Pantages Theatre
In the for almost 40 years I’ve been reviewing theatre, friends often ask why I seldom venture into the lobby during intermission and famously leave directly after an opening night performance, stealthily avoiding most opening night parties and receptions. A great deal of the reason is because I really dislike being asked at that stage of the journey what I think about the show.
When cornered, the only answer I traditionally give is, “I don’t know… I haven’t started writing about it yet.” Truly, overnight or a day or two later is when many of my thoughts begin to formulate. Something I initially thought I really liked I see more clearly at that point. I realize the flaws—and, often, the complete opposite is also true.
I was completely unsure how I felt leaving the phenomenal LA premiere of the Broadway smash Stereophonic at the Pantages. It was a long and not always easy ride, especially since the dizzying view from the front row (thank you, Benny!) brought me immediately right back into the dysfunctional world of my 14 years in the music business dealing with epically difficult yet brilliant superstars on a daily basis. It took me overnight to decide how I felt about it but by morning light and not still stuck in the middle of three hours spent as a fly on the wall during a troubled year-long series of recording sessions creating a hit album back in the early 70s, I realized what a remarkable achievement it is.
Stereophonic is a brave and decidedly rule-breaking work that, thanks to the stark vision of director Daniel Aukin, often reminded me of being smackdab in the middle of a living Ingrid Bergman movie. His purposefully non-kinetic staging and performance style, that between the floor-shaking music and the heated arguments and the delving into the bandmembers’ messy relationships, featured long periods of dead silence and actors left onstage like unmoved pawns on a chessboard staring blankly out into the fourth wall or at one another. It seems obvious to me that the creators of this arresting nouveau Tony-winner for Best Play of 2024 didn’t give much of a crap about commercial considerations and box office success when it was originally mounted off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons and that its surprisingly fearless Broadway producers miraculously went along with the concept. Perhaps that’s why it succeeds splendidly.
After toiling so long in the intensely competitive, astonishingly volatile, and drug-fueled world of the music business 50-plus years ago, experiencing Stereophonic, especially from the front row of the massive Pantages, was like old home week to me, as it was to my companion and best pal Taylor Gilbert who, like me, also spent some of her nicely wasted youth hanging out with some of the super-stoned and nutso musical geniuses of the day in recording sessions similar to the one explored here—albeit, I must state here, for her recalling a decade loooong after my own.
I kept thinking as much as it often felt like a three-hour prison term while watching it unfold, it must be a fascinating look behind the curtain by people who have never had the experience of observing such a crazy scene, something that, quite frankly, explains a lot of the reason I left the music business. In two parts and four acts, Stereophonic depicts a year in the life of a highly successful band trying against the odds to come together and create a new album. By the end of the evening, it’s hard not to imagine the actors must be many times more exhausted than I was watching it from the comfort of my theatre seat.
If anything struck me as an Achilles’ heel in playwright David Adjmi’s unique slice-of-life look at a year in the artistic and personal lives of this dysfunctional group of musicians, it’s that with any work of art, I tend to yearn for some revelation offered me as a viewer. There’s not much resolved by the end of Adjmi’s adventure, except to wonder whether or not any of these people will ever want to work with each other again, let alone be involved in the personal relationships that develop or unravel during the course of their fateful year together.
I made a comment to Taylor referring to Will Butler’s Tony-nominated score for Stereophonic as modern. She laughed and said, “Modern? Really?” I mentioned Butler’s background as the major force behind the band Arcade Fire and that I thought his score clearly reflects, as does Enver Chakartash’s delightfully hippie-oriented costuming and David Zinn’s diagonally-designed raw-wood recording studio set, the whole intoxicating and eclectic visual perfume of my early days. Although reminiscent of the heyday of Fleetwood Mac, what the band creates is also quite contemporary while still echoing both the 70s and the music of today.
I wonder when musicians today gather to record age-old pieces by Mozart or Bach if tensions develop and people become as volatile as when they’re recording pop or rock. Probably not since, unlike 56 years ago when I sat in a London recording studio catching occasional sleep in a rolling desk chair for three continuous days and nights while a now legendary recording artist set down tracks to what became a still highly popular standard, sessions today I suspect are not fueled—and perhaps hampered by—an omnipresent huge baggie of cocaine like the one passed around onstage in Stereophonic.
I never thought back then when I was crashing headlong into the recording industry that the musicians of our day, uber-talented though they were, would become as enduring as they are a half-century later. My partner, who works with preteens and teens in summer camps, on field trips to exotic ports, and in challenge course situations, says all kids today know the lyrics of Elton and Neil and Glenn Frye and idolize the music of my generation.
It’s amazing how much this production started me thinking about such things—so perhaps there are some revelations that it conjures that I previously wrote here I felt were missing. In retrospect, by morning light Stereophonic, featuring not only the groundbreaking book by Adjmi, the inventively risky directorial choices of Aukin, and offering a phenomenal seven-person ensemble cast to deliver the material, five of whom double as musicians and singers who could equal anyone recording today, is an attainment unlike any other produced on any other stage in the many, many years I have been a theatre creator and devotee.
Will Butler’s score also deserves praise in the highest, which leads me to one great disappointment about this production: that so many of his tunes are started and stopped and reworked over and again by the onstage musicians as the play progresses. Most songs are never performed to completion and I would have loved to have heard more of his music and watched these extraordinary performers given the opportunity to deliver them to fruition.
Regardless, Stereophonic provided me with an experience I will not soon forget, one that will linger in my memory and keep me thinking about what my life has been and still could become for as long as I have left.