"Wellington, How Ya Doin'" Shouted out the tall and
very present Lavance Colley, who had settled himself in as compared for the
night. Right of the bat he introduces
PMJ's 'heart throb', Vance Smith, who croons Broadway-style through a very
sweet swing-version of Carly Rae Jepson's Call
Me, Maybe. Dressed in a skivvy,
braces, tight trousers and a boater hat, all that was missing from his
Mississippi Riverboat Showman garb was a striped blazer and cane. He later gave us a fully theatrical version
of Justin Timberlake's Cry Me A River,
complete with falsettos, multiple octave changes and other theatrical twee
embellishments.
The very suave Ms Sarah Niemietz may be the youngest and
newest cast member (the longest serving being the fabulous Maiya Sykes, who's
toured here four times, previously) but that didn't stop her belting out a
fantastic version of Gloria Gaynor's 1978 disco hit I Will Survive - only the gal made it into a 1930's torch song
dripping with sultry innuendos. Marlene
Dietrich would have been proud. Her
powerful, husky alto voice was absolutely stunning, and downright sexy to
boot. Dressed in flapper dress, short
bob haircut and with gams the just won't quit she was the real deal!
Also on fire tonight was the show's spectacular tap dancer,
Sara Reich. Tap is a talent that pretty
much goes under the radar, these days.
Ridiculed as something only the uncool kids do, Reichstag put on a show
that proved she was certainly no geek.
The best part was her 'beats battle' with drummer Dave Tedeschi, who
played out a number of d'n'b tattoos on Reich's tap-board and 'attempted' a few
amateur stunts. Of his own One of them almost
ended in a disastrous crash into the front row.
In reply Reich tapped up a storm in reply, mixed with a bit of hip-hop
and traditional tap dancing. It's hard
to really capture it all accurately on paper but suffice to say she was
definitely one of the highlights of tonight!
Lavance Colley/ Sarah Reich |
Tap dancers are all part of the great PMJ show experience
but I wonder what else they can bring to the stage. Last year we had a really entertaining
performance with Casey Abrams and Adam Kubota simultaneously playing the double
bass during PMJ's signature covers tune All
About The Bass.(Meghan Trainor). Later, Abrams did a few tricks with an ironing
board and a beer, purloined from the front of house bar. Perhaps future shows
could include more of that zaniness, or maybe a few some jugglers and
conjurers. That would really liven
things up.
Also back is Hannah Gill.
She did a few numbers but most memorable was an upbeat swing version of
Gotye's Somebody I Used To Know. She delivered it with such confidence and
passion that Kimbra would most definitely be rethinking her own version in a
live act!
Hannah Gill |
Perhaps less featured this time was our old friend Lavance
Colley, who was happy to let the others do the bulk of the material by he did
give us some gloriously camp falsettos on Adele's Halo. This is a song that I
Once had appreciated as a Pretty good pop tune but done Colley's way you can
well imagine it being used in a remake of Pricilla Queen of the Desert. Another highlight for me.
When I recently talked to Scott Bradlee in an interview, he confided
that he doesn't like to tour, instead preferring to stay in LA, reworking the
latest tunes and making YouTube clips.
Many of the performers featured end up going on tour. At present, there are three tours in full
swing - A European tour, a North American tour and an Asian Australasian tour,
which was just winding up. To fill in
for Bradlee on that leg Logan Thomas took over the keys. Like Bradlee himself, he's a quiet but
exceptionally capable player who communicates mainly with dry quips, nods and
the occasional facial expression. He's
part of the main team with musical director Adam Kubota ("The Bass
Whisperer") and enfant terrible Dave Tedeschi (drums and misguided
stunts). Also helping out, a small brass
section - Nick ("The Shark") Finzer on trombone and Chloe Feoranzo on
sax and clarinet. She also came down to
the front to give us another Radiohead's tune and No Alarms No Surprises. The
surprise was her huge voice - coming as it was from her small, petite
stature.
Post Modern Jukebox are already an institution on the
web. They've built up a reputation of
shows that showcase exceptional talent, performed in the tradition of those old-time
variety musical shows - but with modern music.
Hannah Gill / Maiya Sykes / Sarah Niemietz |
There's something uniquely 'American' about their delivery. So, I was surprised to see no mention of or
references to the recent tragic events in Los Vegas or the passing of Tom
Petty. PMJ's agenda chooses to transcend reality and their motives are pure and
simple: to put of a show that will knock your socks off! There are many artists that would have chosen
to dwell on recent happenings but PMJ chose to remain timeless. They wanted to bring hope and joy so if you
look at it this was then their finale version of Taylor Swift's Shake It Off spoke volumes.
PMJ's final encore number, Such Great Heights (The Postal Service) came with many bows, cheers
and a mass group selfie that involved all the road crew and theatre personnel
as well on the stage. Once again, PMJ
had delivered a night to remember. Wrapping
up, Colley promised that they'd be back again.
Here's hoping they will.
All photos by LeVic Visual / Ambient Light - http://www.ambientlightblog.com/
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