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What's Inside: Songs from Waitress

What's Inside: Songs from Waitress

Current price: $12.99
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What's Inside: Songs from Waitress

Barnes and Noble

What's Inside: Songs from Waitress

Current price: $12.99
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Size: OS

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Of all the pop singer/songwriters who surfaced in the 21st century,
Sara Bareilles
may be uniquely qualified to write the songs for a Broadway musical. Indebted to tradition without being beholden to it,
Bareilles
always favors songs so exquisitely sculpted that their craft is never noticed, only felt, so she's a natural fit for
Diane Paulus
' adaptation of
Adrienne Shelly
's 2007 indie comedy-drama Waitress.
What's Inside: Songs from Waitress
isn't a cast album, it's
' recording of 12 songs from the production, and the highest compliment that can be paid is that it simultaneously plays as drama and as a sequel to her Grammy-nominated 2013 album
The Blessed Unrest
. Bright and open,
What's Inside
does feel of a piece with her 2010 album
Kaleidoscope Heart
-- the presence of that album's producer
Neal Avron
, who sat out
, is apparent -- and that warm, colorful sheen is enough to make the album play as pop: simply judged on its surface, it provides tangible pleasures. The nifty trick
pulls off on
is how the songs also contain a double-edge, serving the drama of the story while also playing as pure pop. Sure, there are flourishes that are pure musical theater -- there's the opening fanfare of "What's Inside." "Never Ever Getting Rid of Me" is
Gilbert & Sullivan
by way of
Todd Rundgren
and the show-stopping ballad "She Used to Be Mine" almost seems to conjure a lonely spotlight -- but never once do the songs on
feel in mere service to a plot. Taken on their own, they're lively, clever, and bold, and further evidence of
' versatility, elegance, and wit. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Of all the pop singer/songwriters who surfaced in the 21st century,
Sara Bareilles
may be uniquely qualified to write the songs for a Broadway musical. Indebted to tradition without being beholden to it,
Bareilles
always favors songs so exquisitely sculpted that their craft is never noticed, only felt, so she's a natural fit for
Diane Paulus
' adaptation of
Adrienne Shelly
's 2007 indie comedy-drama Waitress.
What's Inside: Songs from Waitress
isn't a cast album, it's
' recording of 12 songs from the production, and the highest compliment that can be paid is that it simultaneously plays as drama and as a sequel to her Grammy-nominated 2013 album
The Blessed Unrest
. Bright and open,
What's Inside
does feel of a piece with her 2010 album
Kaleidoscope Heart
-- the presence of that album's producer
Neal Avron
, who sat out
, is apparent -- and that warm, colorful sheen is enough to make the album play as pop: simply judged on its surface, it provides tangible pleasures. The nifty trick
pulls off on
is how the songs also contain a double-edge, serving the drama of the story while also playing as pure pop. Sure, there are flourishes that are pure musical theater -- there's the opening fanfare of "What's Inside." "Never Ever Getting Rid of Me" is
Gilbert & Sullivan
by way of
Todd Rundgren
and the show-stopping ballad "She Used to Be Mine" almost seems to conjure a lonely spotlight -- but never once do the songs on
feel in mere service to a plot. Taken on their own, they're lively, clever, and bold, and further evidence of
' versatility, elegance, and wit. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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