Description
Double CD – gatefold sleeve
Track Listings
| 1 | Aquarius |
| 2 | Donna – Will Swenson |
| 3 | Hashish |
| 4 | Sodomy |
| 5 | Colored Spade |
| 6 | Manchester England |
| 7 | I’m Black/Ain’t Got No – Will Swenson |
| 8 | Sheila Franklin/I Believe In Love |
| 9 | Ain’t Got No Grass |
| 10 | Air – Sasha Allen |
| 11 | Kama Sutra/The Stone Age – Will Swenson |
| 12 | I Got Life |
| 13 | Initials |
| 14 | Going Down – Will Swenson |
| 15 | Hair – Will Swenson |
| 16 | My Conviction – Andrew Kober |
| 17 | Easy To Be Hard – Caissie Levy |
| 18 | Don’t Put It Down – Will Swenson |
| 19 | Frank Mills – Allison Case |
| 20 | Hare Krishna/Be-In |
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21 |
Where Do I Go? CD2 |
| 22 | Electric Blues – Steel Burkhardt |
| 23 | Oh Great God Of Power/Manchester England [Reprise] |
| 24 | Black Boys – Tommar Wilson |
| 25 | White Boys – Saycon Sengbloh |
| 26 | Walking In Space |
| 27 | Minuet/African Drums – Broadway Cast |
| 28 | Yes I’s Finished On Y’All’s Farmlands – Tommar Wilson |
| 29 | Four Score/Abie Baby – Tommar Wilson |
| 30 | Give Up All Desires/Hail Mary/Roll Call – Megan Lawrence |
| 31 | Three-Five-Zero-Zero |
| 32 | What A Piece Of Work Is Man/How Dare They Try |
| 33 | Good Morning Starshine |
| 34 | Aquarius Goodnights/Ain’t Got No/Yip Up The Sun |
| 35 | The Flesh Failures/Eyes Look Your Last/Let The Sun Shine In |
| 36 | Curtain Call: Hair [Reprise] |
| 37 | Curtain Call: Let The Sun Shine In [Reprise] |
HAIR, featuring book and lyrics by the late Gerome Ragni and James Rado and music by Galt MacDermot, opened to rave reviews on Broadway March 31, 2009 at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre. Under the direction of Diane Paulus, Hair arrives on Broadway after a run as part of the Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park 2008. Hair depicts the birth of a cultural movement in the ’60s and ’70s that changed America forever: The musical follows a group of hopeful, free-spirited young people who advocate a lifestyle of pacifism and free-love in a society riddled with intolerance and brutality during the Vietnam War. As they explore sexual identity, challenge racism, experiment with drugs and burn draft cards, the “tribe” in Hair creates an irresistible message of hope, peace and change that continues to resonate with audiences 40 years later.
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