In a recent Op-Ed piece in the New York Times, "West Side Story" violinist Paul Woodiel spoke out about cuts to the Broadway show's string section in order to lower costs.
Woodiel formed a friendship with Leonard Bernstein, who wrote the music for the classic Broadway show, in 1983. As a young violinist Woodiel had the honor to work on the recording of the show in RCA Studio A. After working as a theater musician for numerous shows including "Fiddler On the Roof," "The Music Man," and "Sunset Boulevard," he returned to perform "West Side Story" at the Palace Theater. But now, after 500 performances, producers have decided to release five string musicians and replace them with a synthesizer. Woodiel writes, "The sweeping grandeur of Broadway's classic scores would be impossible without master orchestrations. I would argue that the orchestrator's crafty magic is perhaps best appreciated from the pit below the stage - by musicians who thrill (or despair, as the case may well be) to a given score night after night. To my ear, the orchestration of "West Side Story" towers above all others, a masterwork of complexity and beauty that still reveals marvels to my colleagues and me."Videos