Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Best Songs From Best Scores: 1965 - 1966

Imagine a season with this deep a roster of Best Score nominees: Mame, Man of La Mancha, On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, and Sweet Charity. When the least of them is a beloved score from a short-run musical that was later a film with one of the world's greatest stars, I'd say it was a terrific year for the musical! Seriously, the other three are, for me, no-skip recordings, and they are each on my list of all-time favorite shows.

Best Songs From Best Scores
1965 - 1966

  

Nominee: Mame
Music and Lyrics by Jerry Herman
Best Song: Heartbreaking Duet: "My Best Girl"
If you were/are fortunate enough to have an "Auntie Mame" type person in your life (mine was my Nonna), then this whole show probably gives you all the feels. This song in particular makes me cry literally at just the thought of it. I know what that kind of love and devotion first hand.

Best Song:Character Entrance - Production Number: "It's Today"
As much as I love this jazzy number just listening to it, I'll never forget Angela Lansbury sliding down a spiral staircase in a gold pantsuit while playing a bugle. What an entrance! And what a song of making the most out of each moment we are alive!

Best Song: Bitchy Duet: "Bosom Buddies"
An absolute classic. What could I possibly add to the discourse around this number? It is funny, biting and a real tribute to friendship.

  

Nominee: On a Clear Day You Can See Forever
Music by Burton Lane Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner
Best Song: Character Introduction - Solo:  "Hurry! It's Lovely Up Here" - Daisy Gamble
A crazy premise - she can make flowers grow just by singing to them + a sweet delivery of even sweeter sentiments, and you get one heck of a character piece. Barbara Harris was one of a kind.

Best Song: Title Number: "On a Clear Day You Can See Forever" - Dr. Mark Bruckner
I'd listen to John Cullum sing the phone book, but this is a great title number, that is warm and even catchy. Talk about an ear worm! It's not exactly a toe-tapper, but it sticks with you long after the song is over...

   

Nominee: Sweet Charity
Music by Cy Coleman and Lyrics by Dorothy Fields
Best Song: Production Number: "Big Spender" The Fan-Dango Girls
I'll bet that as you are reading this, you can hear the opening notes of this classic. What's great about the song is that it works just as well when you can only hear it as when you see what goes with it. And those infectious lyrics... fun, laughs, good time indeed!

Best Song: Title Number:  "Sweet Charity" - Oscar
Ok, so technically, this song isn't one of my favorites in the OBCR, but I love the version of the song from the 1986 revival. It is an unabashed song of adoration. I'd kill to have someone love me enough to sing me a song like this one!

Best Song: Production Number: "Rhythm of Life" Daddy Johann Sebastian Brubeck and His Worshippers
I love everything about this song - the catchy, infectious tune, the snappy wordplay of the lyrics, the skewering of organized religion. On a no-skip cast recording like this one, how great that it starts act two so that it is easy to play over and over! (60s shows should be played on vinyl...)


WINNER: Man of La Mancha
Music by Mitch Leigh and Lyrics by Joe Darion
Best Song: Character Introduction: "Man of La Mancha (I, Don Quixote)" - Miguel de Cervantes/Don Quixote de La Mancha
I love how this song is integrated into the story, as the storyteller becomes the story before our very eyes. And the way it builds and builds... no matter who sings it is a thrill ride of a song.

Best Song: Counterpoint Quartet: "I'm Only Thinking of Him" - The Padre, The Housekeeper, Antonia and Dr. Carasco
This song walked so "A Model of Decorum and Tranquility" could run. But seriously, clever counterpoint songs, if done well, develop character and further the plot. This is a gold standard of the sub-genre.

Best Song: Soul Searching Ballad:  "What Does He Want of Me?" - Aldonza
You probably thought the classic ballad, "The Impossible Dream" would make this list, and it is a great song for sure. But for my money, this song that gives us Aldonza at her most vulnerable and confused. Dare she let herself feel love? Dare she let this crazy man in? No one has ever seen her before. What a beautiful song?

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