Current:Home > MyTheater Review: ‘Stereophonic’ is a brilliant ‘Behind the Music’ play on Broadway -ValueCore
Theater Review: ‘Stereophonic’ is a brilliant ‘Behind the Music’ play on Broadway
View
Date:2025-04-18 13:41:42
It’s July 1976 in a Northern California recording studio and the rock ‘n’ roll band cutting their latest album is exhausted and wary. The coffee machine is broken. Never mind, there’s always cocaine — and heaps of it.
“That’s not the same thing,” one of the musicians says.
“It’s the exact same thing,” she is told.
So begins “Stereophonic,” one of the most thrilling pieces of theater in years, a play with better songs than most musicals on Broadway and an ensemble that rocks, literally. You won’t need any of their coke to last the three-hour-plus run time.
Playwright David Adjmi tells the story of a Fleetwood Mac-like band with five members — some married, some dating — working on music with two sound engineers over a life-changing year, with personal rifts opening and closing and then reopening. The riffs also change, as songs endure dozens of takes and changes in tempo.
The play, which opened Friday at the Golden Theatre, is a hypernaturalistic meditation on the thrill, and also the danger, of collaborating on art — the compromises, the egos and the joys. It’s an ode not just to the music business but perhaps to the theater world, too.
“Stereophonic” is a very human play, featuring deep moments about love and the pursuit of art interspliced with digressions about dry cleaners and Marlon Brando. We learn to care about each of the five characters and even anticipate their reactions. Will they survive this album intact?
David Zinn’s marvelous set, with the engineers manipulating dials and faders in the office-hangout spot, in front of a glassed-off recording space, allows for multiple conversations at once, including one intense argument completely offstage that the engineers overhear.
The effect is almost to turn the actors into instruments themselves, alternating silence for one or two moments in one scene and in another with their volumes raised high. There is cross-talk, mufflers and even the clunk of machines whirring when a recording is started. It’s the most interesting soundscape since “The Humans.” Kudos to director Daniel Aukin and the nimble cast for making it all so seamless.
Will Butler, formerly of Arcade Fire, provides the original, layered blues- and folk-based songs — perfect for progressive rockers in the late ‘70s. The songs are instantly funky, head-bobbing bangers and audience members will care about them, too. (What happens to them at the play’s end is a twist.)
An existential angst hangs over this recording studio in Sausalito, California. Long hours in the studio mean the inhabitants lose track of time. They work into the wee hours, forgetting what day they’re in. “What month is this?” one asks.
Outside the studio, we learn this unnamed band is getting famous, but inside there is no escape from microaggressions, breakups and perfectionist demands, all amplified by substance abuse.
The two women in the band — keyboardists and singers played by Sarah Pidgeon and Juliana Canfield — learn to stick up for themselves over the course of the play, while the men — the bassist played by Will Brill and a drummer by Chris Stack — rebel against the dictatorial singer-guitarist, played by Tom Pecinka. Eli Gelb and Andrew R. Butler play the hapless engineers with increasing self-confidence.
Adjmi writes the awful, push-pull fights of couples brilliantly: “Just because I don’t unravel the thread doesn’t mean I don’t know where it is,” one women says to her partner. He also captures with accuracy and wit a scene in which three guys have a random, pot-fueled discussion about houseboats.
Pidgeon’s character, Diana, a budding and gifted singer-songwriter, reveals a profound insecurity, one not helped by her coolly demanding band leader and lover. “I can’t be a rock star and be this stupid,” she says. Unhelpful is her partner: “You can’t ask me to help you and not help you. I can’t do both.”
One of the best moments is when this dysfunctional couple are asked to harmonize together in the studio, sharing the same mic but separated by Canfield’s character. The two on-again-off-again lovers are at each other’s throats — “My skin is crawling. I can’t stand being near you,” Diana hisses at him — until the signal to record begins. Then all three voices beautifully merge into one for the recording. Go figure.
Toward the end, one of the engineers asks Diana why she’d ever consider staying in this noxious band, calling it kind of a nightmare. “This was the best thing that ever happened to me,” Diana replies.
Those in the audience know the feeling.
___
Follow Mark Kennedy online.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Jimmy Johnson to be inducted into Cowboys' Ring of Honor in long-awaited move
- How Patrick Mahomes Really Feels About Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift's Romance
- Fantasy football winners, losers: Rookie Zach Charbonnet inherits Seattle spotlight
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Papua New Guinea volcano erupts and Japan says it’s assessing a possible tsunami risk to its islands
- Test flight for SpaceX's massive Starship rocket reaches space, explodes again
- BaubleBar’s Black Friday Sale Is Finally Here—Save 30% Off Sitewide and Other Unbelievable Jewelry Deals
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Graham Mertz injury update: Florida QB suffers collarbone fracture against Missouri
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Fantasy Football: 5 players to pick up on the waiver wire ahead of Week 12
- Biden is spending his 81st birthday honoring White House tradition of pardoning Thanksgiving turkeys
- Ben Dunne, an Irish supermarket heir who survived an IRA kidnapping and a scandal, dies at 74
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- North Carolina field hockey, under 23-year-old coach Erin Matson, wins historic NCAA title
- Does Black Friday or Cyber Monday have better deals? How to save the most in 2023.
- More military families are using food banks, pantries to make ends meet. Here's a look at why.
Recommendation
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Syracuse fires football coach Dino Babers after eight seasons
College football Week 12 winners and losers: Georgia dominates, USC ends with flop
Ousted OpenAI leader Sam Altman joins Microsoft
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Taylor Swift fan dies at the Eras Rio tour amid heat wave. Mayor calls for water for next shows
Carlton Pearson, founder of Oklahoma megachurch who supported gay rights, dies at age 70
Mother of teen killed during a traffic stop in France leads a protest against officer’s release