Turning Lyrics
Turning
Liza:Tis a gift to be simple
Tis a gift to be free
Tis a gift to come down
Where you wanna be
For until you find yourself
In a place that's right
Turning, turning, will be your delight
Turning, Turning, will be a delight
Chorus:
Whoa-whoa-whoa
Liza:
Come together everybody
Chorus:
Come together everybody
Liza:
Everybody gather round
Chorus:
Everybody gather round
Liza:
While I sing in celebration
Chorus:
Celebration, celebration
Liza:
Of the wonder I have found
Chorus:
Wonder I have found
Yeah
Liza:
And the wonder is the turning
Chorus:
The wonder is the turning
Yeah
Liza:
Is the morning to the night
Chorus:
Tonight, tonight, tonight
Liza:
As the summer to the autumn
Chorus:
Oh, the summer is the autumn
Liza:
As the spirit to the light
Chorus:
Ah, the spirit is the light
Liza:
As a baby to the momma
Chorus:
As a baby to a momma
Liza:
As a stranger to a friend
Chorus:
As a stranger to a freind
Liza:
As a friend into a lover
Chorus:
As a friend into a lover
Liza:
Making circles to the end
Chorus:
Making circles to the end
Oh, yeah
Liza and Chorus:
Cause this a gift to be simple
Tis a gift to be free
Tis a gift to come down
Where I wanna be
Liza:
Oh, turning, turning,
Chorus:
Turning, turning
Liza:
Turning turning, whoa
Chorus:
Turning, turning
Liza:
Turning, turning, whoa
Chorus:
Turning
Liza:
Turning, is your delight
Song Overview
TL;DR: A borrowed hymn tune repurposed as Broadway craft - communal, circular, and briskly timed, like a backstage pep talk that happens to be singable.
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Where it lands: Act I, between the barroom portrait gallery of "Bobo's" and the group commentary of "Little Do They Know".
- Track identity: Track 4 on the cast album, performed by the star with chorus.
- Material: A Shaker hymn text and feel, adapted into a short, driving ensemble number.
- Stage job: It turns the room from spectators to participants - the show briefly pretends we are all in the same circle.
- What makes it stick: Repetition with purpose: the title word becomes both theme and percussion.
The Act (1977) - stage musical - diegetic. Act I placement: Michelle Craig leads the number, with the chorus reinforcing it as a shared chant more than a private confession. Why it matters: in a star vehicle, this is a rare moment when the spotlight widens instead of tightening, and the show lets its ensemble do what a chorus does best - make an idea feel inevitable.
Creation History
The song is labeled as a "Shaker hymn" in Broadway documentation, and it behaves like one: plain language, communal address, and a melody built for voices to stack quickly. Kander and Ebb fold that material into a contemporary 1970s score, so the effect is less museum-piece and more working theater - a familiar spiritual cadence retooled as a piece of stage momentum. According to The New Yorker, the production was already calling attention to details like the hymn number and Halston's costuming in its first week, a reminder that this show arrived with a lot of eyes on it and very little patience for filler.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
The Act uses a backstage story as scaffolding for a run of nightclub-style turns. This number arrives in Act I as a brisk reset: after the show has shown you the grit of everyday survival, it offers a compact, almost ceremonial chorus to lift the energy and pull the room into one rhythm. On the cast album, the chorus presence makes that intent unmistakable: this is not just Michelle singing - it is the show building a crowd.
Song Meaning
At face value it is a celebration of change: morning to night, summer to autumn, stranger touí friend, friend to lover. But the deeper message is practical, not mystical. The lyric keeps insisting that you find "the place that's right" by movement, not by worry. In other words: keep going, keep adjusting, keep circling back until you land where you can stand. For a character selling a comeback, that idea is not decorative - it is strategy.
Annotations
Tis a gift to be simple
The opening frames the number as a hymn, then the staging turns it into a show-business tool: a clean phrase that gives the singer instant authority without needing plot explanation.
Come together everybody
This is stage direction wearing a lyric hat. It is not subtle, and it does not need to be: it is the kind of line that makes a chorus look like a community on cue.
Making circles to the end
The image is cheerful, but it is also a little sharp: circles can be comforting, and they can be traps. The number chooses comfort, yet the phrase leaves room for the show's harder edges to return.
Turning, turning, will be your delight
The hook is a mantra and a metronome at the same time. Repetition here is not laziness - it is how the number turns belief into rhythm.
Style and rhythm
Even when the rest of the score flirts with late-1970s gloss, this one keeps its feet on the floor. The pulse is steady and forward, and the chorus writing favors unison and simple responses - a fast way to sound united. It is a short number, so it cannot afford fancy detours; it does its work by keeping the pattern obvious and the momentum clean.
Feeling curve
The curve is upward, but not syrupy. It starts as a statement, becomes a gathering, then ends by doubling down on the central verb. The piece does not ask you to solve anything; it asks you to move.
Technical Information (Quick Facts)
- Artist: Liza Minnelli
- Featured: Chorus (cast album performance)
- Composer: John Kander
- Lyricist: Fred Ebb
- Producer (cast album): Hugh Fordin
- Release Date: June 1978 (original cast album)
- Genre: show tune, hymn-based ensemble
- Instruments: voice, chorus, orchestral accompaniment
- Label: DRG Records
- Mood: buoyant, communal, brisk
- Length: 2:49
- Track #: 4
- Language: English
- Album: The Act (Original 1977 Broadway Cast Recording)
- Music style: chorus-driven refrain with hymn phrasing
- Poetic meter: accentual, built for singalong stresses
- Tempo: 114 BPM
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is this the same "Turning" as the song from Les Miserables?
- No. This is a different song from The Act by Kander and Ebb, tied to a Shaker hymn idea and presented as a short ensemble number.
- Why is it tagged as a "Shaker hymn"?
- The lyric borrows the Shaker hymn opening and its plainspoken structure, and the number leans into communal singing rather than character monologue.
- Who sings it in the Broadway story?
- Broadway song lists credit Michelle Craig leading it, and the cast album expands that into a star-plus-chorus performance.
- What is the dramatic purpose of placing it in Act I?
- It acts as a reset: it gathers the room, lifts the pace, and prepares the show for the next wave of plot and commentary.
- Does it function as a nightclub number or a book song?
- It plays like a nightclub turn in its direct address, but its job is closer to a book song: it reframes the evening's themes in one clean, repeatable idea.
- How long is it on the cast album?
- Just under three minutes, which is part of why it feels like a burst of oxygen rather than a long meditation.
- Is there evidence it was released as a commercial single?
- The commonly cited release history centers on the cast album and later reissues; a dedicated single release is not widely documented in standard discographies.
- What is the key image of the lyric?
- Transformation as a chain: day to night, season to season, stranger to friend, friend to lover. The point is the motion, not the destination.
- What tempo does it sit around?
- Performance metadata commonly lists it at 114 BPM, which supports a light, driving chorus without pushing into sprint territory.
Awards and Chart Positions
The song itself is not typically singled out in trade charts, but the show and its recording left a clear paper trail. Michelle Craig's star turn earned major awards attention, and the cast album briefly appeared on the US Cash Box Top Albums chart, peaking in mid-July 1978. According to Cash Box magazine, the album's chart run was short but real - a three-week appearance that reads like a souvenir from a production that people argued about, then kept listening to anyway.
| Item | Result | Year / Date |
|---|---|---|
| Tony Awards (The Act) | Best Actress in a Musical - Liza Minnelli (win); additional nominations for score, actor, choreography, costumes, lighting | 1978 season |
| US Top Albums (Cash Box) | Cast album peak position: 188 | July 15, 1978 issue |
Additional Info
This is the rare Broadway moment that borrows a sacred tone without turning into stained glass. The number is short, direct, and slightly bossy - it tells the room what to do and then makes that instruction sound like joy. I also like its placement in the album sequence: coming right after a thick slice of character writing, it snaps the focus outward, as if the show is reminding itself that a chorus is not decoration. As stated in The New Yorker in early November 1977, "Turning (Shaker Hymn)" was already part of the public conversation around the production in its opening stretch, which makes sense: a hymn inside a star vehicle is a deliberate choice, and critics notice deliberate choices.
Key Contributors
| Subject | Verb | Object |
|---|---|---|
| John Kander | composed | "Turning" |
| Fred Ebb | wrote lyrics for | "Turning" |
| Liza Minnelli | performed | "Turning" on the original cast album |
| Hugh Fordin | produced | The Act (original cast album) |
| DRG Records | released | The Act (original cast album) |
| RCA Records | handled manufacturing and marketing for | The Act (original cast album distribution arrangement) |
| Joseph Brackett | wrote | "Simple Gifts" (Shaker song referenced by the lyric) |
| Ralph Burns | orchestrated | The Act (Broadway production and recording credits) |
| Earl Brown | arranged | "Turning" (recording credits) |
Sources
Sources: IBDB production page for The Act, The Act (cast recording) reference entry, The Act (musical) reference entry, Shazam track page for "Turning" (credits and BPM), DRG Records YouTube delivery page for the track, Cash Box Top Albums chart reference in cast-recording documentation, The New Yorker November 1977 Broadway column mentioning "Turning (Shaker Hymn)", Simple Gifts reference entry