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This is the Army [A Decca Broadway Original Cast Album]
 
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This is the Army [A Decca Broadway Original Cast Album] [Import] [Cast Recording]

~ Irving Berlin (Composer), Harold Rome (Composer), David Rose (Composer), Lehman Engel (Conductor), Milton Rosenstock (Conductor), et al.
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Details

  • Orchestra: All Soldier Orchestra, Call Me Mister Pit Orchestra, This is the Army Pit Orchestra
  • Conductor: Lehman Engel, Milton Rosenstock
  • Composer: Irving Berlin, Harold Rome, David Rose
  • Audio CD (Jan 1 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import, Cast Recording
  • Label: Decca
  • Run Time: 71 minutes
  • ASIN: B0000A9D1N
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)

Track Listings

1. Overture: This Is the Army, Mr. Jones/I Left My Heart at the Stage ...
2. I'm Getting Tired So I Can Sleep [From This Is the Army] - Stuart Churchill
3. I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen [From This Is the Army] - Corporal Earl Oxford
4. Army's Made a Man Out of Me [From This Is the Army] - Staff Sergeant Ezra Stone,
5. Army's Made a Man Out of Me [From This Is the Army] - Staff Sergeant Ezra Stone,
6. What the Well Dressed Man in Harlem Will Wear [From This Is the Army] - Corporal James "Stump" Cross
7. How About a Cheer for the Navy [From This Is the Army] - All-Soldier Chorus
8. American Eagles/With My Head in the Clouds (Intro)
9. Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning [From This Is the Army] - Irving Berlin, Soldier Chorus
10. Going Home Train [From Call Me Mister] - Male Chorus, Lawrence Winters
11. Along With Me [From Call Me Mister] - Paula Bane, , Danny Scholl, Chorus
12. Little Surplus Me [From "Call Me Mister"] - Betty Garrett
13. Red Ball Express [From Call Me Mister] - Male Quartet, Lawrence Winters
14. Military Life [From Call Me Mister] - Harry Clark, Chandler Cowles, Jules Munshin
15. Yuletide, Park Avenue [From Call Me Mister] - Betty Garrett, Vocal Septet
16. When We Meet Again [From Call Me Mister] - Paula Bane, , Chorus
17. Face on the Dime - Lawrence Winters
18. South America, Take It Away [From Call Me Mister] - Betty Garrett, Male Trio
19. Call Me Mister [From Call Me Mister] - Bill Callaghan, , Chorus
20. Winged Victory [From Winged Victory]
See all 23 tracks on this disc

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars At long last and timely to boot, Aug 31 2003
By F. Behrens "Frank Behrens" (Keene, NH USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Having scored a triumph during World War I with his "Yip Yip Yaphank," Irving Berlin was a natural to be asked to create a similar revue for World War II, and the all-male "This Is the Army" did very well. An original cast recording came out in 1942. The very next year, the Air Force got its chance with Moss Hart's "Winged Victory." Four of the songs appeared in boxed set of 78 rpm discs. When it was all over, the returning GI was saluted in yet another revue called "Call Me Mister." That original cast album appeared in 1946. Now you can hear them ALL on a single Decca CD (BOOOO831-02).

There is a soundtrack recording from the film "This Is the Army" that is extremely fuzzy, making this Decca release far preferable, all the more so because it does give us the original all-soldier cast that included Irving Berlin himself singing (more or less) his immortal "Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning." Other songs include "I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen," "How About a Cheer For the Navy," and "American Eagles."

The focus here is how men made the transition from civilian to military life, and most of the problems they faced are mentioned in the opening number, "This Is the Army, Mr. Jones." We must also note with some sadness that the real problems of joining an army are never explicit, but the purpose of the show was to reassure and not to look at the "dark side of the force."

"Winged Victory" originally contained only two discs holding four songs: "Winged Victory," "My Dream Book of Memories," "The Whiffenpoof Song," and "The Army Air Corps." That last one thrilled my generation whenever it was played over the radio and especially during the wartime films; and it has lost none of its potency over the years. (The line about going "down in flame" still chills.) This was also the first military revue that included women, a fact which makes it even more of an historical document.

In 1946, Harold Rome lent his talents to putting together a revue for those returning to civilian life. Early in the war, Dinah Shore was able to praise "A Boy in Khaki," but Vaughn Monroe later in the war sang about looking forward to wearing "Just a Blue Serge Suit." I have a particular fondness for this set, because I owned a copy as a boy, played it to death, and eventually lost track of it. I never knew there was a 1950 LP version which included "This Is the Army," and I spent years trying to find the company that held the copyright that would get it onto a tape or (later on) a CD. So 57 years after the album first was released, my prayer has been answered!

The first number, sung by Lawrence Winters (a great portrayer of Porgy, by the way), takes place aboard a "Going Home Train" and is replete with optimism. A sketch in which a group of men are waiting to be assigned work for the day included Winter's rendition of "The Red Ball Express" on which the Black GIs carried supplies to the troops. He is the only one denied work at the end of the scene. We had an even older enemy than the Nazis to face.

A young newcomer named Betty Garrett delighted audiences with "Little Surplus Me" and "Yuletide, Park Avenue" in which many of the New York shops are mentioned in Christmas carol style. But it was her rendition of "South America, Take It Away" that brought down the house and raised her to stardom.

You get the expected comic number, "Military Life," sung by Jules Munshin (remember him from the film "On the Town"?) and two other men, while Winters sings "A Face on a Dime," a song that needs some explaining to those who were born after the minting of the "Roosevelt Dime." "Along With Me" and the full version of "When We Meet Again" are the ballads, while the title song acts as a finale number.

The press release announces, "Decca Broadway Salutes the Troops With the CD Release of Three World War II Musical Revues." The current situation, I am sure, helped prompt the release of this set; but whatever the reason, I am absolutely delighted it is finally available. The songs are mostly excellent examples of their kind, the lyrics for the most part clever and powerful, the historical value great. I really suggest that History Departments take notice and get a copy. All the textbook accounts of the war never give the human side of things, and this CD will go a long way to letting the present young generation know how we faced all-too-familiar problems back then.

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