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Spaza
Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)

Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)
Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)Uprize! (Music From The Original Motion Picture)

Artists

Spaza

Catno

M3H 007LP

Formats

1x Vinyl LP Album

Country

South Africa

Release date

Oct 16, 2020

Media: VG+i
Sleeve: NM or M-

$45*

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

A1

Bantu Education

A2

Sizwile

A3

Mangaliso Sobukwe

A4

Solomon, Tsietsi & Khotso

A5

The Black Consciousness Movement

B1

Banna Ba Batsumi

B2

Bayasiphazamisa

B3

Xolile Mosi

B4

We Got A Lot A Work To Do

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The all-singing, all-dancing show focuses on the African-American experience with songs on such topics as tenements, slumlords, ghetto life, student protests, black power, and feminism. The music is a mixture of gospel, jazz, funk, soul, calypso, and soft rock.The show had its first staging at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. from September 15 to October 10, 1971,[2] with subsequent stagings at the Locust and Walnut Street Theatres in Philadelphia.The restaged Broadway production, directed by Vinnette Carroll and choreographed by George Faison, opened to acclaim on April 19, 1972, at the Playhouse Theatre, where it ran for two months before transferring to the Edison. It had a total run of 1065 performances. In his review of the opening night, Clive Barnes of The New York Times described it as "a mixture of a block party and a revival meeting" and wrote: "It is the unexpected that is the most delightful. Last night at the Playhouse Theater a new musical came clapping, stomping and stamping in. It is fresh, fun and black ...Black heroes such as Flip Wilson and Godfrey Cambridge, and even Bella Abzug and Ralph Nader are mentioned and the show makes wry mockery of the changing times and celebrates the rise of black aspiration and achievements ... the show is full of talent working together with a cohesion rarely encountered outside the dance world."[3] Time magazine theater critic T.E. Kalem also praised the show, writing: "all heaven breaks loose on stage. This is the kind of show at which you want to blow kisses."[4]The cast included Micki Grant, Alex Bradford, Hope Clarke, and Arnold Wilkerson. With Vinnette Carroll as director, Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope became the first Broadway play to be directed by an African-American woman, and Micki Grant was the first woman to write both the music and lyrics to a Broadway musical.[5]The 1972 Los Angeles production featured Paula Kelly.