[kj] Recent Jaz activity
Paul Rangecroft
gathering@misera.net
Wed, 24 Mar 2004 15:09:40 +0000
from rage anthem 'wardance' to sarah brightman singing 'the war is over' in
less than a year. he's certainly quite the musical schizo our jaz.
and i think to myself: what a wonderful world...
>From: "nicholas fitzpatrick" <gasw30@hotmail.com>
>
>From a March 8 article in the Deseret Morning News (US). It appears jaz
>was leading the backing band for Sarah Brightman.
>
>
>>Brightman's two-act concert featured a backing band, led by Jaz Coleman,
>>best known for his role in the industrial-metal band Killing Joke.
>>However, this band was a far cry from distorted guitars. Instead, the
>>sweet sounds of techno-laced classical, neoclassical and New Age-style
>>orchestrations poured from the sound system.
>
>Full article:
>
>>'Brightman shines in stellar show'
>>SARAH BRIGHTMAN, Delta Center, Saturday.
>>The full moon hung low in nearly cloudless skies outside as Sarah
>>Brightman sang "La Luna" inside the Delta Center.
>The queen of musical theater returned to Salt Lake City Saturday night
>after a three-year absence and greeted her adoring fans in the
>semi-intimate venue of the Nu Skin Theater. While the setting is about
>two-thirds smaller than the full arena, the stage show was elaborate enough
>for a super-size spectacle, with costumes that would make adventure
>novelist H. Rider Haggard proud. A moon-shaped stage was connected to a
>star-shaped mini-stage in the center of the theater, near a runway. On the
>crescent stage, a curving staircase led up to a lone microphone stand,
>which protruded from the ground.
>
>Brightman's two-act concert featured a backing band, led by Jaz Coleman,
>best known for his role in the industrial-metal band Killing Joke. However,
>this band was a far cry from distorted guitars. Instead, the sweet sounds
>of techno-laced classical, neoclassical and New Age-style orchestrations
>poured from the sound system.
>
>The singer mixed in some exotic Middle Eastern influences with the title
>track from her most recent album "Harem," and added more musical fragrance
>with "Arabian Nights" and "Stranger in Paradise."
>
>Surrounded by six belly dancers, Brightman strutted across the runway and
>with the help of a couple of hydraulic lifts, towered over her audience
>during "It's a Beautiful Day." A dreamy remake of Kansas' "Dust in the
>Wind" was a nice surprise, along with a few more Brightmanized classic-rock
>numbers she scattered throughout the show, including Queen's "Who Wants to
>Live Forever" and Procol Harum's "Whiter Shade of Pale."
>
>Brightman also remembered the musical that made her a household name,
>revisiting ex-husband Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Phantom of the Opera" with
>"Think of Me" and "Angel of Music" (though, surprisingly, not "Music of the
>Night").
>
>"Free," "Anytime, Anywhere" (complete with the Albinoni "Adagio" motif)
>were performed with the usual Brightman flair. And the breathtaking "Nessun
>Dorma" was performed on top of the staircase, which had swung her over
>center stage.
>
>"The War Is Over," featuring Iraqi singer Kadim Al Sahir, and "The Journey
>Home" brought a poignant tone to the show, along with a Gothic take on
>"What a Wonderful World" and "Question of Honour."
>
>Brightman was more personable than in the past, and that only made the
>performance more meaningful to her audience. E-mail:
>mailto:scott@desnews.com
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