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Tag: temptations

  • Houston Concert Watch 9/24: Jimmie Vaughan, Whiskey Myers and More

    We music geeks are, by and large, completists. Record companies know this, which is why, even in an era when physical media is becoming a thing of the past, they keep releasing “deluxe,” “expanded” or “complete” editions of classic rock albums.

    The formula is generally this.  Remix the album in question, add a disc or two of alternate versions of songs and maybe a few tunes that didn’t make the cut when the album was initially released, and find some live recordings (sometimes an entire concert) from the era. Throw in reproductions of ephemera (backstage passes, decals, maybe a poster) and perhaps a modest coffee table book, and you’ve got something that can be sold for a premium price. And that’s how you generate some cash flow from material that has already been bought and paid for.

    Do I sound skeptical or, at the very least, cynical? Of course I do. I’m a music writer. Or maybe my attitude has to do with having bought bootlegs that promise “revelatory” alternate takes and mixes which, in point of fact, offer little more than slight variations on what was actually released. But, having said that, there are some box set behemoths that are slated for release within the next few months that are, in fact, worthy of consideration.

    Pink Floyd – Wish You Were Here 50th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set (2 CD / 4 LP / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Jethro Tull – Still Living in the Past (5 CD / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Bruce Springsteen – Nebraska ’82 (4 CD / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Little Feat – The Last Record Album (4 CD)
    The Who – Who Are You? Super Deluxe Edition (7 CD / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Jimi Hendrix – Axis Bold as Love (4 CD)
    The Beatles – Anthology 2025 (8 CD)

    Ticket Alert
    Christmas music comes in all forms, so if your jam is of the singer-songwriter variety, you can load up the sleigh and head to the Heights Theater for Jack Ingram’s “Acoustic Holiday Tour.” Tickets for the Houston (Fine, Woodlands) native son’s show on Saturday, December 13, are on sale now.

    Cardi B has a new album (Am I the Drama?) coming out, and she is taking the unusual step of appearing at Walmarts across the country to pimp it during the record’s rollout. The Houston Walmart stop took place yesterday, but don’t despair if you missed it, since Ms. B will be perform at Toyota Center on Wednesday, March 3. Presales are in progress, with the general sale set for Thursday. Hmm. Makes you wonder. Is a ZZ Top promotional tour at Buc-ee’s across Texas in the offing?

    In the tradition of Prince, who for a time went by the moniker “The Artist Formerly Known as Prince,” Kanye West, who legally changed his name to “Ye,” and Sean Combs, who has been known as “Puffy,” “Puff Daddy,” “P. Diddy” and just “Diddy,” Machine Gun Kelly has decided that he will henceforth be known as MGK. OK. The musical chameleon will play the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Saturday, May 23, with Wiz Khalifa and Beauty School Dropout opening.  Tickets are on sale now.

    Concerts This Week
    Granted, there aren’t many original Temps or Tops remaining, but you can’t argue with the catalogs that both acts assembled during the ‘60s and ‘70s. The Temptations: “My Girl,” “Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me),” “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg,” “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone.” The Four Tops: “Baby I Need Your Loving,” “I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch),” “It’s The Same Old Song,” “Reach Out I’ll Be There.” If that list doesn’t get your head to bobbing, well, I don’t know what to tell you. Get your groove on tonight at the Smart Financial Centre.
    Chance the Rapper is not your typical rap artist. Gospel and jazz influences pop up in his work, and his lyrics have dealt with subjects not usually addressed in rap, such as Christian theology. Chance will perform on Friday at the Bayou Music Center, and you can find out more by taking a look at this Houston Press interview.
    There are two shows of note this week at the Mucky Duck. On Friday, blues / Americana artist Seth Walker will be in town to showcase tunes from his most recent album Why the Worry. Then on Saturday, the West Texas Exiles will celebrate the release of their new record 8000 Days with early and late shows. For more on the Exiles, check out this week’s Houston Press interview with the band.. Tickets for all performances are in short supply, so getting while the getting is good would be the recommendation.
    Charlie Wilson earned his bona fides as the lead singer of the Gap Band for the entirety of the group’s existence, 1967-2010. Wilson has also distinguished himself as a solo artist and a producer. On Friday, Wilson will bring “Uncle Charlie’s R&B Cookout” to the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, presenting a bill that also includes venerable old-school artists Babyface and K-Ci (of Jodeci fame). Now, since this event is billed as a “cookout” and is designed to engender a “cookout” atmosphere, there will, I image, be a code of behavior that should be followed. This video might help those who have not yet been schooled. And this one, re: potato salad.
    Whiskey Myers and its “What We Were Born to Do” tour rolls into the Pavilion on Saturday. This band, the pride of Palestine, TX, has a country twang but still rocks hard when the need arises. Dexter and the Moonrocks, purveyors of what they call “western space grunge,” and Landon Smith will open.
    Jimmie Vaughan was, at one time, a wild-ass teenaged guitarist lighting it up with the Chessmen in the mid-‘60s and making a name for himself as one of the best players in Texas. After a few years, though, Vaughan looked to the past, refining his style and wholly embracing the blues. He formed the Fabulous Thunderbirds with Kim Wilson and recorded classic albums like What’s the Word? (1980) before departing the band to explore less commercial but more authentic musical pastures. Vaughan and his Tilt-a-Whirl band will play the Heights Theater on Sunday, conducting a master class in the blues, with Houston’s own rising star Mathias Lattin opening.

    Tom Richards

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  • Temptations musical brings ‘My Girl’ love songs to Kennedy Center just in time for Valentine’s Day – WTOP News

    Temptations musical brings ‘My Girl’ love songs to Kennedy Center just in time for Valentine’s Day – WTOP News


    Take your date to the acclaimed musical “Ain’t Too Proud: The Life & Times of The Temptations” at the Kennedy Center in D.C. from Tuesday, Feb. 13 through Sunday, Feb. 18.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Ain’t Too Proud’ at the Kennedy Center (Part 1)

    The cast of “Ain’t Too Proud.” (Matthew Murphy)

    Valentine’s Day is just two days away and few music groups had more romantic tunes than The Temptations.

    Take your date to the acclaimed musical “Ain’t Too Proud: The Life & Times of The Temptations” at the Kennedy Center in D.C. from Tuesday, Feb. 13 through Sunday, Feb. 18.

    “If you want to bring your girl or your guy, bring ’em on down because this is an amazing, amazing show and you will not be disappointed,” Actor E. Clayton Cornelius told WTOP.  “You’re gonna laugh, you’re gonna cry, you’re gonna go down memory lane if you came up through those times. … It’s just a great show packed with music and dance and a great story actually,” written by playwright Dominique Morisseau.

    Cornelius plays Paul Williams, who joins Otis Williams (Michael Andreaus), David Ruffin (Elijah Ahmad Lewis), Eddie Kendricks (Jalen Harris) and Melvin Franklin (Harrell Holmes Jr.) to form the iconic R&B group The Temptations, who were signed by Motown Records in 1961. Along the way, they meet Motown founder Berry Gordy, singer/songwriter Smokey Robinson and superstar colleagues like Diana Ross and The Supremes.

    “This story basically starts from the point of view of Otis Williams, who is the last surviving Temptation,” Cornelius said. “Otis about 82 now and he looks fantastic. It’s told from how he started as a boy, how he started the group and picked up all the five classic Temptations. … Their journey of going through the Civil Rights Movement, coming up through that time as a teenager to become men and rising to stardom and having to deal with all of that.”

    Of course, it’s a jukebox musical so you will hear all of your favorite Temptations hits, including “Get Ready,” “Cloud Nine,” “Just My Imagination,” “Ball of Confusion” and “The Way You Do the Things You Do.”

    “This is the soundtrack of generations. The Temptations are very classic, No. 1 hits all over the place, ‘My Girl,’ ‘Papa Was a Rolling Stone,’ ‘Ain’t Too Proud To Beg,’” Cornelius said. “Just so many more songs than you probably even thought you knew about The Temptations. You’ll come see the show and go, ‘Wow, I didn’t know they sang that!’ …. You can be at the gas station or the grocery store and you’ll hear all of these hits all of the time.”

    Expect to see the vintage, sparkling suits and synchronized, snapping dance moves all set to Sergio Trujillo’s Tony Award-winning choreography, one of 12 total nominations from the 2019 Broadway production.

    “The Temptations always had classic moves, but they weren’t pirouetting and doing some of the dance moves that we do now on stage, so the choreography is exactly what you see from them in the old tapes but heightened more,” Cornelius said. “You have to be really close in order to harmonize as well as we do and to dance and sing and act on stage for 2 1/2 hours together in sync, so we really do have a really great bond and foundation.”

    It’s a full-circle homecoming for “Ain’t Too Proud” as the show had its pre-Broadway run at the Kennedy Center in 2018, just the second city to stage it after its initial premiere at Berkeley Rep in Berkeley, California.

    “D.C. was the first city after Berkeley,” Cornelius said. “The first professional touring run of the show pre-Broadway was D.C. I was part of that cast as [later Temptations member] Richard Street, so if anybody saw the show before, I was in the white suit, I sang ‘Gloria’ and I sang eight different characters in the show, then I graduated to becoming Paul Williams on the tour for the second year and I closed the Broadway show in 2021.”

    Find more information here.

    Listen to our full conversation here.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Ain’t Too Proud’ at the Kennedy Center (Part 2)

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    Jason Fraley

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