Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Latest on the Quixotic Quest cc @joshgroban

I saw a tweet on my timeline that reminded me of my Quixotic Quest.  This is the interchange I saw.


YES, YES, indeed!

So I tweeted back. These are screen images, so the tweets appear in reverse chronological order, just as they would on twitter.



I think I've blogged about these videos that appear in my tweets before but they're still on my mind.

This is one that shows Michael Jackson's audiences a lot.   I think it's a composite of many audiences. MJ liked to show his audiences, because he felt that these views demonstrated that he was channelling spiritual energy from the universe into those listening.  He commented later that he travelled to 40 countries, and everywhere he went people cried, fainted, lit candles &c in exactly the same places.  He concluded that music, dance, and children could heal the world.




This one shows a group of singers singing "We are the World" at the World Expo in Shanghai in 2010.  


These are all very fascinating performers who we haven't heard much about in the USA, but who are big in their home countries.  I really urge people to look into them, because it's not clear to me why we don't know about them.

I have been most interested in 費翔 Kris Phillips, because he is an American who lives in New York and performs in China. He is also a citizen of Taiwan. He went into China in 1987 -- alone -- armed only with his beautiful voice, his handsome face, and his disco dancing skills and he took that country by storm. He introduced pop music there and became a figure of similar magnitude to Michael Jackson there. We never heard a thing about it. He's the one who sings first in the video, the very tall, very handsome half Asian.

He was criticized by Taiwanese, because he was viewed as a communist appeaser. He was criticized by Chinese for being a decadent capitalist influence. Yet he went in. He seems to be a very idealistic person who loves China and wants to promote international cultural understanding.

I feel he deserves more recognition here, though I guess he likes the fact that Americans don't recognize him, while he probably can't go out on the street in China.

Tho I must say that Vitas' amazing falsetto is something that we have also been missing out on, presumably because he's Russian -- as if that should matter.

Laura Fygi is a person of fascinating mixed ethnicity. Rain is a big star in Korea. SunNan is a Chinese tenor with an absolutely lovely tone. CoCo Lee has performed here, once at the Oscars, I think.

The World Expo in Shanghai in 2010 got a virtual news blackout in the USA -- except for a few reporters who interviewed malcontents outside the event. Our press seems to have a see no good, hear no good, speak no good attitude towards China.  

Other countries took the event more seriously. The city of Copenhagen sent their actual Little Mermaid statue to the festival -- THE SYMBOL OF THEIR CITY. Think about it, as if we had sent the Liberty Bell from Philadelphia. During the Expo, if you went to the place where the Little Mermaid normally stands in Copenhagen, you would find a screen with a video feed to Shanghai. Now that's commitment. I admire them for it.

By contrast, our press attitude was deplorable.

(I don't understand why I can't clear the background color out of this section. Google's blogger interface is not so great)

But the curious, and remarkable thing, was that that only the month before, a group of Americans sang "We are the World," including Josh Groban -- who is a common theme in this blog. 


I erroneously said it was the same month as in China, but the YouTube dates of these videos are a bit more than month apart.  I'm not sure when the recording in China actually occurred.  The actual expo didn't start until May, but CocoLee uploaded her video March 31, 2010.

Still, pretty close.

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Addendum

I see that this is what Adele actually sang for Brussels -- very nice








Monday, March 21, 2016

Audra McDonald & "Shuffle Along"

I saw Audra McDonald perform with Josh Groban or at least in the same concert at least twice. Once was in Lincoln Center, I think at the Marvin Hamlisch concert. The other was on his Stages DVD. Anyone new to this blog is perhaps not aware that being a Grobanite is a central feature of mine and of this blog.

After Stages, I looked up some of her videos on YouTube. I liked what I heard. I decided I wanted to hear more of her singing, and in person.

So I went to her website and looked for her tour. Josh said on the DVD that she was on tour. I found out she was in New York City for a while in March doing a show called Shuffle Along. I was still thinking this was the name of a concert she was doing. Josh always has names for his concert tours.

The show was in a Broadway Theater, The Music Box, but I know Jackie Evancho has done concerts in Broadway theaters, so I was still thinking it was a concert.

I got there early and there was a huge line to get in, people who already had tickets. I double checked my ticket and I had an assigned seat, so I went off to the side and checked in to my next day's acting job using my cell phone.

Eventually the line started moving. I went in past a very cool, historical drinking fountain, where the water was coming out of something that looked like a fish and there were small paper cups to collect it. These were really small, like shot glasses. You had to drink several of them to get any appreciable amount of water. Fortunately, there wasn't a line for that.

Nor was there a line for the bathroom, fortunately. I suspect they must have added some stalls since the original theater. The place was quite ample. Curiously, I later saw men waiting for the restroom at intermission. You seldom see that.

It turned out that the show was sold out. I like to buy cheap tickets, so I was near the rear of the balcony. I don't have long legs. My height has always been in my torso. Even so there wasn't enough leg room. It was quite uncomfortable.

It was the guy sitting next to me who clued me in to the fact that it was a Broadway show, a musical. Fortunately, Audra was appearing in the musical, as one of the leads. Naturally, there four male leads, and only one female, though there were some supporting females who got substantial performance time.  

One of the other leads was Brian Stokes Mitchell. He also has performed with Josh Groban. There's a recorded duet of them somewhere. Also I saw Mitchell at the Americans for the Arts Awards, where Josh got an award back in 2012. They both got awards.

So I essentially killed two birds with one stone, getting to hear them both perform. 

Apparently some of the other performers are well known also, but not to me, so that wasn't as exciting for me.

Anyway, the guy next to me informed me that Shuffle Along was the first Broadway play to be all Afrimerican performers. He thought this was a reenactment, tho that also turned out to be not quite right.

They sang the songs from the original show, but in between they told the story of the show and of the performers. It turned out to be a history lesson.  I found parts of the show fairly confusing at first, possibly because I was coming in with the wrong expectations. 

I did like Audra best of all the performers. It turns out that she's a triple threat.  She acts and she did tap dancing.  Although she seemed quite shy and retiring in the video where she performed with Josh, she didnt seem so on stage at all. She played a sassy character convincingly.

I definitely did like her singing a lot. Everyone was singing on stage, but her voice was the one I liked best. If she were to do a concert on her own, I would love to hear her.  She has a very rich, full tone.  Though belting seems to be all the rage on Broadway, shes more of a legit singer.  Its nice to know that legit singers arent completely excluded from Broadway.