Showing posts with label musical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label musical. Show all posts

Friday, December 8, 2017

An Amazing Musical Suprise: MIM

What's in a name? I admit, “musical instrument museum” did not inspire me. I pictured a dusty set of cabinets with tarnished saxophones, even though a couple of well-traveled friends raved about the place. How right they were!
I have mentally renamed the Musical Instrument Museum (MIM) “The Amazing Museum of World Music” (the acronym isn't as clever but this place is so uplifting, illuminating and inspiring to everyone, not just musicians, it deserves a name that should have people flocking to it.


First, the building itself is elegant and handsome. Second, visitors experience the best of technology with portable headsets that automatically pick up transmissions when they approach any of the hundreds of video/sound screens that explain and demonstrate various musical styles etc. The exhibition rooms of mechanical music machines and play-it-yourself instruments on the first floor are just plain fun, and the “world of music” on the upper floor is nothing short of fantastic. Talk about seductive! As you pass from area to area, country to country, section to section, snatches of songs and sounds call out to you to stop and examine the unique costumes, cultures, musical styles and instruments from, say, Burkina Faso in Africa, or Latvia, or Israel ( the floor is roughly divided by continents - the US has a room of it's own).
Check out this YouTube video from MIM. The white-coated restorers are a little surreal, and this demonstrates only a minor part of their automated collection of tweeting birds, automatons and giant orchestral machines - a tiny part of everything you'll find here.

The variety is astounding, the depth and breadth of research impressive. But most of all, you will come away entertained, educated, enlightened, and yes, uplifted with the knowledge that wherever a human lives on the the planet, we all speak the language of music.
AND you'll have a new appreciation of the beauty of all sorts of instruments. Tickets run from $10-20, and the museum is open most days, with specially scheduled concerts.

Musical Instrument Museum
4725 E Mayo Blvd.
Phoenix, AZ 85050
(480) 478-6000 

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Aladdin WOW; Disney Knows How to Spend Money

Just saw the stage musical of "Aladdin" at the Orpheum in San Francisco. I'm crazy for musicals, and I've seen quite a few, including "Cabaret" (which I found quite shocking as a young teen) and "Hello Dolly" with Carol Channing, too many years ago to count. Of course I have my faves: chief among them "Wicked", the prehistory of Wizard of Oz, developed here on the left coast, and "Jersey Boys", an all-around great musical. "Book of Mormon", which I saw in New York, was cute, but not worth the ridiculous ticket prices it commanded. However, are over-the-top visuals are your thing? "Aladdin" is made for you. It's bling central.

If all extremely well-funded corporations spent money like Disney, we'd be sending donations direct to them. No expense was spared for this production, with more than 300 people working on the costumes, nearly 9,000 Swarovski crystals in one costume alone (and there are dozens of them), and, yes, live fireworks. No need to worry, since this show premiered in New York a couple years ago, and they have the safety issues down.




Orpheum interior
Speaking of New York, this is an excellent traveling cast and orchestra; Aladdin himself is played by the NY original who developed the role, Adam Jacobs. I shouldn't call him a NY original, however, since by his own admission he was raised among the pumpkin patches in Half Moon Bay, and he learned his trade here, eventually exchanging squash for the big apple. The genie was played by Korie Lee Blossey (a stand-in for regular Anthony Murphy), who worked his heart out to portray the high-energy - and very queenie - genie, with great success.

I had my doubts about a Disney musical, but I enjoyed it. Expect some corny one-liners, evil-but-entertaining villains, and a lightweight, transparent story line with, yes, a happy ending. As a triumph of musical theater, it's pretty meh, but all that means nothing as you bounce out of the theater with a light heart and dazzled eyes, humming the last few bars of the closing tune. You will have a great time, be thrilled by the intricately beautiful stage sets and special effects and those hard-working, incredibly talented singers/dancers/actors who fill the stage. And if your child is interested in theater, you can't go wrong with "Aladdin".