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Oklahoma! is the original soundtrack album of the 1955 Academy Award-winning film Oklahoma!, an adaptation of the musical play of the same name. The soundtrack charted #1 on the Billboard Pop Album Chart in 1956 and has been in continual print. It was certified "gold" by the RIAA on July 8, 1958 and "multi-platinum" on April 1, 1992.[1] It was originally released as a 42 minute album on the Capitol Records label, but only in mono at first. However, as with the 1956 film soundtracks of Carousel and The King and I (also issued by Capitol on LP), because the film's soundtrack had been recorded in then state-of-the-art stereo, it was possible for Capitol to issue a stereo version of the album in 1958. And again as with Carousel because of a difference between mono and stereo grooves, it was necessary to cut a very brief section of the music on the stereo release. The film soundtrack album of Oklahoma! was later issued on CD, again by Capitol, then on Broadway Angel on CD in the Broadway Classics series, and finally on Angel in a much expanded CD edition containing virtually all the music. It is the best-known recording of Oklahoma! ever made, even eclipsing the fame of the pioneering 1943 original Broadway cast album of the show. One notable difference between the original version of the movie soundtrack album and the expanded edition is that the original album contains a new overture specifically created for the recording, and not the overture and main title sequence as heard in the actual film. The expanded edition of the soundtrack, issued in 2001, contains both the overture that was heard before the opening credits in the original roadshow theatrical release of the movie, plus the opening credits music exactly as heard in the film. In 1956, less than a year after the first mono Capitol soundtrack LP was released - Goddard Lieberson of rival Columbia Records produced an LP featuring Nelson Eddy and a supporting cast, with the chorus and orchestra directed by Lehman Engel. The Columbia LP "Nelson Eddy in Oklahoma" (CL 828) was promoted as the "complete score" because it included the song "Lonely Room" and a track "Entrance of Ensemble" which had not previously been released from the score.
[edit] Todd-AO vs. CinemascopeA notable difference between the mono and stereo versions of the Capitol album is that the Cinemascope version of the film was used in the making of the mono version, while the Todd-AO version was used for the stereophonic release. Although the singing is the same in both, different inflections are noticeable in the brief spoken dialogue retained on the album, for instance, in the spoken portion of the song Pore Jud Is Daid. [edit] Track listing for the LP versionAll songs composed by Oscar Hammerstein II and Richard Rodgers.
The latest CD expanded edition contained more than twice the amount of music listed here, and runs nearly 80 minutes. [edit] Named performersBy order of appearance on soundtrack.
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