Despite my love for all things Coach K (Duke) and the amazing color scheme worn by the greatest player of all time (light baby blue and white of North Carolina), I have always identified the Illini as my favorite college basketball team. From the days of first starting to watch college basketball when the '89 team with Nick Anderson, Kendall Gill, and Marcus Liberty made their march madness run, to the magnificently under-achieving Kiwane Garris era. TThen there was Lon Kruger and the Peoria boys, plus the arrival and departure of Bill Self. Bruce Weber was a favorite of mine, and you can't forget his teams' magical run through and over the Big Ten. Dee Brown, Deron Williams, Luther Head, james Augustine...I even loved the Brian Randle/Demetri McCamey teams. Bur since Webber was relieved of his duties, it's the John Croce tenure that has me and other fans completely disapointed. Underwelmed is a word most commonly used. This upcoming season won't change that. The team returns leading scorer Rayvonte Rice, but loses team captain senior Tracy Abrams to a knee injury. Also back are Kendrick Nunn and big man Nnanna Egwu. The rest of the roster is filled with a team wh needs to step up and provie itself, featuring only 3 talents over 6'9 and the rest right around the 6'3 height range. Croce was hoping to change all of that with heavily recruitment of the state of Illinois and Chicago. Cliff Alexander would have changed that. The Cliff Alexander decision to go to Kansas hurt...alot. Alexander would have changed the current culture of hoops for Croce. Some people have said the same about Jalen Brunson, the Stevenson guard who just committed to Villanova. Another big time Illinios kid Croce went after and lost. In turn, Croce has been able to load his roster with mid-level kids from the state, and even snag some of the area's elite (6'7 DJ Williams, 6'4 Aaron Jordan, and 6'4 point Jalen Coleman). The problem is his team is built more for battling smaller conference teams, and lacks the size and talent tit takes to compete in th Big Ten. In fact my alma mater Marian University features more of a height advantage than the Illini (minus the 3 guys they have over 6'10). So how do we fix things? How can we bring some excitement to this program? Well here's a few suggestions:
Let's start big, shall we? There are a few high school seniors still looking for schools that could really help this program. Check out Diamond Stone, a 6'10 center from Milwaukee ranked 4th in the HS 150. Caleb Swanigan is ranked 8th, a 6'8 big forward from Fort Wayne, Ind. Isiah Briscoe is a 6'3 point guard from Union, NJ currently ranked #13th would be an exciting signing, as would PJ Dozier, a 6'6 swingman from Philly (ranked #21). Melvin Frazier is an excited 6'7 game-changer from Louisiana (#87), as is Carlton Bragg, a 6'9 forward in Cleveland, a former stomping ground of Croce (ranked #18). Also close to home is the 6'5 Davon Dilliard from Gary, Indiana (ranked #94).
There's also a look into the future...the class of 2016. The potenial in kids like Ben Coupet (a 6'7 forward from Simeon) and Barrett Benson (6'9 Hinsdale) is hard to miss. Getting those two players to stay in state would be a good move, as would be pursuit of Whiteny Young's Skyler Nash, a 6'5 guard who's heavily on Wisconsin's wishlist.
Chicago has two huge unsigned talents that will generate lots of attention this season in Myles Carter and Marcus LoVett. Both seniors have tremendous upsides. Carter is a 6'8 power forward playing for Catholic league powerhouse St. Rita (let's go Mustangs!) and features a ton of athletic talent that needs a small does of pushing in the right direction. LoVett...he's been at the center of the Chicago basketball universe recently. There are some who think he's the best point guard in Illinois and even better than Brunson (definitely not better than Brunson). A solid 6'0 tough as nails point guard with handles and passing skills that get crowds excited often, LoVett will get to show off his talents at Morgan Park this year for Nick Irvin. LoVett is the classic over-skilled underdog and if he really is as god as he and Irvin think he is, well he could bring that excitement to Champaign that the Illini has been missing for years.
"And baby It’s amazing I’m in this maze with you, I just can’t crack the code, one day you screaming you love me loud, the next day you’re so cold...."
Holy Grail
It was going to be hard for “The Legends of the Summer” tour to actually top the ultimate anticipation and expectations surrounding its build up, however when that tour includes the number one pop artist and the number one artist in rap, not to mention said artist both promoting new albums, you can see why expectations were high.
Here’s what you should know: Justin Timberlake is a tremendous pop artist. He’s a showman, a song and dance king. He’s been doing this thing before even he remembers. Justin can sing and dance and entertain in his sleep. Where he begs and pleads for approval, his tour-mate Shawn Carter basically demands it, un-apologetically. Trying to find a common comfortable ground, both played wingman throughout the night for each other. With large band in hand and a tremendous stage setting, the show opener “Holy Grail”, echo’ed throughout the 60,000 plus packed Soldier Field like anew generation sing a long anthem…and it’s fitting, in a music industry so fickle and built on stars who rise and fall within minutes, both artists were here, in this moment, with the biggest albums in the world, staring in the biggest concert tour of the year.
So let’s get to the show: Over 30 songs, all full of energy, had the crowd singing and dancing all night long. Their difference in styles comes off more as an Alpha/Omega relation, where as in past concerts Timberlake plays the same, he’s all over different instruments, commanding the crowd, and interjecting some very cool dance moves. Put him next to Jay Z however, and you notice how Jay commands a stage, while Justin fits easily into the sideman role. Jay Z has become one of the better live performers in music. While not built on movement or running and dancing around stage, Jay Z makes every move mean something, every verse, wether he emphasizes a line, a word, his voice…it commands the crowd.
There were the typical show-stoppers: Timberlake’s “Tunnel Vision”, “Pusher Love Girl”, “Mirrors”, “Love Stoned”, and “Cry me a river” put the crowd in the palm of his hands. Plus you’ll rarely find another song that gets a crowd moving and chanting like “Sexyback”. And while Justin was tremendous, it’s Jay Z who dominated the night. Commanding the Chicago audience to sing along to his NYC anthem “Empire State of Mind”, Jay Z rocked the crowd with hits such as “PSA”, “U Don’t Know”, “99 Problems” and “ Ni**as in Paris”.
After nearly three hours, as the clock approached midnight the two kings of music brought this epic night to a close, dominating the nights with hits, living up to most of the expectations fans had been counting on for months and months. Great show, great night.
My introduction to music started back in 1983. The 80’s were a phenomenal era, and rock music was everywhere, every artist was different, pop music and r&b music had the same sound, and Michael Jackson ruled world. And then Purple Rain happened….changing everything I thought about music. Prince wasn’t like anyone. He didn’t sound like anyone. He didn’t want to be like anyone…and this movie, this movie was just cool. Here was a guy who was bad ass, didn’t care what you thought about what he wore or how he looked and was going to sing and play his ass off. The more I heard from him the more I realized that I need more. This bad ass could do no wrong. His music, not perfect, but provided hit after hit after hit. You couldn’t copy Prince, he was just too original. He was so un-realistic to me, that he didn’t exist in real life, just in music, stories, and the occasional television appearance. He toured, playing in other states, countries, and even here but pushing new material, which may have been good but wasn’t quite up to that standards of the Prince I wanted to see. I wanted the hits. I wanted prince at his best, no restrictions. Finally I got my chance when Prince hit Chicago for a 3 day stint at the United Center.
From top to bottom most people who attended the first show on Monday will tell you it was a disaster. That won’t change hear. Prince is anything but perfect, yet seemingly a perfectionist. Let’s go on to the last show on Wednesday, which was short on the encore yet had the strongest opening of any of the concerts so far. I’ve seen many shows from some of the greatest artist of my time; nevertheless the opening to Prince’s final show was easily the best I’ve ever experienced. From starting with “Controversy”, Let’s go crazy” Delirious” “1999” “Little Red Corvette”….hit after hit after hit. Prince gave Chicago the proper ending his “Welcome 2 Chicago” stint deserved. With an incredible horn section, including some incredible work done by the legendary Maceo Parker. Prince also has a serious appreciation of the work his cousin Morris Day has done, as he ended the Wednesday show partying it up with fans to “The Bird” and “Jungle Love”.
So with the bad start, and the properly-fitting ending, its Tuesday’s performance that makes Prince’s stay at the UC memorable.
From the get-go Prince was determined to make up for the rough start that was Monday. With the stage set up in the round in the form of his love symbol, prince stomped all over the stage wearing a pair of heels better than most of the women attending the concert. Big on fan participation, Prince often let the crowd do the singing, if not the three lovely (not so) background singers who performed almost every song with him. The show kept a steady rhythm of hits until falling flat when Prince turned over the stage to his latest protégé Andy Allo. While she wasn’t bad, the crowd came specifically to see prince, not Allo, so the energy fell flat.
As if on cue Prince returned and picked up steam quickly, albeit, with a few slow songs. All crowd pleasers, he brought down the house with “Sometimes it snows in April”, Shhh (a song written for Tevin Campbell), and a slowed down version of “I could never take the place of your man”. The biggest reaction of the night came next, with the performance of “Nothing compares 2 u”, as midway through the first verse Chicago’s own Jennifer Hudson took the stage. With a voice bigger than the arena holding her, she owned her part of the duet, bringing tears to eyes and fans out of their seats. It was very funny watching Jennifer (wearing heels) tower over prince (also wearing heels) like Andre the Giant staring down at Hulk Hogan at Wrestlemania III. Prince followed that performance with “Purple Rain”, a powerful and magical ending with included confetti and glitter and everything else you’d expect from a Prince performance of the song.
Prince had a lot to make up for on Monday, so four encores didn’t hurt. The fans weren’t leaving, and when they did it only made prince want to come out even more. Whether it was a one song encore, or a musical medley of over 10 songs, prince gave the crowd everything he got, even once screaming “you know how many hit’s I got? We’ll be here all night!”
The end of the night concluded much like Wednesday’s show with fans dancing on stage, with the houselights on (he did this frequently, wanting to see the crowd dance), jamming out to the Batman soundtrack rarity “Partyman”, a fitting song for a man who held the crowd in his hands since the rumors of a prince concert were mentioned.
And just like that, Thursday morning it was over…like it had never happened, life was back to normal. But for the fans of Chicago who attended, whether the good, the bad, or the great, it was clear (using his own words) that “can’t nobody do it like Prince”.
The Tuesday Night Set-list:
(thunderstorm show intro)
(with Let's Go Crazy)
Shhh…
I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man
(with Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough)
(with Jennifer Hudson)
How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore
Encore 3:
What Have You Done For Me Lately
(Janet Jackson cover)
It wasn't that long ago where I gushed and gollied over what an incredible album Jay-Z and Kanye West's "Watch the Throne" collaboration turned out to be. While so called experts and critics felt it was 'under-whelming" and 'self-absorbed", I knew better. And quite frankly the streets don't lie. You know what else doesn't lie...numbers. And by the shear amount of sell-out crowds and acclaim garnered from previous stops on their 'throne" tour, you just knew the touchdown in Chicago was going to be epic. Not only is Chicago the hometown of Mr. West, its also one of Jay-Z's favorite spots to perform.
I've had the pleasure of seeing Kanye West at Summerfest in June, and while he was very theatrical, he also was extremely emotional and energetic. So I knew what to expect from the hometown kid who was bout to live his dream of playing a packed house in his hometown next to his hero. As for Jay-Z, well he's gotten better and better each time I've seen him, so with their last two shows in my head I came in expecting nothing less than a total euphoric hip hop experience.
No opening act needed for these two, as the sounds of "HAM" came reigning through the speakers (yes I know how I spelled reigned...I like that description!). With both performers on dual rising cubes across from each other, they tore into a "Throne" favorite "Who gon stop me", in which Jay-Z just tears through his verse like Jason through the first hundred Friday the 13th movies. Why Kanye thinks wearing a kilt cool is anyone's guess, but hey, he's Kanye., he does what he wants...clearly.
Both artists took turns on stage seperate and together ripping through crowd favorites back to back to back...there was no time to rests as the crowd spent the concert on their feet the entire night. I once pointed out the differences in stage approaches in both Jay and Kanye, and it was the same here: Kanye, emotional, eccentric, not sure what he's going to do or say, while Hov is like the world's best poker player on stage, never letting his guard down, never giving you too much, always making sure each gesture and lyric is well planned, well thought out...none more evident that the encore where as Kanye would put on any hat thrown on stage by the crowd , as Jay stayed focus...Yankess hat tilted over his eyes, only removed for purpose and to get his point across.
The duo hit an entire catalog of hits, and the visual aspects on the background screen helped give some of the "throne" songs more of an emotional connection. But this show wasnt about selling an album, it was the two kings of hip hop and music worldwide showing just why they are in a league of their own. A setlist like no other hip hop or rock show before it, its clear why they have gotten rave reviews in every city. Its a can't miss show filled with 3 hours of nonstop hits. From die-hard to casual fans of eaither artist, this is the show you'd want to see.
My favorite moment of the show..one that was repeated from last year's Jay-Z show is when the lights go out upon the crowd as Hov finishes up his monstorous crowd pleaser "U don't know", and they show the entire crowd, hands in the air in the diamond position rocking back in unison to Jay-Z like an army...its a breath-taking thing to witness as its amazing when music connects so well with its biggest listeners.
I didnt sit down until the encore...well, midway through the encore, which was the duo ripping through their hit "Niggas in Paris" a record 8 consecutive times! This song is currently the hottest record on radio and even in high school gyms (almost every high school basketball team has this song in their warm-up, which means it must be hot, right? The kids are even listening to it!!) Hearing a song 8 times in a row is just way too much for me, no matter how hot the song is at the moment, but it was clear that the duo was actually having alot of fun on stage together, and enjoying the chemistry and crowd reaction. You could tell they were having too much fun as even the poker-faced king of rap let down his guard with a smile and tip of his hat, as he ripped through his "Paris" verse a 6th and 7th time. And despite it all the crowd ate it up.
There's currently a lil' Wayne/Eminem tour oversees that may make its way to the states before the year is out, but it will be hard-pressed to come close to the energy and emotion given by Jay-Z and Kanye on this night.
SETLIST:
1.Intro: HAM
2. Who gon stop me?
3. Otis
4. Welcome to the jungle
5. Gotta have it
6. Where I'm from
7. Jigga what, Jigga who?
8. Can't tell me nothin'
9. Flashing lights
10. Jesus Walks
11. All falls down
12. Diamonds...
13. PSA
14. U don't know
15. Run this town
16. Monster
17. Power
18. Made in America
19. New day
20. Hard Knocks Life
21. Izzo
22. Empire state of mind
23. Runaway
24. Heartless
25. Stronger
26. On to the next
27. Dirt off your shoulder
28. I just wanna love you
29. Thats mu bitch
30. Good life
31. Touch the sky
32. All of the lights
33. Big Pimpin
34. Gold digger
35. 99 problems
36. No Church in the wild
37. Lift off
38. Niggas in Paris
39. Niggas in Paris
ENCORE:
6 more renditions of Niggas in Paris (tour record).
"Hark,who goes yonder? Well speak up man, what is it?"
"News from the East sire, Mike Kincaide has returned to Buzznews.net!!!!"
I absolutely un-apologetically love hip hop. Always have. Its in my blood. Coming from the rough neighborhood of Englewood on the southside of Chicago, r&b soul music is the soundtrack to life in that area. Growing up its hip hop which dominated the culture and way of life in the community. All your friends listened to it, hustlers sold bootleg t-shirts and tapes, gangsters dressed the part...family and friends lived by it. Happy or sad, tv or radio, it was everywhere.You couldnt avoid hip hop no matter how hard you tried.
With all that said I immediately had a strong connection to Kanye West, another southside guy who grew up in the same areas, listened to the same music and radio, and dealth with the same struggles I did. He had a strong connection with soul music, talked aout places I'd been and hung out at, had owned a very personable personality and affinity for my favorite rapper, Jay-Z...all which drew me to him. In time, while my love of Mr. West has gone back and forth because of his actions there has never been any doubt aout his talent. Continuously puts out quality if not outstanding music. He has begun to transend beyond the hiphop world which may have become his gift and his curse.
The one thing Kanye does really well is hip hop music. He can orchestrate a scene or project feeling and emotion through the artistry of his work, which is something alot of music artists can't even fathom. Because of this and the numerous opinions and attacks by the media and others Kanye has become very reclusive in his appearances,going so far as to even move out of the country. So with the rare chance to see Kanye's act live in person at Milwaukee's Summerfest, my decsison to see his show was a no brainer.
Again much different than a typical rap shows Kanye's stage set-up is more artistic. He doesnt have a dj and performs with ballet dancers. Opening act Kid Cudi was extremely energetic and had the crowd into his show albeit only for a brief time as he only played for about 25 minutes. Cudi performed with no ballet dancers but was easily a crowd favorite and all over Kanye's upcoming set.
After about an hour wait the booming and radiating sounds of "HAM" played over the speakers. West opened the show performing "Dark Fantasy", the opening from his latest album, from a pole in the audience. Kanye didnt just connect with the crowd he had them at his mercy all night long. Dressed in all black wearing old-school red and black AirJordans and an old school snakeskin Chicago Bulls hat, Kanye opened his show very strong with a ton of energy and confidence. Kanye wasted no time ripping into hit after hit and owning the crowd. And everything he gave the crowd gave right back. West rocked out with "Hell of a Life" and tore the house down with "Monster" before turning to Kid Cudi for some assistance.
Kanye did at one point get on his soapbox, which is fine, as he made up for it by again piling hit after energetic hit together, working the stage and sweating like a madman. Going over material from previous albums including a guest appearances (West really rocked his verse from his Katy Perry collabo "E.T.") Kanye showed his hand to the observant fan on where he got his ideas for creating the setlist and show. Listening to newer material made some songs performed from the first album sound dated. Its a trick however, his mentor Jay-Z has mastered and perfected at his shows. Jay-Z seems to pull it off effortlessly while West rocks them out like they are today's current big hits when there's a strong portion of the crowd who just werent fans back then. West also follows Jay-Z's stage manerisms to a tee, wether it be him running all over the stage, swinging his arm and hand gestures, commanding the crowd, not necessarry rapping for them. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, however West needs to find his own stage persona and presentation, which he is highly capable of.
Kanye doesnt finish as strong as he starts but the energy and list of hits keep the crowd into it. West re-creates a cool moment of the MTV debut of his big hit "Runaway", "All of the Lights" performed with Kid Cudi whips the crowd into a near frenzy, and then....splat. While I understand the significance of the song "Hey Mama", its use of a closer takes the life out of a great concert. Or maybe I'm just being insensitive. Anyway, Kanye's how isn' t much of a show, but more of a exciting presentation to loyal fans...complete with swan-like ballet dancers.
SET-LIST
Jay-Z's Blueprint 3 tour hit Chicago..
Jay-Z first hit the music scene in 1996. Now you must understand the average lifespan of the average hot rap star is about 3 years, give or take a few months (remember how you had to hear "Hot in Herre"by Nelly every 3 minutes?). Then there's the rare rap star who maintains their relevance in the music world (Snoop, Eminem), and even then you shouldnt expect anything much from their stage show. Rappers aren't great entertainers, unfortunately. Yet since 1996 Jay-Z has taken all that he's seen and experienced and sorted the good and the bad from his own career and ran with it.
I've seen Jay-Z in concert a handfull of times and each time he's gotten better with each perfromance. He's gone from a jersey-wearing stand stilll rhyme sayer who's needed other characters on stage with charisma to help his performanceto the headlining one mans how he is now.
On to the show...first up was the curtain opened Trey Songz. If you've never heard of Songz, its ok...he's just the latest r&b heartthrob, a 25 year-old crooner who appears on alot of remixes and looks great taking his shirt off. A very intense performer, Songz performs more like a rapper than anything, yet most of his act is based in baby-making music.The ladies ate up his act, singing hits songs "Say Ahh", "Neighbors knowmy name" and his "Panty Droppa", which had the crowd on their feet. I must say that I wasn't a fan of Songz before this performance, but after listening to him sing a few of his hits and the intensity of his show and the fun he seemed to be having with his band he definitely won me over.
Intermission came next, and while the stage crew set up, the crowd headed to the concourse for drinks and breaks while preparing for what they expected to be a set by Young Jeezy. A countdown with on the screen from 10:00 and as the lights got set and the band prepared to go, as the clock hit 0:00 a majority of the crowd was still on the concourse as the lights went off and the sounds of "Run this town" hit the speakers and Jay-Z emerged from a lift underneath the stage completely taking the entire crowd by surprise.
Jay-Z supplied hit after hit after hit, showing once again how his stage performance has grown with age. No longer needing the sideman (we barely saw a glimpse of co-hort Memphis Bleek) or any other label mates to take the stage with him, Jay-Z rocked out with just his backing band for most of the show. Clearly enthused by the size of the crowd (almost every seat in the United Center was filled except the section behind the stage) or his special guests (NBA baller LeBron James) Jay was all hits and no misses, unlike previous shows. Performing hits from almost every album, he concentrated mostly on tracks from his latest release, Blueprint 3, including the crowd-pleaser "Empire state ofmind". Around the 1 hour mark we were treated to the 3rd act on the tour, Young Jeezy.
Jeezy made his way to the stage collaborating on a song from the Blueprint 3 album before Jay stepped away to give Jeezy his stage time. The crowd was really into Jeezy, who's street lyrics and street mentality may be just too "real" for mainstream America. He is however, huge in mixtape and street scene, and his status continues to grow with each release. Yet again, its his street mentality that truly may keep him away from superstardom, with the latest example of this being his shoutouts to "the vicelords and folks gangstas" in the audience...which garnered the most unique responce of the evening from the crowd.
Jeezy ran through a medly of hits and verses that kept the crowd on their feet and singing along before Jay-Z returned.
If you haven't figured out that Jay-Z is a business yet then figure who he's on tour with: touring with two of the hottest urban artists out right now, there's even plans for a joint album being made. Add that to the fact you couldnt walk 10 feet without someone trying to get you sign up or sell you anything featuring Jay-Z (I love you Jay, but I will not spend $40 for anyone's t-shirt that doesn't come with a jetpack).
Jay returned to the stage piggy-backing on Jeezy's "My president is black", and from there we were treated to a video from the President Obama giving a speech and wiping dirt off his shoulder, referening another Jay-Z hit. Jay went into that song before performing about 45 minutes more, focusing on early material. Throughout the show, Jay was continuously gracious to the crowd, even going so far as to accept one fan's demotape, and sign another's baseball hat before bringing her on stage for a hug and giving her the mic to rhyme a few of her own lyrics. Throughout 'overtime" Jay kept thanking the crowd and even took a song request ("Song Cry") before heading out to his usual show ender "Encore".
Again, I've seen Jay-Z in concert many times before but never has he been as good as this last show....for someone who doesn't want to just be the best rapper but the best act in music, a show like this one will definitely help his cause.
going for pizza...not done.
Alicia Keys is a huge star in the entertainment industry, and it doesnt take her dozens of appearances on the Oprah show to convince me of that. She's backed by music powerhouse Clive Davis and has thrown out hit after hit ever since appearing on the music radar years ago. While she's toured before, her current tour is her biggest yet, and it started here in Chicago Wednesday night.
"The Element of Freedom Tour" follows the recently released album of the same name, and it's a very good album. However, Keys has problems in the delivery of her show. While she's a very powerful, independently strong woman, her songs and video images just don't match up. While throwing up words like "freedom" and pictures of Martin Luther King, Keys was busy singing dopey, fast-paced love songs and doing her best "Sasha Fierce" impression. Understandably in this day in age to compete with the Beyonce's, Lady GaGa's, and Britney's you just can't just sit at a piano all night...however its on the piano where Keys does her best work. Oh by the way...Keys is smoking hot, wether she's dancing or playing piano.
The night started with newcomer Melanie Fiona, who had a solid performance as an opener, highlighted by her hit "It Kills Me". Up next was an energetic set by crowd favorite Robin Thicke. With an arena filled with mostly women, Thicke had the ladies in his hands all night long, dressed upas a grown up Justin Timberlake in a suit. The band was solid, and the songs he chose connected with the crowd very well, especialy for a balladeer. Thicke went with to the Lil' Wayne well twice, with a fun performance of the Lil' Wayne assisted "Shooter", an under-appreciated favorite, while still getting great reactions for the love songs, especially his current hit "Sex Therapy". Thicke's show looked more like a modern version of old Marvin Gaye footage. Overall it was a great perfromance by Thicke and his gang, who were clearly having fun as they left the stage rapping and dancing to Lil' Wayne's"a Milli"
Then came the main event, Alicia Keys. Now again,you don't have to tell me twice what a huge star Keys is...its clear just from the auidence she attracts. It wasn't just a black crowd, or younger crowd, or female crowd, or anything you'd picture...every aspect of America was in the audience, older, younger, black, white, men,women,Asian, Hispanic...I spent my night with an older white couple on on side of me, an older black and Hispanice couple in front, 4 drunken white ladies behind me, and 2 pre-teen girls,one white, one black, just bopping away next to me,definitely inspired by every word Keys said or put on the screen.
Keys; show started with a cage around the stage while trapped in a cage singing "Caged Bird"...clever, even clever was her escape. And while the show wasnt exactly fluid and had several bumpy and dis-jaunted moments, Keys did her best work with her voice and her piano. Shei s un-matched talent-wise when its just singing...no Tori Amos or Ben Folds antics, just an amazing voice and a piano, and its that the crowd came to appreciate most.
Keys put on a good performance, but again, she really didnt seem sure if she wanted to be Beyonce or Bono, when she should've just stuck to being Alicia. Keys may be one of music's top artists, but her stage show is clearly built to be a opener for concert professionals like Jay-Z (which ironically is how she ended the show, singing her version of the hit song she has with the rapper, having many in the crowd hoping for an appearance by Mr. Carter).
Set-List:
opened with "Caged Bird”
encore : “Empire State of Mind (Part II) ” Mike Kincaide
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Music Theatre Works’ Little Shop of Horrors, featuring music by Howard Ashman and a book and lyrics by Alan Menken,…
I’m actually not a dance critic. I don’t know enough about dance; I‘m not fluent in the language of dance;…
IDENTITY PERFORMING ARTS Presents Fall Concert “Embrace” World Premiere in Chicago for Two Performances Location: Ann Barzel Theater Visceral Dance Center,…
American Blues Theater announces its 23rd Annual Production of It's a Wonderful Life: Live in Chicago! from Frank Capra's film and directed by Executive Artistic…
Chicago Tap Theatre (CTT) has recently returned from a successful European Tour and is pleased to announce its 2024-2025 season and…
They do abuse the king that flatter him For flattery is the bellows that blows up sin These days, fireplace…
Teatro ZinZanni, Chicago's wildly entertaining cabaret and cirque show, will open up their vintage circus tent, the Spiegeltent, to present The LiV…
Marriott Theatre has added a second matinee performance of the concert CHRISTMAS WITH THE KING: BRANDON BENNETT SINGS ELVIS PRESLEY…
In the midst of the bustle and busyness of several stunning song-and-dance routines in Some Like It Hot, beautifully directed…
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