We went to a concert last night starring Linda Eder and Steve Tyrell. Steve was the first act and I actually had never heard of him or if I did, I forgot. He is like what I would call ” a working actor” and one who plays character roles. Now I hope that doesn’t throw you all off but it is an impression I got. He’s been around a long time in the business and as far as I was able to determine he is not a singer who ever recorded one of his own songs or sang one that became a hit. HOWEVER, he is a very good singer even now and I say that because he has been singing, song-writing, musical directing for over 40 years. He performs at the Cafe Carlyle, one of Manhattan’s premier rooms, he has sung songs in several movies starring Diane Keaton, he has produced hits with Rod Stewart and Diana Ross. He just finished recording his ninth album, a compilation of love songs. He was really very good and his musical selections, many from his new album, were spot on with the Auditorium crowd. In between songs, he talked about famous lyricists and songwriters, and which earlier artists were his greatest influence. Steve received more than one standing and they begged him to sing just one more and he did.
He is an entertainer, he plays to the audience, he sang what they wanted to hear…and the reward for that is applause, appreciation, a standing ovation and those calls for just one more! Is he an artist? Well, every performer, actor, singer, writer, poet, photographer, musician, painter believes they are an artist and in that sense they are, as they have mastered an art form. Steve Tyrell is talented, has a good voice and is at ease performing. He was the warm-up act for the star, Linda Eder.
Linda Eder is cabaret singer and Broadway performer par excellence! Her voice is an instrument not to be believed! On the road to stardom, Linda had a 12 week winning streak on the Star Search show of the late 1980’s. She is an accomplished soprano, her range is wide and her notes crystal clear. Listening to her belt out a tune, the mastery of Judy Garland and Barbra Streisand quickly comes to mind. In fact, it has been said of Linda that she is a Barbra Streisand wannabe, which she handily refuted with the retort, “No, in fact, I am a Martha Stewart wannabe”- ahh, a woman after my own heart lol.
So here we have before us a very attractive woman, with an astonishing set of vocal cords and I am ready to be regaled with the great American Songbook standards she has been known to perform so beautifully. Alas, that is NOT what we heard. In the years since I last saw Eder perform, she has been on Broadway, married and divorce. For years, by her own admission, Linda sang only the songs her husband wrote. And that may explain a lot of what I found to be wrong with her performance last night.
Believe me, I don’t tout myself as either a musicologist or an expert on performance and entertaining. So the theory I am about to espouse may have no merit or a leg to stand on…but you read it and let me know what you think.
The biggest problem with Linda Eder’s performance was really two-fold; First of all like many artists, Eder took this performance opportunity to promote the songs from her new album, one that is comprised solely of her ex-husband’s songs. He is Frank Wildhorn, a Broadway composer, best known for his musical Jekyll and Hyde. You know that with very few exceptions, most songs written for a Broadway show, do not stand up well on their own. They are story songs, songs that move the play along and/or express an action or emotion of the moment. The glory songs of Berlin, Gershwin, Rogers & Hart, Arlen and other great songwriters of the past that emerged from a Broadway musical to become a hit are not the kind of songs that make up a modern day musical. There are exceptions, several from Andrew Lloyd Webber plays but it is not the norm. Story songs have many more words than the lyrics of the past. Think of Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered or Come Rain or Come Shine. These are lyrics that have rhyming meter, are easy to hear and remember, NOT so with the selection of songs chosen by Ms. Eder to perform. She told her audience how beautiful the words were to several songs she sang, the words, however, were a mystery to me and I believe most of the audience. I listened to what people leaving the auditorium had to say. Universally they loved her voice and then said of course they weren’t familiar with the songs at all which is also a way of stating you didn’t really hear the words anyway.
My husband and I spent an hour after the concert discussing this disappointing factor in her performance. During the show, we turned to one another and said, ” I can’t understand a word she’s saying”. Now as to WHY? Peter said that her technique overcame clarity and I wholeheartedly agreed; It’s her strong voice and her style of inflection in which we lose the words. It’s not that she swallowed the words the way some singers do, and she wasn’t over-powered by the metallic shrieking of an electric guitar. No, I believe it was as he said, her technique along with a few other factors;
Linda Eder is a cabaret singer. Cabaret by definition is a small room performance, an intimate occasion between singer and audience. Often the songs are more ballad-like than well-known standards and often written by either the performer or by a lesser-known composer or lyricist, nonetheless, still an artist in their own right. The Great Auditorium is a concert hall, not a cabaret room. The acoustics are fabulous but they are monstrous as compared to say, the Oak Room at The Algonquin Hotel. Add in the factor that lots of Broadway songs especially the show stoppers are sung in a belt-it-out style. So what we heard were a lot story-type songs with long sentences sung by a high range soprano with a slightly theatrical style in a massive hall. Did she not enunciate her words? I don’t think so. I am basing this on several clips I watched of her earlier performances where every word was clearly heard. AND, in fact, last night she did sing Blue Skies by Irving Berlin and it was perfectly audible-was that because we were already familiar with the words? Maybe and by the way, there were probably 100 fewer words in that song that any of the new Wildhorn songs Eder performed.
As a sort of test, I watched a YOUTUBE clip of Barbra Streisand performing the rapid dialogue song “Don’t Rain on My Parade” and then one of Eder singing the same song. It was almost as difficult to really understand the words sung by Barbra even though I have listened to that song hundreds of times. Too many words belted out.
To wrap up this very long commentary and hopefully not to leave you with a negative impression of one the BEST voices in today’s vocal community, let me say that Ms. Eder is an artist, her instrument is her voice, she is a Broadway performer not necessarily the same as an entertainer. She was not at ease with her audience, she wasn’t able to converse easily the audience in between songs. She refused a request even though it was at the end of her performance and would have been the just one more and one she probably could have sung a capella even if the band didn’t have the arrangement. All of this is NOT to say you shouldn’t see her perform. In fact if you have the opportunity you should run not walk to the ticket booth because to hear a VOICE the likes of Linda Eder’s is a rare treat and truly music to your ears!

Linda Eder
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TOP 10 Great Movies BUT BOX OFFICE FLOPS!!!
Posted in From My Point of View - Personal commentary on Movies and Books, Thursday's Top Ten, tagged box office failures, Elizabeth Taylor, flops, great movies, Jimmy Stewart, Johnny Depp, Judy Garland, Kevin Costner, Martin Scorcese, movies, Orson Welles, Robert DeNiro, Tim Robins, Toto on November 7, 2014| 3 Comments »
It’s so true…many movies we’ve come to love and make classic were really box office flops in their day! You’re going to be shocked by some of these, I’m sure.
Orson Welles in Citizen Kane
1. CITIZEN KANE: Most often listed as the Number 1 top movie on many lists and the must-see handbook for aspiring film-makers and actors, this movie didn’t do much for Orson Welles career at the time. Initial reviews were favorable but much of the American public was shielded from them because Randolph Hearst, the newspaper mogul, blocked any mention of the movie, believing the character was based on him.
2. IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE: There wouldn’t be a holiday season if there weren’t a broadcast of this now-loved classic Christmas story. It’s hard to imagine a film watched so often by so many could have failed miserably in the theaters, but it did. The movie cost $3.18M to make and only grossed $3.3M.
3. BLADE RUNNER: With an opening weekend revenue of only $6M, things looked dim for this movie that cost $28M to make. It received mixed reviews, while viewers were awed by the imagery, they were alienated by the narrative. It probably would have been better if the studio had left Ridley Scott alone and kept his original vision instead of meddling with the final cut. The film resurfaced with a Director’s Cut in 1992 prompting critical reevaluation and huge home video sales.
4. RAGING BULL: A favorite of mine as I am in still in awe of Robert DeNiro who totally transformed his body to play the thuggish Jake LaMotta. It was nominated for 8 Oscars but tanked at the box office. It lacked the feel-good factor of ROCKY and alienated the viewers first by being shot in black and white which was exactly how it should have been done artistically and then there was the prevalent violence for 2 hours – most people go to the movies to relax and enjoy some form of escapism.
5. THE WIZARD OF OZ: Can you believe this movie actually lost money? It cost $2.7M to make and garnered $3M in its opening run. Viewers did not flock to see Judy Garland, a cute dog and a tornado in technicolor. However, over the years and many re-releases, the viewing of The Wizard of Oz has become an annual event in many of America’s households.
Shawshank Redemption
6. SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION: Tell the truth now, do you switch the channel when you see Shawshank Redemption playing? The film finally found its audience on TV. In 1994 when it was released, it was overwhelmed by PULP FICTION AND FORREST GUMP. It cost $25M to make and grossed $28M.
7. THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW:$ Budget-$1.4M. This one requires some explanation. Despite making next to nothing ($22,000) its opening weekend, the late night flick is actually the longest running movie in continuous theatrical release, attracting a cult of folks who dress up and shout along to the campy comedy with kick-ass songs. With ticket sales, and home movie availability, it has reportedly made over $365 million! Just like the movie itself, it’s financial success is in a category of its own.
8.THE FIGHT CLUB: Budgeted at $63M it grossed $37M. Maybe the first rule of Fight Club shouldn’t have been “Don’t talk about Fight Club.” David Fincher’s adaptation of the Chuck Palahniuk novel was the victim of a botched marketing campaign (or at least that’s what the studios are saying). It lived on through home video sales.
9. THE BIG LEBOWSKI: Happy to admit I’m part of the cult club that will watch The Big Lebowski whenever it is on TV. Not many box office bombs can claim such a cult following, an annual fan festival and religion! Released in 1998 during the immensely successful box office run of “Titanic,” the film starring Jeff Bridges, which cost $15 million to make, debuted to $5.5 million opening weekend. The film recieved mixed reviews with Variety calling it “hollow and without resonance” while others like Roger Ebert found it “weirdly engaging” like the Dude himself. The film eventually pulled in $17 million at theaters, but it wasn’t until years later fans used the internet and social media to re-evaluate the film and turn it into a cult sensation.
10. I’m leaving number 10 blank and giving you all some suggestions. What do you think was a great film but one didn’t make any money? Here are a few; The Fountain, Water World, Assination of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, Ed Wood, Cleopatra, Heathers, Vertigo, Willie Wonka and The Chocolate Factory, The Postman, The Hudsucker Proxy, Tron-The Legacy, Donny Darko, Once Upon A Time In America
OK guys it’s your hands, let’ s vote for number 10 – one of the above or one of your own.
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