot here that's likely to delight kids, including those who have found Broadway recently. If your kid likes the rap in Hamilton, it's well worth sharing with them T.I.'s "When The Going Gets Tough," which has its own repeatable phrases and word tangles that are fun to wrap your mouth around.

And of course they close with a take on the theme song. We do live in a society here.

--Ends--

Online / Social Media
Website: SpongeBobBroadway.com
Facebook: facebook.com/SpongeBobBway
Twitter: @SpongeBobBway
Instagram: #spongebobbway
YouTube: youtube.com/spongebobbroadway

More Nick: Brian Ray Norris and Wesley Taylor Join Cast of the SpongeBob SquarePants Musical on Broadway!

Original source: Playbill.
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