Bowzer's Last Rock 'n Roll Dance Party?
Can it be that this is the last Bowzer show I will see at
Mohegan?
I so look forward to this show each January. It brightens the
beginning of mid-winter for me. Why would it be discontinued? Here are
the factors I was told:
1. Bowzer's back surgery didn't really help his situation.
2. Three weeks ago, he had a heart procedure and is returning home to have another.
3. Nobody in the music business is growing younger by the day, (same situation for everyone on earth) and so pre-scheduling a show a year in advance, as is his practice, is not possible.
4. Tickets do not sell as they use to. Yes, the concerts bring
younger and younger fans into the fold, but those younger fans (and many
of we older fans) do not continue to
go to concerts unless they are free or comped. This means the house
makes up the difference. I have heard this said from several artists.
Let's get into yesterday's performance at Mohegan Sun so we can see what we would be missing if this is indeed the finale.
Bowzer's
Dance Parties are like listening to the radio of the past. Each act
performs no more than five songs, with the headliner topping out at 7-8.
So, you are getting the hits. Just as you would have heard on the radio.
Without this collaboration, we would not be able to experience a live
performance, by the original artists, the way we remember it. AND these
talented people are able to still enjoy their craft. The concert was four
hours long! And I didn't get hungry! (OK, I went through a drive-thru on my way home, as all the restaurants were filled after the show, but it
was because I knew I better ingest some food before I arrived home. Now
I will become a name-dropper and tell you who performed.
As
you will soon read, this show was a family affair. Generational and
long-term friendships, which only solidifies the fact that music is
forever.
First out after
Bowzer's introduction to the day is Johnny Farina. His steel guitar
playing maintains its exceptionality. As he says, "You can't get that
sound with anything else." His second and final song was "Sleep Walk,"
which I could hear coming from the car radio as my dad drove us on the
long trip to visit grandparents. The benefit of those trips was eating
at Howard Johnson's and listening to the hits of the day as the car
moved closer to our destination. "Sleep Walk" was written by the Farina
brothers (Johnny and Santo) at 2:00 in the morning after one of them
woke up and said, "Get up! I have an idea for a song." They lived in a
duplex so not only did their family get to hear this early morning
songfest, but the family in the second half of the building must have
also awakened.
A bright red
suit, a skip, a jump and a hop announces the entrance of ... not
Santa ... Joey Dee! The man who made The Peppermint Lounge what it was and
became its resident performer hits us with several Twist songs. Ending
with "The Peppermint Twist" (naturally), he skip hops off the stage, but
not before he has mimicked a RAP song to show his disdain for that
genre. I am not in any way, a RAP fan so I cannot give a technical
review ... however, I thought, as RAP goes, he wasn't bad. If he had been
horrible at it, it would be easy for people to say, "Of course he
doesn't like it. He can't do it." So doing the best RAP a limber 83 year
old can do is the way to present it. "AH NUTS!"
I
want to take a minute to thank Jimmy Fox (now passed) and Maynard
Strickland of the Mohegan Tribal Council for 22 years ago working with
Bowzer to bring about the first ... and all succeeding Bowzer Doo Wop and
Rock 'n Roll shows. Without their tireless support, I would not have had
my January respite from the grey skies of winter all these years.
Cleveland
Still (88), of The Dubs, is also recovering from heart surgery and was
unable to make it this year. But the other three members of the group
came and if you search for information on The Dubs, you will find that
the three songs they are known for are: "Don't Ask Me to Be Lonely, " "Chapel of Dreams" and "Could This Be Magic." Delightfully, these are
the three songs they sang here. Missing Cleveland, as a first tenor,
they were Still (pun intended) able to pull off great Doo Wop harmonies.
Cleveland says he will be here next year, so we just have to have a
next year!
We gotta have some girls! You know I love their outfits! Believe Me ... LaLa Brooks of The Crystals has outfits that knock me out.
Here is LaLa and her co-singers today. That top shimmered
and sparkled on stage, even when she was standing still ... which was for
10 seconds total at the most. Another three hit songs? "And Then He Kissed
Me," "Da Doo Run Run" and "Proud Mary." LaLa was only 13 when she first
started recording with Phil Spector. Yes, Spector was suspect even
then, but able to produce at a high quality. Check out the book, THE
WRECKING CREW. "Proud Mary" is better known as a Tina Turner song so
LaLa shoots the second half of the song into high gear with Turner
twists and turns that rock the stage, down into the audience, and up the
sides of the arena lofts. She posted that she had a great time and
enjoyed doing the show. SHE enjoyed the show? WHAM! That means we must
have relished each moment.
9/11
Firefighter hero, Frank Pizarro, took over lead vocals for Herb Reed
and The Platters after his recovery from his response in 9/11. Herb Reed
passed in 2012. Frank, his wife and two others who sang with Sonny
Turner, also of The Platters, have teamed up to do The Platters hits,
NOT labeling themselves as Platters (remember the Truth in Music Laws
everyone), but singing as Frank Pizarro, former lead singer of The
Platters. Herb Reed has professed that Frank was the only person he ever
heard that sounded like lead singer, Tony Williams, who recorded The
Platters songs. I have not run my own comparison. However, Frank Pizarro
is good! From the moment his mouth opens into the mic, it is magic. His
voice fills the arena and then escapes out into
the lobbies. Again, three dynamite hits: "My Prayer," "The Great Pretender" and "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes." Wheeeewwwww ... my radio comparison is so
true. This is hearing the best from the best.
Bowzer
is known for playing "Bumble Bee Boogie" at this point in the program,
but tonight he plays the Israeli National Anthem in honor and memory of
his mother, Bessie Bauman. Since this may be Bowzer's last roundup here
at Mohegan, I am going to relate the anecdote he tells of his mom. When
he comes back next year (fingers crossed), ya'll can pretend you don't
know it.
Bessie Bauman
wanted her son to go to Julliard College of Music and play Carnegie Hall
(no pressure here.) He did attend Julliard from the age of 12 to 17.
Then he joined this group, Sha Na Na, and discontinued his Julliard
sojourn. Well, Carnegie Hall fell on some hard times and they started
pulling in rock and roll groups to perform. Sha Na Na was one of these.
Throughout the entire concert, a woman in the middle of the second row
stood up excitedly waving her arms while Bowzer sang "Ram-a-Lam-a-Ding-Dong" and other non-Julliard favorites. On completion
of the songs she yelled, "JONATHAN, YOU MADE IT!" because to every
mother, Carnegie Hall is Carnegie Hall. No matter how you get there. Of
course, the woman was Bessie Bauman. By the way, she proceeded to the
autograph table, giving out autographs as, BOWZER'S MOTHER.
Jackie
Wilson, a high energy performer had no idea he had a son he had never
seen or knew about. Conversely, his son never knew about him either.
Bobby Wilson could not be more of a Dad Double. Before he knew he was
Jackie's son, he did a tribute show with others where he impersonated
Jackie Wilson. After a series of synchronicities, he was urged and
indeed, invited to get a DNA comparison with a member of Jackie's
family. The results showed 99.999% probability that he is Jackie
Wilson's son. Can you imagine how he must have felt at that moment? Let
me tell you how I feel as I watch Bobby perform, NO DOUBT! That is
Jackie Wilson's son. After his four songs, I'm exhausted. Jackie's hits: "That's Why (I Love You So)," "Lonely Teardrops," "To Be Loved" and "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher" are done to perfection, just as
his dad would have it. Both father and son had rough lives, but Bobby
says he would change nothing. "It was all a process." Hopefully Bobby's
life is now going forward and he can stay on track and enjoy his talent.
The last act before intermission is TA-TA-TA-TA!! Jay Siegel and The Tokens.
Five wonderful songs: "Tonight I Fell In Love," "I'll Always Love You," "Portrait of My Love" (my all-time favorite and one that charted during The British Invasion.) I don't feel sorry for our American groups during that time. I was involved with all music then and now. It is true that some people are fickle and jump from group to group, based on popularity and are not able to add on new without throwing away the old. Their loss.
Medley to salute The Happenings and The Chiffons; two groups produced by The Tokens: "See You In September" and "One Fine Day" ... followed by, of course, "The Lion Sleeps Tonight."
As
long as the first act has been, the audience is still rocking and
loving The Tokens. Jay's son, Jared, is the pianist and sometime
vocalist with the group ... another familial connection. Jay's voice,
especially his falsetto, is rockin' good. I am sure I have relayed the
story about his granddaughter bragging that her grandfather sang "The
Lion Sleeps Tonight" in The Lion King movie. Nobody bought her story.
"Yeah, yeah! He sings it in the shower. He sings it in the house. Sure
we know!" She had to bring him for kindergarten show and tell to prove
it to her class. Well, there is no doubt that it was Jay Siegel and The
Tokens when you hear it today.
While
I was waiting in line to pick up my tickets, Jay and his son, Jared,
cut through the line behind me in order to get from the hotel to the
arena. I had just been in a conversation over the fact that people
always cut through the line in front of me wherever I am standing. Jay
proved me wrong. He cut in back.
Bowzer and the Stingrays open the second act and I am
thrilled to see the lead vocalist of Sha Na Na, Johnny Contado, join him
for this session. They may not be physically related, but they are
certainly family after all these years. Even in health recuperation
status, Bowzer can sing bass for a mean "Blue Moon." With Johnny chiming
in on vocals, and harmonies emanating from The Stingrays, this is not
only triumphant for Bowzer, but magical for the audience. Bowzer's piano
was wrongfully removed from the stage during intermission, but not to
worry, Rocky and the Rollers (the band for all performers thus far) move
a standing keyboard downstage to where Bowzer is standing and he uses
it for "Runaway" and "Those Magic Changes." The ending piece is the duet
Bowzer and Johnny routinely sing when they perform together, "Lovers
Never Say Goodbye." I really cannot easily say good-bye to the Dance
Parties and I will tell you how you can help at the end here.
Drum
shots, guitar riffs, rocking horns and Gary US Bonds appears to hit us
between the eyes with "New Orleans." Well, a Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey.
Backed by his wife and daughter, Gary shoots into a walloping medley of
hits: "Shake, Shake, Shake"; "Twist, Twist Senora"; "La Chia"; "This
Little Girl Is Mine"; and "Quarter To Three." Gary explains that a medley is
a composite of songs resulting from the performer saying, "I'm sick of
doing these d*** songs." It doesn't sound like it, so the audience can
laugh at his definition, clap along and jump up and dance. His wife and
daughter are unified in their movements and the presentation of harmonic
backing. A Latin addition to bring up the heat.
This
year's closers are Kenny Vance and the Planotones. As Rocky and the
Rollers leave the stage, The Planotones Band starts moving in. Among
them is Johnny Gale, musical director, producer, and guitarist
extraordinaire. It only takes moments before they begin to play as
Bowzer talks about the transformation of Kenny from Jay and the
Americans to heading up his own group and now becoming the headliners of
this 2024 show. The Planotones then stroll on stage asking Bowzer if
he's seen a "tall guy with a hat?" Bowzer says they better find him
because he has to stay onstage until the tall guy comes out. Then, of
course, Kenny Vance saunters out. "It's Alright (Have a Good Time)"
opens their segment. Next is the Jay and the Americans slot where they
bring in three songs: "She Cried," their first hit, "Come A Little Bit
Closer" and "Cara Mia." Until "Cara Mia," Kenny has been leading the
vocals with a clear high intonation. His son, Ladd Vance, takes over on "Cara Mia" and we sway into Cara Mia Fair. The last three songs: "In The
Still Of The Night," "Angel Baby" and "Looking For An Echo" only cement
this concert as the finest way to relive the AM radio days. The quality
surpasses what we heard from our favorite shows, but the songs are the
ones we remember.
Rocky and
the Rollers return and it is time for "Goodnight Sweetheart," the
traditional Bowzer ending of every show. The father/son connections, the
father/daughter connections, the husband/wife connections all brought
together in the name of music. Just bringing stellar songs to life for
mass enjoyment.
So what
can we do to continue the enjoyment for ourselves and those following
us? Looking at my opening paragraph, there is much we cannot control.
What we CAN control is letting theatres and venues know who we want to
see and then BUYING tickets to go see them. We can't buy tickets to
everything we want to see. (I know ... I keep trying!) But attend as often
as you can and hit the fairs and outdoor venues.
Bowzer
said that if we can get a show at Mohegan Sun next year, it will indeed
be the last one. I'm up for the challenge. If the 23rd year of "Bowzer Presents" is the final chapter, I will be there. The year will not be
2525, but 2025, and an admirable run. If you are in the New England
area, let Mohegan Sun know that Bowzer should come back and end his
Mohegan run with a bang-up show.