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Kim Criswell
Back to Before and The Slow Drag
Kim
Criswell is an experienced Broadway performer who relocated to London some years ago. Her
US appearances included Nine (taking over as Claudia), Baby and eighteen
months as LA's first Grizabella. Her first West End appearance was as Annie Oakley - for
which she received an Olivier nomination - and she subsequently appeared in Elegies for
Angels, Punks and Raging Queens and Dames at Sea. Criswell has made
a number of show recordings for both EMI (including Annie Get Your Gun and Anything Goes)
and JAY/TER. Her Adelaide, in their recording of Guys and Dolls, is the equal
of any on record.
In the last few
years Criswell has appeared to great acclaim in concert and cabaret throughout Europe and
the US. The foundation of this success is her extraordinarily versatile voice which
ranges from Mermanesque belt to crystal soprano with equal facility. She is also at home
in a variety of styles, from popular operetta via Broadway standards to the blues, and
seems as comfortable singing with symphony orchestras as she does when accompanied only by
the piano of her regular musical partner, Wayne Marshall.
Back to Before
features Criswell in a program of mostly familiar numbers from the last thirty years of
Broadway and West End musicals. With few exceptions, these songs have been recorded many
times before but Criswell is able to find something new in most of her material. Very much
an actress as well as a singer, she offers up a distinctly different character for each
piece. While many singers succeed - and occasionally fail disastrously - by imposing their
particular manner on a song, Criswell is able to adapt her vocal and performing style to
suit each one.
She is at her most
effective in the more "classic" numbers. Broadway Baby is impressively
unaffected and she holds back the power until the very last notes, rendering the climax
even more effective. Don't Rain on My Parade is sung with abandon, her chest notes
gorgeously resonant on "I'll march my band out..." and the final glorious
"parade" held to the point where the listener begins to fear for her
lungs. The most successful item is also, perhaps, the least known. Irving Berlin's Mr.
Monotony didn't make it to the Great White Way until Jerome Robbins' Broadway
in 1989 - forty years after it was dropped from Miss Liberty. Criswell's
scorching performance and Don Walker's thrilling orchestration serve to make this omission
seem even more incredible.
Of the more recent
material, it is interesting to have Rainbow High as an alternative to some of Evita's
more frequently recorded numbers. Here the voice takes on a steely edge and the
interpretation is appropriately unrelenting. Criswell offers what must be one of the first
recordings (apart from the
original casts') of the soaring Back To Before from Ragtime and finds all of
Mother's potent mixture of strength, courage and slightly anxious anticipation as she
looks towards an exciting but uncertain future. She closes the disc with a number that
frequently acts as her concert encore,
a version of Annie's Tomorrow which thrills like no other and serves the song up
afresh.
Some of the material
is just a little too familiar. Even a singer of Criswell's caliber is unable to add much
to I Don't Know How To Love Him or On My Own and her interpretation of Memory,
though heartfelt, offers little that we haven't heard before. Overall, however, the album
is a fine representation of one
of the most delightfully versatile interpreters of Broadway material working today.
The
Slow Drag offers another side of Criswell's talents. It is the original cast
album, with additional tracks, of a 1997 show which premiered at London's tiny Freedom
theater and transferred to the Whitehall later that year. The show was a fictionalized
account of the life of jazz musician
Billy Tipton who, upon his death in
1989, was discovered to have been a woman. Criswell starred as the character's wife, with
the splendidly unlikely name of June Wedding, and delivered the bulk of the show's numbers
which included familiar standards such as More Than You Know, Why Don't You
Do Right and Blues In The Night, the latter receiving a particularly intense,
down an' dirty performance as the singer alternately croons, growls and belts her way
through the lyric. The added numbers include a touching My Foolish Heart, a
thrillingly brash You Came A Long Way From St. Louis and a witty duet with the
show's 'male' star, Liza Sadovy, on Baby It's Cold Outside. As an album, The
Slow Drag probably lacks the broad appeal of Back To Before but Criswell is in
fine form throughout and, while she can't challenge the great interpreters of jazz and
blues, her versions are highly enjoyable and all the more impressive for being delivered
by a white, theatrically trained singer.
Sadly, Criswell's
fine solo debut, The Lorelei, on which she and John McGlinn offer loving
recreations of 30's and 40's Broadway material in original arrangements, is no longer
available. Seek it out in the second-hand stores and also check out the 1993 cast
recording of the aforementioned Elegieswhich
contains her definitive reading of the show's finest song, the achingly sad little ballad My
Brother Lived In San Francisco. While this number is slowly creeping into the
repertoire of a few cabaret
singers it remains surprisingly little known and is unlikely to find a finer or more
touchingly direct interpretation than this.
- Mark Jennett