Sunday, November 17, 2013

The Rascals Once Upon a Dream Live @ the Fox Theatre Detroit

                                                            


The Rascals

Once Upon A Dream

Live @ The Fox Theatre

November 15th 2013

 

Felix Cavaliere vocals, Hammond organ

Eddie Brigati vocals & the toy

Gene Cornish Lead guitar, vocals

Dino Danelli drums

 

This is the moment I’ve been waiting for since the Rascals acrimonious breakup in 1970. I was a big fan from their very beginnings. I first saw the band @ the Eastown Theatre in 1971 not knowing Eddie Brigati and Gene Cornish were no longer in the band. It was a time of personal and musical changes for the Rascals. Cavaliere kept the name alive yet changed the musical focus from rock & roll and blue-eyed soul to more complex jazz-inspired excursions, melody and harmony mixed with a heady mix of improvisation and virtuosity. This was Cavaliere’s embrace of be-bop, a genre perfected by Saginaw legend Sonny Stitt. He added several musicians including Buzz Feiten on guitar, Chuck Rainey on bass with Annie Sutton and Cynthia Webb on vocals (Sutton sang Eddie Brigati’s tour-de-force How Can I Be Sure in their live show, giving it a soulful twist). Through the years I attended several Felix Cavaliere solo performances as well as a knockout Reunion Show at Meadowbrook. It was a glorious event yet Brigati chose to opt out. His presence was sorely missed. As the second lead singer and focal point onstage (he danced his ass off), Brigati was instrumental in creating the Rascals sound and stage persona. He was the heart and soul of the band. Cavaliere was well aware of this missing piece in the Rascals performance and announced onstage that Eddie was greatly missed.

Kudos to Steven Van Zandt as the producer and director of Once Upon a Dream. He is a true believer and is responsible for developing this incredible concept of merging a hybrid Rock N’ Roll concert with a Broadway Show. The Rascals performance would go beyond just their hits and go deep into the pocket of their rich catalog of music. The concert experience will feature filmed interludes that reveal not just the history of the Rascals but the history of the sixties through the prism of their music.

In an interesting twist the Rascals were not lured back to the stage for monetary reward instead it was Van Zandt riding the range and mending fences that brought the four principle players into the fold. They rediscovered themselves and each other forty years after their split. Once Upon a Dream is the perfect metaphor for The Rascals’ journey, as well as our own, as we all begin to measure time as how much time we have left. We learn about letting go whether it’s hitting the right note or keeping a slim waistline. But tonight all is forgotten in a brief flicker of the moment when the only thing that matters is that beautiful, soulful and joyous music of the Rascals. Listen…

The disembodied voice of Little Steven Van Zandt catches the attention of the audience…

“You can take photos, you can take videos, do whatever the fuck you want”

He goes on to encourage the crowd to put it up on facebook.

 

The Rascals opened with It’s Wonderful, the only hit on their fourth studio LP Once Upon a Dream. It is Brigati’s preachy but absolutely charming ode to enlightenment. Brigati’s singing is right in the pocket. His singing is confident and his scratchy tenor sheds forty years of anonymity. His voice is supple and has survived the ravages of time.  The hits come in quick succession from Cavaliere’s soulful take on Lonely Too Long (the big hit on the Collections), follows up with a deep end cut What is the Reason and an incredible take on You Better Run with a powerful extended coda.

The arrangements are true to the recorded versions with slight exceptions. For instance Brigati nails the gospel tinged Carry Me Back but Cavaliere’s intro on the original recording contained a complicated super charged piano trill that was left out of the concert performance.

The videotaped interview segments of the band members proved to be a fascinating firsthand account of the life and times of the Rascals in the sixties. The musicians were frank and funny in an ironic way. They told about their own foibles, how they met and the evolution of their sound – deep background stuff. Cavaliere relates a story from the early sixties in which he and Dino joined up with Sandra Scott and the Scotties in Las Vegas and they both had to wear Scottish uniforms – it put a tilt in their kilt.

The 50 by 25 foot LED screen provided an exciting backdrop that included lava lamp psychedelics, tie-dye grooviness, peace signs, doves flying, period videos and photos of the band and other sixties benchmarks from civil rights, the growth of youth culture and the assassinations of the Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King.

The re-enactment vignettes with young actors who resembled our heroes was not altogether annoying but added little to the overall vibe of the show.

 

There was a short 15 minute break in the show. The overhead lights come on and van Zandt’s pre-recorded voice booms, “It’s half time. Get drunk. Buy a tee-shirt. Take a piss!

 

The Rascals played several of their high-energy covers of Motown songs (a big inspiration) including Mickey’s Monkey, Turn on Your Lovelight and  Too Many Fish in the Sea. Mid-way through the set they rolled out their first minor hit Brigati’s garage punk show case I Ain’t Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore (written by Pam Sawyer and Laurie Burton) was spot on, melodrama personified. Good Lovin’ was a different story. It reached the top of the charts with its pulsating high energy delivery. It was delivered with all the punch and energy of the original recording, people were dancing in the aisles! The only major bummer in the show was Baby Let’s Wait. It was covered by several bands including the Rascals but the best version belonged to The Royal Guardsmen. It’s is superb slice of bubblegum but not a good fit for the Rascals.

 Gene Cornish provided one of his deep catalog chestnuts Away, Away. It is a slice of new wave psych with obscure lyrics. Beautiful.

Each member is strategic to the overall sound of the Rascals. In past reunions there was no Eddie Brigati and each time that missing piece led to a less than satisfying experience. Near the end of the show Eddie sang How can I Be Sure – me and everyone else there held our breath as Brigati reached and hit that high note on “Whenever I.” It was a transcendent moment. Eddie got a standing ovation and he was visibly moved by that outpouring of love.

The later hits from Freedom Suite were all performed including Ray of Hope, Heaven, People Got to Be Free. It was an astonishing triad of beautiful sounds with lyrical precision the preached peace, love and hope for all - modern hymnals. These were political statements that were colored by the spiritual longing in Cavalier’s lyrics.

The encore was the magnificent See, a minor hit with a big sound. The music was layered and complicated with elements of blues, jazz and hard rock all rolled up into five minutes of rock & roll nirvana – a neglected masterpiece

This multi-media showcase was a revelation, not just in the Rascals execution of the thirty plus songs but what they contributed to sixties culture in America. They were the voice of a generation speaking out against violence, racism and war. The violence in the sixties mirrored the discontent of our people. It was a cry for freedom. The Rascals music was the soundtrack for all that we hoped and dreamed for our country and ourselves. We only need to keep our hearts open to the possibility of truth and justice. The Rascals are an inspiration

Steven and Maureen Van Zandt produced and directed this incredible multi-media event and made it possible that the Rascals could be remembered as the sixties become a forgotten moment in time, fading in the distance as we speed off to the next big thing, the Rascals legend receding down the highway as we take one last look in the rearview mirror.

Time Peace

Bo White

 

 

Field of Hope; Brian d'Arcy James Live @ the Temple Theatre

                                                            

Field of Hope

Celebrating 25 Years

Starring

Brian d’Arcy James

 

The Temple Theatre basked in a brilliant sheen of love and remembrance in honor of Dr. Malcom Field’s 50 years of dedicated service to the community. Field’s is celebrating a silver anniversary, 25 years as an organization dedicated to people with neurological afflictions. The mission of Field Neurosciences Institute is the prevention, early diagnosis, care and cure of neurological diseases, disorders and injuries. This honorable pursuit resonates clearly as our community continues to rediscover itself and find meaning in the pursuit of helping others without hidden gain. In this millennium we are finding another way to live with honor and walk the path of integrity. With that in mind, Brian d’Arcy James was the perfect messenger to deliver the universal note. It was a captivating night with an audience merging into an amoeba-like oneness in support of their prodigal son, love was in the air and for that brief flicker in time we held each other and realized we were all together now.

The show opened, curtain drawn with a PowerPoint and a soundtrack that served as a retrospective of Brian’s career in film, stage and television from Shrek, Titanic, Port Authority as well as his self-penned tribute to Saginaw entitled Michigan Christmas (a great song).

Brian opened the show with Everybody Loves You Now, d’Arcy has a strong baritone with an impressive range. His pitch is spot on, a bit toasty but doesn’t not waiver a bit – quite refreshing. James comes off as a charmingly humble, a nice guy – genuine, no diva. He is a natural and he talks with the crowd like he’s in the living room with a few high school buddies. Yet he admits he is absolutely terrified to perform in front of family and friends. James also disclosed that his career started right here on the Temple stage when he auditioned to be one of the munchkins in the Wizard of Oz.

He pushed the veil a bit with his version of the Otis Redding R&B masterpiece Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay. Against all odds he pulled it off, his powerful baritone had a little bit of soul and proved to be a great yet modest arrangement that gave this tarnished bauble a slightly different sheen – it’s like polishing up an old pair of shoes for one more time around the floor. He even got the audience to join him in an off-key whistle fest at the coda. James surprised piano man Dan Lipton with a fresh loaf of Spatz Bread, a legendary local Saginaw bakery.

 

D’Arcy is involved in a play directed by former Saginaw thespian Jack ‘O Brien. It seems that James got out of rehearsal just to do this show and proved it by calling O‘Brien from the stage and getting the audience to give him a Hail Mary at the count of three 1,2,3  –“ Hi JACK!!” It’s a solid slice of community good vibrations flowing between the home town hero and his adoring fans.

He continued with a triad of songs composed by the Beatles. James rendition of Yesterday was a lovely minimalist reading with a quiet piano motif. He segued to Norwegian Wood, a smoky Lennon lament that was fueled by copious amounts of weed. It’s about a brief affair between Lennon and a bird he pulled from a night club. James ends the medley with a stunning portrait of Lennon’s sentimental masterpiece In My Life.

D’Arcy  combines two Johnny Mercer songs One for My Baby (One more for the Road) and October Goes (music by Barry Manilow). The first selection has a neat jazzed up piano the provides the emotional landscape for Joe the bartender giving the unlucky in love protagonist a listening ear and one last taste of the juice, This segues into October Goes. It’s another heartbreaker and d’Arcy’s vocals have just the right touch of pathos. It’s a great tune and the lyrics are bold and sensitive and the music colors the landscape with a powerful melancholy. This is a place you never want to visit. Sample the lyrics…

And when October goes
The same old dream appears
And you are in my arms
To share the happy years
I turn my head away
To hide the helpless tears
Oh how I hate to see October go
I should be over it now I know
It doesn't matter much
How old I grow
I hate to see October go

The next song Save the Last Dance for Me was a big hit for the Drifters in 1960. It was written by Doc Pomus and Mort Schuman, two of the greatest R&B songwriters ever. It’s a song that has a nice syncopation that gets your toes tapping and you just can’t help yourself and the dance floor fills up, the groove is on.

James explains that most of his songs are from musical theatre and that “Shrek is in the house.” He does a great version of the Shrek show stopper Who’d I Be. He introduces the song with a first-hand account of the 90 minute makeup preparation he endured for all of his Broadway performances. It was a great run that required an almost athletic fitness. James emotional reading ended in a powerful crescendo. Perfect!

7 Days is a song about two men vying for the love of tne same woman. The staccato piano rhythms speak to the herky jerky ambivalence in the lyric.  The protagonist says his rival is a Neanderthal but he doesn’t believe she’s bluffing this time around. The middle eight uses a time worn and approved technique citing tasks for each day of the week

Monday, I could wait till Tuesday
If I make up my mind
Wednesday would be fine, Thursday's on my mind
Friday'd give me time, Saturday could wait
But Sunday'd be too late

James is an unabashedly fond of Billy Joel (me too – especially the pre-liquored and balding version of our hero) and his catalog of music is exceptional. d’ Arcy’s baritone shows great range on this pop chestnut. He segues to a triad of wistful chestnuts including Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head, Satchmo’s Wonderful World and Barry Manilow’s ode to love a loss and letting go,  Can’t Live Without You and brings it all back with a reading of Billy Joel’s She’s Got a Way – heartfelt, loving and just a touch of melancholia.

Tempted was the big surprise of the evening – it’s is a great song yet a non-hit by the eighties pop/rock band Squeeze. D’arcy sings it real.

Brian sings Joseph & the Technicolor Dreamcoat. He originally did the song as a high school teen and a few years later at the Midland Center for the Arts. Tonight he reprises the song onstage with a few clips from his Midland performance so many years ago – sharing a personal and collective memory. In honor of his father, d’Arcy sang one of his favorite songs, the Lady is a Tramp, jazzed up Buddy Greco-style.

The finale At last is song made famous by Ella Fitzgerald. It is powerful, even spiritual. The perfect closer

 

At last my love has come along
My lonely days are over
And life is like a song

At last the skies above are blue
My heart was wrapped up in clover
The night I looked at you

I found a dream that I could speak to
A dream that I could call my own
I found a thrill to press my cheek to
A thrill I've never known well

You smile and then the spell was cast
And here we are in Heaven
For you are mine at last



The encore Beautiful City was a key song in the Broadway musical Godspell. It clearly resonates with Brian and audience and he gives it a strong treatment…

When all your trust is all but shattered

When your faith is all but killed

You can give up bitter and battered

Or you can slowly start to build

A beautiful city

Yes, we can; yes, we can

We can build a beautiful city

Not a city of angels

But finally a city of man

 

Brian James is a social visionary, wanting the world to be a pleasant place to live, a better place so there is no more suffering. Our fear is the music will stop and we won’t be able to dance anymore. Yet the arts will survive and we will have hope for the future as long as people like Brian d’Arcy James continues to keep music alive.