Track List
Bombshell: Act 1. Let Me Be Your Star (extended intro) - Bernadette Peters
Bombshell: Act 1. At Your Feet - Katharine McPhee/Megan Hilty/Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 1. Smash! - Katharine McPhee/Megan Hilty/Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 1. Never Give All The Heart - Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 1. The 20th Century Fox Mambo - Katharine McPhee/Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 1. The National Pastime - Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 1. History Is Made At Night - Smash Cast/Will Chase
Bombshell: Act 1. I Never Met A Wolf Who Didn't Love To Howl - Debra Messing/Megan Hilty/Nick Jonas/Phillip Spaeth/Smash Cast/Jaime Cepero/Will Chase/Christian Borle
Bombshell: Act 1. Mr. & Mrs. Smith - Smash Cast/Will Chase
Bombshell: Act 1. Don't Say Yes Until I Finish Talking - Smash Cast/Christian Borle
Bombshell: Act 1. On Lexington & 52nd Street - Smash Cast/Will Chase
Bombshell: Act 1. Cut, Print... Moving On - Katharine McPhee/Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 2. Public Relations - Katharine McPhee/Smash Cast/Christian Borle
Bombshell: Act 2. Dig Deep - Henry Stram/Phillip Spaeth/Smash Cast/Uma Thurman
Bombshell: Act 2. Second Hand White Baby Grand - Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 2. They Just Keep Moving The Line - Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 2. Let's Be Bad - Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 2. The Right Regrets - Smash Cast/Christian Borle
Bombshell: Act 2. (Let's Start) Tomorrow Tonight - Savannah Wise/Debra Messing/Leslie Odom Jr./Smash Cast/Christian Borle
Bombshell: Act 2. Our Little Secret - Smash Cast
Bombshell: Act 2. Hang The Moon - Megan Hilty/Smash Cast/Bernadette Peters
Bombshell: Act 2. Don't Forget Me - Katharine McPhee/Smash CastAlbum Notes
Lyricists: Marc Shaiman; Scott Wittman.
Audio Mixer: Lawrence Manchester.
Liner Note Authors: Marc Shaiman; Scott Wittman.
Recording information: Avatar Studios, New York, NY; Jungle City Studios, New York, NY; MSR Studios, New York, NY; Over At Marc & Scott's, New York, NY; Sound Decisions, Austin, TX; Spin Recording Studios, Long Island City, NY; Sugarbox Studios, New York, NY.
NBC's musical-within-a musical TV series Smash kicked off its second season by releasing the original cast recording of Bombshell, the Marilyn Monroe-inspired production the show's characters struggled to get off the ground in the first season. That was a smart move, since the Bombshell songs that were included on the season one soundtrack were among the most vibrant, capturing the passion that fuels staging a Broadway show. Bombshell plays like a true original cast recording, tracing the show's plot in its liner notes and separating its songs into acts. While the competition between Karen (Katharine McPhee) and Ivy (Megan Hilty) over who would be Bombshell's leading lady was one of the main plot points of season one, the cast recording features both wannabe Marilyns, allowing each performer to play to her strengths, whether they're singing together, as on "Let Me Be Your Star," or separately. While both actresses sing ballads and rousing songs, McPhee's more delicate voice works especially well on vulnerable numbers like "Never Give All the Heart," and Hilty's playful Monroe impersonation sizzles on "The National Pastime" and "I Never Met a Wolf Who Didn't Love to Howl." As with the tracks that premiered on the season one soundtrack, Bombshell was written by Scott Wittman and Marc Shaiman, who bring the same wit to the rest of these songs. The slick, brassy "Smash!," "Public Relations," and "Dig Deep" examine the star system and publicity machine that Marilyn used (and was sometimes abused by) with clever lyrics, while "Don't Forget Me" is exactly the kind of showy finale expected from this kind of old-school musical. Elsewhere, Bombshell spotlights Smash's on-the-mark casting: Bernadette Peters gives the project more Broadway credibility with her turns as Marilyn's mother on the bubbly '30s pastiche "At Your Feet" and the unabashedly sentimental "Hang the Moon." Tony Award-winner Christian Borle delivers a show-stopping performance as a motor-mouthed Daryl Zanuck on "Don't Say Yes Until I Finish Talking," and Leslie Odom, Jr. embodies Nat King Cole on "Let's Start Tomorrow Tonight." Even if Bombshell isn't a real Broadway musical, it hits all the notes a production like this should, and showcases the most appealing parts of Smash in the process. ~ Heather Phares























