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Lloyd Webber Back on Broadway
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16899 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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4 / 1990 |
2,077 Words |
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Herb Greer Herb Greer is an American writer and playwright who lives in
Britain and on the Continent. |
Saying something unkind about an Andrew Lloyd Webber show is like trying to cut a path through a room full of feathers with a baseball bat. Even where reviews are sour, as they were for Phantom of the Opera and the extremely silly and vacuous Starlight Express, advance sales and ticket lines continued to stretch away into the middle distance in London and New York. This guaranteed popular following makes news of the latest Lloyd Webber show.
The fact is that faintly praising or openly sneering at Andrew Lloyd Webber's music has become a sort of a fashionable middlebrow activity. I myself have remarked on his ability to send and audience out of a theater whistling somebody else's tunes, and the tone of much British newspaper comment on his latest score has been, well, tolerant. It is hard to escape the impression of an underlying a priori hostility to this very wealthy and seemingly critically invulnerable entertainer.
Of course, what the critics say about his music is quite correct. It is eclectic (that is to say, almost derivative, but never quite to the point of borrowing), it is vapid, thin, flavorless, facile, and in Aspects of Love, sometimes so empty as to amount to a kind of musical doodling. But this does not quite explain or justify the relish with which Lloyd Webber is chewed up and spat out by some critics.
Violating Expectations
One has to ask what all those haughty critics want from Andrew Lloyd Webber. What are the criteria they apply inputting down these processed tunes bought by the public in such great international
... (1997 of 11755 Characters)
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