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Music CD - Jeff Marx, Robert Lopez, John Tartaglia, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Avenue Q: Avenue Q (2003 Original Broadway Cast)

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Music CD: Avenue Q (2003 Original Broadway Cast) Artist: Jeff Marx, Robert Lopez, John Tartaglia, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Avenue Q
List Price: $18.97
Our Price: $9.99
Your Save: $ 8.98 ( 47% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: RCA Victor Broadway
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. The Avenue Q Theme - Company 2. What Do You Do with a B.A. in English? - John Tartaglia 3. It Sucks To Be Me - Jordan Gelber, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, John Tartaglia, Rick Lyon, Ann Harada, Natalie Venetia Belcon, Jennifer Barnhart 4. If You Were Gay - Rick Lyon with John Tartaglia 5. Purpose - John Tartaglia & Company 6. Everyone's A Little Bit Racist - John Tartaglia, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Natalie Venetia Belcon, Jordan Gelber, Ann Harada 7. The Internet Is For Porn - Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Rick Lyon & the Guys 8. Mix Tape - Stephanie D'Abruzzo, John Tartaglia 9. I'm Not Wearing Underwear Today - Jordan Gelber with Ann Harada 10. Special - Stephanie D'Abruzzo with the Guys 11. You Can Be as Loud as the Hell You Want (When You're Makin' Love) - Natalie Venetia Belcon, Rick Lyon, Jennifer Barnhart & Ensemble with Stephanie D'Abruzzo, John Tartaglia, Jordan Gelber, Ann Harada 12. Come True - John Tartaglia, Stephanie D'Abruzzo with Rick Lyon 13. My Girlfriend, Who Lives in Canada - John Tartaglia 14. There's a Fine, Fine Line - Stephanie D'Abruzzo 15. There Is Life Outside Your Apartment - Jordan Gelber, John Tartaglia & Company 16. The More You Ruv Someone - Ann Harada, Stephanie D'Abruzzo 17. Schadenfreude - Natalie Venetia Belcon, Rick Lyon 18. I Wish I Could Go Back to College - Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Rick Lyon, John Tartaglia 19. The Money Song - Rick Lyon, John Tartaglia, Natalie Venetia Belcon with Jordan Gelber, Ann Harada, Jennifer Barnhart 20. School for Monsters/The Money Song (Reprise) - Rick Lyon & Company 21. There's A Fine, Fine Line (Reprise) - John Tartaglia, Stephanie D'Abruzzo with Ann Harada 22. What Do You Do With A B.A. In English? (Reprise) - Rick Lyon with Natalie Venetia Belcon, John Tartaglia, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Jordan Gelber & Jennifer Barnhart 23. For Now - Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Jordan Gelber, Natalie Venetia Belcon, Ann Harada, Rick Lyon, John Tartaglia, Jennifer Barnhart
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0828765592321 Format: Cast Recording Label: RCA Victor Broadway Manufacturer: RCA Victor Broadway Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: RCA Victor Broadway Release Date: 2003-10-07 Studio: RCA Victor Broadway
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Catchy, fun. Comment: No one will ever mistake this for Camelot, South Pacific, etc. But if you're in the right frame of mind, this is one of the most enjoyable musical OCRs on the market.
The lyrics are clever and honest - sometimes a little too honest ("The Internet is For Porn").
The tunes have a Sesame Street-esque hummability, and it's just a fun CD.
Standouts are D'Abruzzo's "Fine, Fine Line" and the Cast's finale, "For Now".
If you've ever been broke and unemployed and turning 33, this recording is for you.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Avenue Q The Musical Comment: I choose the original sound track from the musical and am glad I did. It was very clear, easy to understand and absolutely hilarious. The description that I had heard before I bought it; "Sesame Street meets South Park" is right on track. It was a great combination of ribald humor and just plain funny stuff. I highly recommend it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Genuinely Funny!! Comment: I heard this CD for the first time in my friends car after I told him I had never heard it before. From "BA in English" on I was hooked. I thought this was the funniest thing I had heard since Spamalot, and I went and bought the CD that afternoon. Before, I was afraid to by this CD because I heard it was all about Gay people. Gay people running around and singing about being Gay. This is only slightly true. Yes there is a gay person in it, but the show itself is a hilarious musical comedy about puppets and their ridiculous problems. For me, this was an instant classic. Besides all the funny songs, thier are also some very pretty, and sometimes touching ballads that make this a balanced musical experience. I am not going to say I love every track, there are a couple I skip over most of the time. But I would most definately reccomend this musical to someone who is not easily offended and is willing to laugh at the world we live in. But heed the parental advisory sticker, this is not a show for kids.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Avenue Q is fabulous! Comment: This is an ADULT themed musical with snappy lyrics and singable tunes. Prudes beware! If you enjoy musical theater and want something to amuse you while driving, this is it!
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Funniest Comedic Play Besides Spamalot Comment: I loved this musical! I mean, absolutely ADORED it to pieces and nearly fell into those pieces after I saw it I was laughing so hard. This is one of the best plays ever written - yes, better than Shakespeare! - and that is really saying something. With fantastic humor, lovable characters, and a wonderful character-driven plot, this music is something for everybody except children.
On the whole, this CD was truly spectacular, and I was flashing back to sitting in the theater watching the play as I listened, but here are reviews for the individual songs, because those will be more specific and informative.
Track 1: Avenue Q Theme
This was a good opening, and it set the stage for real Sesame Street/The Simpsons/Family Guy/Friends humor that have never been combined yet, though it was slightly irritating.
Track 2: What Do You Do With A B.A. In English?/It Sucks To Be Me
The best opening track to a play possibly ever, tied with No One Mourns the Wicked from Wicked. Hilariously funny, it starts the plot going and introduces the character in a remarkable display of wit and wonderful vocal talent. You'll be rolling around on the floor clutching your stomach laughing. It introduces all the best characters: the naive Princeton, the lovely and single Kate Monster, the unemployed Brian, his Japanese fiance (and later in the play, wife) Christmas Eve, the pervert Trekkie Monster, the roommates Rod and Nicky, and the superintendent of the apartment Gary Coleman (that's right, THE Gary Coleman!)
Track 3: If You Were Gay
Meet Rod and Nicky, two of the supporting characters of this play who are roomies and best buddies (though they were introduced in the previous song.) Think Bert and Ernie, with the homosexuality that everybody's been considering they have! Here, Nicky is telling a frustrated and denying Rod that it would be alright if Rod was gay. This song is laugh-till-you-cry funny and will get stuck in your head no matter what.
Track 4: Purpose
It was okay. I'd say it was the worst in the album, but worst implies that it was bad. I'll go with least good.
Track 5: Everyone's A Little Bit Racist
Great! Wonderful! And true to life! I would almost say the second-best song on the album! I have got to stop using exclamation points in this section! But it's great! It should have been a single!
Track 6: The Internet Is For Porn
This will offend Internet-users everywhere, and has got to be as good as Keytes' songs. This is what would happen if Cookie Monster became a pervert. I loved this song - and the main message is true for all of my friends.
Track 7: Mix Tape
Kate Monster likes Princeton, & he likes her, so he makes her a mixed tape with alternating romantic and unromantic songs which all lead to Princeton - well, see the show.
Track 8: I'm Not Wearing Underwear Today
This was a funny song, but it was very small. A single by Brian, he sings it at a bar and at the end his fiance shouts at him, "Get a job!"
Track 9: Special
A bar-slut's song purely, this is not that funny but it is entertaining, and it introduces the loose Girls Gone Wild star Lucy the Slut.
Track 10: You Can Be As Loud As The Hell You Want (When You're Makin' Love)
This song is played during a nude sex scene with Princeton and Kate, and though it is pretty gross it is also funny, and shows the wonderful vocal talents of that lady who plays Gary Coleman.
Track 11: Fantasies Come True
It wasn't that funny, but it was really sweet and a little sad at the end.
Track 12: My Girlfriend Who Lives in Canada
A hilarious, short song which sums up Rod's abortive attempts to convince everybody that he is not gay.
Track 13: There's a Fine, Fine Line
A beautiful solo piece with Kate Monster, who has just been dumped and is very sad about it, because it's not the first time.
Track 14: There Is Life Outside Your Apartment
Great, funny song showing a depressed Princeton with a screwed up life being convinced by all of his new friends to lighten up and explore New York City, where they all live. You'll love it to bits.
Track 15: The More You Ruv Someone
This is a muppetlike nearly operatic ballad from Christmas Eve, explaining to Kate that just because you really, really hate somebody and want to kill them it doesn't mean you don't love them. It's great!
Track 16: Schadenfreude
This song and "Everyone's A Little Bit Racist" are tied in second place. Gary is telling a now-homeless Nicky how people are "taking pleasure in his pain" in a witty, spectacularly funny song giving examples of when people do this.
Track 17: I Wish I Could Go Back To College
Anybody in their early twenties and fresh-out-of-college years will know this, and it presents this despairing wistful feeling in a fantastic song.
Track 18: The Money Song
Homeless Nicky begs Princeton for money, and Princeton, upon giving it to him, realizes how good it feels to help others and decides to make Kate's biggest dream come true: a school for monsters exclusively. He teams up with all of the rest of the cast, and they ask everybody in the audience to cough up all of their money for the cause.
Track 19: School for Monsters/The Money Song (Reprise)
This song is where Trekkie is convinced into donating millions of dollars (which he made by the way off of internet porn) to the school. It's good - not amazing - but good.
Track 20: There's A Fine, Fine Line (Reprise)/ What Do You Do With A B.A. In English? (Reprise)
A funny song, but it's basically just a mixture of the songs that it is reprising, as all reprises are, so again it's not amazing, though it has some nice dialogue.
Track 21: For Now
The wonderful finale, and since I've rambled on so long I'll just let you see for yourself how funny it is.
All in all, this CD is fantastic, and you should buy it even if you don't like musicals, plays, or even a little if you don't like comedy (though everybody loves a good laugh once in a while.) You'll find it great, and worth the money. Buy it, listen to it, and be happy.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Avenue Q will only fuel the frustration of those who think that Broadway has given up on sophisticated entertainment geared to adults. "Whatever happened to Cole Porter's witty rhymes and mature subject matter?" they'll say. Well, it's hard to deny that Avenue Q's main frame of reference is Sesame Street and that its humor can be very broad--yes, there's profanity and puppet sex. But the show also displays heart ("The More You Ruv Someone" typically begins with "Why can't people get along?") and a pretty satisfying zany streak. Musically, the score is rooted in 1970s pop, with nods to the aforementioned Sesame Street. The excellent cast, dominated by John Tartaglia and Stephanie D'Abruzzo, does it justice, milking the humorous numbers for all they're worth and finding pathos in the more straightforward ones. Not bad for a childish show. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
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