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Wicked: Vocal Selections

Wicked: Vocal Selections

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $12.57
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wicked Fanatic Here!!!!!!!
Review: I have been taking piano lessons since kindergarden, so 6 years and I can play every song in this book
*NO ONE MOURNS THE WICKED
*THE WIZARD AND I
*WHAT IS THIS FEELING
*DANCING THROUGH LIFE
*POPULAR
*I'M NOT THAT GIRL
*ONE SHORT DAY
*DEFYING GRAVITY
*I COULDN'T BE HAPPIER
*WONDERFUL
*AS LONG AS YOUR MINE
*NO GOOD DEED
*FOR GOOD

SOME OF THEM HAD CHORUS PARTS TAKING OUT BUT ARE JUST AS GOOD AS BROADWAY!!


Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Easy, Easy...
Review: I have taken piano lessons for about 5 or 6 years, and I can barely play this. I end up just playing the chords, some of which I have never even heard of. All the songs in this book are in wacky keys with flats and sharps all over. Kudos to anyone who can actually play the accompaniment! I feel that Schwartz ruins some of the songs (such as "No One Mourns the Wicked" and "Dancing Through Life") by attempting to make them easier to understand or by making them solo songs. Especially for someone like me, who is an absolute fan of the show, it frustrates me that the sheet music is so different from it. My personal favorite in this book is "For Good" because it is in its original show format and yet it is fairly easy to play. Don't even try to play "No Good Deed" - it is, with no exaggeration, impossible!

On the bright side, for a faithful Wicked fan who is an experienced pianist or guitarist, this is a great book to have. It keeps me occupied and gives me hours of fun, and it has great pictures, too. I have no trouble sitting down at the piano and playing through the entire book (at least, playing through the songs I can play!). A good buy!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Hardest music I have ever played!
Review: I have taken piano lessons for about 5 or 6 years, and I can barely play this. I end up just playing the chords, some of which I have never even heard of. All the songs in this book are in wacky keys with flats and sharps all over. Kudos to anyone who can actually play the accompaniment! I feel that Schwartz ruins some of the songs (such as "No One Mourns the Wicked" and "Dancing Through Life") by attempting to make them easier to understand or by making them solo songs. Especially for someone like me, who is an absolute fan of the show, it frustrates me that the sheet music is so different from it. My personal favorite in this book is "For Good" because it is in its original show format and yet it is fairly easy to play. Don't even try to play "No Good Deed" - it is, with no exaggeration, impossible!

On the bright side, for a faithful Wicked fan who is an experienced pianist or guitarist, this is a great book to have. It keeps me occupied and gives me hours of fun, and it has great pictures, too. I have no trouble sitting down at the piano and playing through the entire book (at least, playing through the songs I can play!). A good buy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great arrangements, one of the best "Vocal Selections" books
Review: I ordered this music book after reading the real book and hearing reviews of the musical. Although I haven't yet seen the musical the songs contained in this book are excellent. I am very satisfied with this book. Unlike many "Vocal Selections" books I've come across, the arrangments of this are wonderful and sometimes challenging. Please note, these are NOT unplayable as some may have suggested.

Once again, I am very satisfied with this book...5 stars on the product.

Another note, I ordered this product when it was out of stock. It seemed like it took forever to come. My advice is to order this seperately if it is out of stock (I ordered 3 other music books, all in stock); I also used the budget shipping...everything came together in one shipment. So it took a little time to come. My little mistake, but just a heads up if you are eager to receive your orders.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Easy, Easy...
Review: This is not a complicated score. The music is simple to play, the vocal lines are easy to sing. For women there are a few power ballads, even a sensitve number or two for women. However, there is virtually no material at all for men, so be warned.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful arrangements, Great score for Vocal Acompaniment!
Review: This version of the Wicked Songbook is the one that DOES NOT have the melody interpolated throughout the piano part-- it is meant as a "vocal line with piano accompaniment" version. It is described by Stephen Schwartz in his forward to the book as being "essentially a reduction of what is played by the show orchestra, edited so that it is playable by one person with two hands and ten fingers."

The songs have been adapted so that they may be sung out of the context of the show, with longer instrumental sections, chorus parts, and other such material being trimmed out in most cases. Though this gave me pause at first, I am learning that it really serves the material in this sense, making the music perfect for performing on its own, out of the story-driven context of the show. (Some cuts include the 'We Deserve Each Other' section of "Dancing Through Life", and the 'Who's that Mage...' counterpoint in "One Short Day")

All the favorite songs appear here, from "The Wizard and I", to "Dancing Through Life" and even an excerpt from "Thank Goodness" entitled "I Couldn't Be Happier". There have even been some small additions to the songs to make them work better for solo performance-- I love the new added verse in "No One Mourns the Wicked", for example. It makes for exciting rediscoveries of these already familiar pieces.

The arrangements are challenging, yes, and except for in one case all the songs appear in their original show keys (which means, e.g., that "Defying Gravity" is in Db, "One Short Day" is in F#, etc, but are well worth the effort-- both those songs sound amazing. "For Good" has been taken down a half step and appears in the book in C major). For those trying to compare this book to the P/V/G (with melody) version, I would say there is NOT a huge difference in degree of difficulty between the two books.

The wonderful result of this effort is that the arrangements are SO true to the score. It's really encouraging that Hal Leonard is starting to let composers publish more accurate and exciting versions of their work, and that what we get in the vocal selections is not some cheap simplified thing that sounds nothing like the nuanced and complex score but instead is actually rich and fantastic and interesting.

These Vocal Selections are without a doubt some of the best I've seen produced. Huge congrats to Stephen Schwartz for getting out the music in such a way that the core of the score really is still intact and ensuring that the great songs from this show will be performed for a very long time. Just Amazing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful arrangements, Great score for Vocal Acompaniment!
Review: This version of the Wicked Songbook is the one that DOES NOT have the melody interpolated throughout the piano part-- it is meant as a "vocal line with piano accompaniment" version. It is described by Stephen Schwartz in his forward to the book as being "essentially a reduction of what is played by the show orchestra, edited so that it is playable by one person with two hands and ten fingers."

The songs have been adapted so that they may be sung out of the context of the show, with longer instrumental sections, chorus parts, and other such material being trimmed out in most cases. Though this gave me pause at first, I am learning that it really serves the material in this sense, making the music perfect for performing on its own, out of the story-driven context of the show. (Some cuts include the 'We Deserve Each Other' section of "Dancing Through Life", and the 'Who's that Mage...' counterpoint in "One Short Day")

All the favorite songs appear here, from "The Wizard and I", to "Dancing Through Life" and even an excerpt from "Thank Goodness" entitled "I Couldn't Be Happier". There have even been some small additions to the songs to make them work better for solo performance-- I love the new added verse in "No One Mourns the Wicked", for example. It makes for exciting rediscoveries of these already familiar pieces.

The arrangements are challenging, yes, and except for in one case all the songs appear in their original show keys (which means, e.g., that "Defying Gravity" is in Db, "One Short Day" is in F#, etc, but are well worth the effort-- both those songs sound amazing. "For Good" has been taken down a half step and appears in the book in C major). For those trying to compare this book to the P/V/G (with melody) version, I would say there is NOT a huge difference in degree of difficulty between the two books.

The wonderful result of this effort is that the arrangements are SO true to the score. It's really encouraging that Hal Leonard is starting to let composers publish more accurate and exciting versions of their work, and that what we get in the vocal selections is not some cheap simplified thing that sounds nothing like the nuanced and complex score but instead is actually rich and fantastic and interesting.

These Vocal Selections are without a doubt some of the best I've seen produced. Huge congrats to Stephen Schwartz for getting out the music in such a way that the core of the score really is still intact and ensuring that the great songs from this show will be performed for a very long time. Just Amazing.


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