Showing posts with label Concert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Concert. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 September 2009

Tori Amos and Hairspray... huh?

I went up to London on the weekend of the 11-13 of September to see two very different shows: Tori Amos in concert and Hairspray at the Shaftsbury theatre.

Firstly, Tori Amos is an artist I have long enjoyed - ever since Helen introduced me to her when we were about 18 I think! She is entirely mad though - her lyrics will show you that if her pronunciation of same does not. She has been touted as the inspiration for Neil Gaiman's Delirium, and I can well believe it.

I went with Jason, who, upon my demand for 'Steak!' took me to a lovely adult pub in the wilds of London called the Andover Arms, a cracking good place with a lovely atmosphere and very helpful staff (I will admit to at first miss-reading the name and thinking 'why on earth would anyone call a pub the handover?!?' but decided not to mention this to J who already has an evil sense of humour regarding my use of the English language!). After steak was had (I always get a rush of energy from red meat, sorely needed after the three and a half hour train ride from Plymouth!), Jason expounded his theory on pub goodness, which goes somewhere along the lines of "The excellence of a public house is inversely related to it's distance from the nearest source of mass transportation; the further away it is from said hub, the better it will be." which I think is very true.

Anyway, Tori was to be found at the Apollo Stadium. She played a good mix of her old and new pieces. I didn't recognise a couple of tunes, but the rest were well known and I enjoyed the way she re-interpreted her own songs. The concert started a little slow, but after a solo stint (including Mr. Zebra!) the energy picked up and by the end, the stage had a swarm of fans squished between the stage and first row of seats trying to get close to her. 'Precious Things' and 'Little Amsterdam' were highlights for me as well as the staple 'Cornflake Girl' which she absolutely rocked. I thoroughly enjoyed the evening.

Hairspray on the other hand was a completely different kettle of fish if I can mix my metaphors. Hillary and I went for a girls night out, and excluding the overwhelming heat of the theatre and the phenomenal line for the ladies, it was a really enjoyable night.

In fact, I haven't laughed so much in a musical since I saw 'The Producers' - I was crying from laughter at one point! The parents of the protagonist, Tracy, sing a love duet called 'Timeless to Me'. Tracy's mother, Edna, is played by a man, so the set-up is already ripe for many sniggers. However the father on our night was played by the understudy, Nigel Planer being absent for whatever reason, and this guy either flubbed a line, or exaggerated a gesture, and caused the both of them to spend most of the number trying not to laugh, and for some reason there is absolutely nothing funnier than an actor in a funny situation snorting to suppress laughter. I had stitches!

The storyline to the show is slightly different to the movie version too, all to the good in my opinion. Two new musical numbers made the show fresh for me, and the energy of the dancers was incredible - I was tired just watching them! I won't tell you the story here - you'll just have to find out for yourselves!

All in all, it was a very enjoyable, if very exhausting, weekend away.

Monday, 16 July 2007

2nd Night at the Proms

On Saturday night I went to the 2nd Night at the Proms at the Royal Albert Hall. The first had already sold out, but Wow.... wow wow wow. I was seated on the prompt side of the stage, behind the cellos & double bases and the SOUND!!! I was in row 2, 2 from the end, for Prom 2.


The night's presenter was Richard E. Grant, and the theme of the night was English film music to celebrate the 60th year of BAFTA. And I was in heaven. Amongst music from Harry Potter, Much Ado About Nothing, the Dam Busters and Laurence of Arabia, it was an emotional roller-coaster. I was blown away. Most of the time I was grinning manically, when I wasn’t almost in tears. The hall’s organ was also deployed and boy was it amazing! I cold feel the sound through my feet! And being so near the brass section, we got all the blasts of volume you could desire. It was wonderful!! This was what I heard:

Walton: Battle of Britain - 'Battle In The Air' (5 mins)
Lambert: Anna Karenina – Suite (10 mins)
Vaughan Williams: The 49th Parallel - Prelude (2 mins)
Adler: Genevieve – Waltz (3 mins)
Maurice Jarre : Lawrence of Arabia - Theme (3.30 mins)
Easdale: The Red Shoes - Suite (15 mins)
Arnold: Bridge On The River Kwai – March (3 mins)
Ireland: The Overlanders – March – Scorched Earth (4.30 mins)
Sir Richard Rodney Bennett: Love Theme From 'Yanks' (3.30 mins)
Eric Rogers: Carry On... Medley (7 mins)
Patrick Doyle: Much Ado About Nothing - Overture (4.20 mins)
Stephen Warbeck: Shakespeare In Love (5 mins)
Debbie Wiseman: Wilde – Suite (4.30 mins)
John Powell/Harry Gregson-Williams: Chicken Run (4 mins)
Addison: A Bridge Too Far (3.30 mins)
John Williams : Harry Potter - Harry's Wondrous World (4.30 mins)
Coates: The Dam Busters (3.45 mins)

Lining up for tickets before hand was a minor nightmare: note to self, buy tickets at least the day before the performance next time! I waited in line for ¾ of an hour, only getting my tickets 15mins before the performance started, and there were MANY more people in the queue behind me.

Afterwards though, I had a surreal experience. Unlike almost every classical concert I’ve ever been to, where most of the patrons disappear into their cars and a traffic jam ensues, it seemed to me like the entire audience filed, in very orderly fashion, down the road to the nearest tube station… which was a good 10 minutes walk away. So for 10-15 minutes, I was part of a continuous stream of people walking from The Royal Albert to Knightsbridge Tube Station, and even though it was the middle of the night, I felt safer then than I have ever felt in London. I crossed the road at one stage, and checked out the procession: there were people as far as I could see in both directions. It was very like being in Sydney after the New Years Eve fireworks without any drunks! It was very cool.

London for me though is both Sunshine and Shadow; I both love and hate this city. I was depressed this morning. It was raining, and I am sick of my hostel after only two days and unhappy that I have to go back there, and the server at work went down overnight and didn't come back up for three hours and I have to produce over 1000 maps in the next week and a half... So, not happy. Then I went for a walk during lunch along Charing Cross Road, visited 6 bookshops in the space of 15 minutes before settling on one (needless to say, making a couple of purchases) and came back to work Euphoric... such a strange city.