Depending how you trace its origins, rock 'n' roll is fast approaching retirement age. And if you count
Hair as the first rock musical, then stages both on and Off-Broadway have been rocking for four decades now.
So should it be any surprise that not only the teenage kids but the fortysomething parents in the dysfunctional-family musical
Next to Normal, now on Broadway, express themselves to the accompaniment of electric guitars?
"It used to seem that rock 'n' roll had to be a younger form of communication," says Tom Kitt, the composer of
Next to Normal, whose lyricist and book writer is Brian Yorkey. "But here, with characters in their 30s or 40s, rock is a part of their musical landscape the way anything else would be."
Tempo and volume aside, Kitt intended the score to reflect the characters and their situation--a family in which the mother, played by Alice Ripley, struggles valiantly on the verge of madness and medication--rather than impose a style on them.
"I tried to be careful about it, and to write a score I felt was truthful and appropriate to the characters and what they're going through," says Kitt. "On some of the angsty songs, where someone is highly emotional and on the edge, I use rock music like
Tommy or
Hair.
"But I think it has to be used judiciously," continues Kitt, whose score also references vaudeville, country and traditional showtunes. "There's a verse-chorus form that goes with rock and pop, and if that form is used too much, you can stop the storytelling a little bit and get lulled. You always have to know what rock is doing."
One rock musical that didn't get very far past the chorus was 2006's short-lived
High Fidelity, an adaptation of the Nick Hornby novel that featured Kitt's score and lyrics by Amanda Green. In retrospect, Kitt says he understands why it faced such an uphill battle for audience goodwill.
"I didn't realize it at the time, but I was trying to do two things at once with that," says Kitt of the show, a romantic comedy about an obsessive rock record collector. "I was trying to write a new score with a new voice, but also pay tribute to classic rock songs. That was difficult to put over; some people got it and some people didn't."
He notes that the show has picked up its share of admirers, and had a successful run last year in St. Louis. But the review he cherishes most came from the original author himself.
"Nick Hornby came to see it and he loved it," Kitt says. "He had tears in his eyes at the end of the show. It was a nice comfort to know that."
Even more comforting, though, is to have a well-received original show that's not adapted from a beloved property.
"I'm hoping
Next to Normal is judged on its own merits," Kitt says. "I'm so proud of
High Fidelity, but this was the perfect thing to do next--a show where I didn't have to walk into those expectations."
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