Bette in Baltimore –
Finally
by Eileen F. (New BLB Reader)
October 13, 2004
Photo: BaltoBoy Steve Weiner
Well it finally happened. Ms. Midler came to little, ole Baltimore,
and boy, was I excited. I hadn’t been able to go to the first
part of Kiss My Brass when she was in D.C., so I was determined
to get to see her in my hometown. I dragged by husband along (much
to his chagrin, but more on that later).
I should begin my review by apologizing to Ms. Midler for the crowd.
They were, in general, a very sedate group – except for a
few of us who tried to get them going. I don’t think it had
anything to do with the show though, because all I heard were positives
– how great it was, what a great entertainer she was, etc.
I’m not sure of the reason, but I really hope that won’t
deter her from coming back!!! I could have shot the folks in the
front row – if you’re not going to get into the show,
give the tickets to someone like me – who will really appreciate
it!!!
Now on to the concert. I thought her entrance was so grand!! People
all around us were oohing and aahing over it. Her monologue at the
beginning was right on target for Baltimore. She even got the Dundalk
and Ruxton (local suburbs) parts right !! But the best part was
her comment about staying up and watching the Baltimore Ravens beat
the Washington Redskins –that really got the crowd excited
(at least for a brief period). She certainly does her homework.
And that piece really makes you feel special – as if she really
is a part of your “community.” Being a largely Democratic
state, her political commentary was very welcomed and was received
with lots of laughs and applause.
Her performance was so powerful. Watching her perform “Skylark”
(one of my favorites) and “I Think It’s Gonna Rain Today,”
it really struck me what a performer she is. She is able to throw
herself into these songs. I really think the crowd was awestruck.
My husband thought her performance of “Shiver me Timbers”
and “Do You Wanna Dance” were also something special.
But, I’d have to say “From A Distance” really
hit me – hard. It was so perfect for the time we’re
in right now and really got me thinking about what’s going
on in the world, what kind of leadership we have, and what we’re
doing to our planet.
The second act seemed to fly by and before I knew it the concert
was over – we thought. She was kind enough to come out and
do an encore—“The Rose.” It was sooo awesome!!!!
She just came out and told us she really liked it when the crowd
sang to her. She sat down on the stage (again, I was jealous of
the front row folks who really didn’t appreciate what they
were experiencing), started singing and then stopped and let the
crowd sing. It was MAGICAL!!! You really felt as if she cared about
the crowd (which I know she does), and was very touched by us singing
the words to her song. After a bit, and after some in the crowd
yelled for HER to sing, she finished the song – strong. The
night was over and I was totally enthused. But I’ve saved
the best part for last.
My husband – I told you I dragged him there. Well, after the
concert on the ride home he had this to say: “I had no idea
how fantastic she was. I thought she was just a ‘broad’
but she’s so much more. Boy, was I wrong. I’d go to
another concert anytime.” Alas, another Bette convert. But
the best part? He gave me the green light to get the best available
tickets next time!! (yes, I’m going to go for front row –
or somewhat similar). SO, here’s hoping Ms. Midler sticks
to her promise and doesn’t retire any time soon and graces
Baltimore with another concert. Who knows how many more people are
waiting to “experience the Divine Miss M.”?
Bette Bungles Baltimore Or Vice Versa?
(Mister D's Title For This)
by Dana Switzer (Bettehead)
October 13, 2004
I
have to be honest here with Bette's show in Baltimore. Although,
she is an amazing performer, an amazing actress and one of the greatest
entertainers of our time; I was disappointed in her show on Thursday
night. She seemed to lack the spark that I have seen in the other
three shows of the last leg and made hardly no connection with the
audience itself.
(Photo: Steve Weiner)
Our Divine Miss M usually paces the floor like a race horse, gabs
to the spectators and trots from one side of the stage to the other,
signaling her fans for their applause and praise. Tonight, though,
she hardly noticed the audience, much less played to them. In her
defense, I will say that the audience in Baltimore was dreadful
and only about half of the seats were full. There were true fans
in the stands that cheered and screamed and stood up for ovations
at the end of the songs but, for the most part, the audience just
sat there and barely clapped for her. In turn of the audience's
less than remarkable reactions, Miss M, cut out about three of her
songs and the entire Rose segment from the show.
I have to say, that I am disappointed in Bette for not doing her
full show. I don't think it was fair that she cut out at least 30
minutes of her performance just because the audience wasn't up to
her expectations. Many people paid 135 dollars for the show and
will only see her once in their lifetime. What a disappointment
for those fans!! I have been lucky enough to see her several times
through the years and this show was by far not her best. The best
I can say was that she was perfunctory, she did the show, she did
all the songs that she was supposed to do and she left.
On a lighter note, though, for this leg of the tour, I was pleased
with the changes in the show. I loved the Britney Bunch segment
and all of the 'new' Soph jokes. She brought many fans to tears,
with When a Man Loves a Woman and the infamous, Wind Beneath My
Wings. I'm glad she kept the Mister Rogers segment for this leg
of the tour, I think Mister Rogers plays to all the sensibilities
to the audience and I think it's a touching tribute. Bette also
made a touching reference to her former high school, drama, teacher,
who was in the audience that night. My favorite part of the show,
though, was the singing of The Rose with the audience, one guy from
the stands, being a moron, yelled to Bette that she needed to sing
louder, and Bette, true to form, told him to, 'Shut up!' That was
great!! Glad to see that she's still the brash, bold, ballsy girl
that we have always known.
All in all, it was a good show, even without the last half hour
of it, the girl can still sing, and she looks amazing in all of
her outfits. The Harlettes and the band also looked and sounded
fantastic; I am totally amazed by all of their talent. I hope when
I'm in Richmond on October 21st, that the audience is breathing
and coherent and I'll get to see the Rose segment.
A diva who deserves the title
Bette Midler’s still divinely brassy, divinely sassy
By Rashod D. Ollison
Baltimore Sun Pop Music Critic
October 11, 2004
In
pop music these days, the word diva is often flung around. Sell
a million, overdo the hair, makeup and attitude and suddenly everyone
is supposed to revere you. But there are actually few true pop divas
still on the scene - performers with long, amazing track records,
brains, abundant talent, a magnificent presence. Female artists
who grandly re-invent themselves and refreshen the stuff of yesterday,
pulling us in again and again. Aretha Franklin. Barbra Streisand.
Diana Ross. Cher. Madonna.
You can add, perhaps, a few more names to the list: Patti LaBelle,
Liza Minnelli, Whitney Houston. But one you definitely can’t
leave off is Bette Midler. Of all the true pop divas, the Hawaii-born
performer, whose “Kiss My Brass” tour stops at 1st Mariner
Arena tonight, has been the most accessible over the years.
“Personality plays a lot in her career,” says Michael
Paoletta, senior writer and reviews editor at Billboard magazine.
“You can say, ‘I can hang out with her for dinner and
drinks.’ She can be the diva who belts the song and she knows
how to pull the heart strings. She’s always real. She’s
not afraid to speak her mind.”
(Photo: BaltoBoy Steve Weiner)
And stretch her talent. Midler, who’s 58, long ago established
herself as an accomplished actress on stage and, especially, in
film, with such blockbusters as The Rose, Beaches and The First
Wives Club. Her 32-year recording career has seen more peaks than
valleys with four Grammys and 24 gold, platinum or multiplatinum
records. The performer’s latest album, Bette Midler Sings
the Rosemary Clooney Songbook, came out last September. The tribute
to the jazz-pop legend, who died of lung cancer two years ago at
age 74, sold gold (more than 500,000 copies) in a month.
“I knew [Clooney] from the middle ’80s until she died,”
says Midler, who’s calling from Hartford, Conn., where she’s
rehearsing for a show. “She was so warm, so gracious, so hospitable.
A big, big soul with a beautiful voice. I had no intention of recording
her material, though, until Barry Manilow called me and said he
had a dream that we recorded this tribute. I was a little apprehensive
at first because she hasn’t been gone that long.”
The recording process was a reunion of sorts. As many Midler fans
know, Manilow, who produced and arranged the Clooney set, was Midler’s
pianist in the early ’70s, before she signed with Atlantic
Records and became an immediate recording star. Those were her New
York cabaret days, when she mixed campy show tunes and ribald routines,
amassing a solid fan base that supports her today.
“Barry made [recording the tribute album] so easy,”
Midler says. “We recorded it live, the tracks and my vocals.
It was done in a week. I never made a record like that before. Usually,
I’m in such a fog on my records. I’d never done an album
of standards.”
Midler’s sincerity flows throughout the tribute and, as usual,
she embodies each song. “Hey There” and “Tenderly”
are standouts - well-executed, fluid and tasteful. Manilow adds
daring textures to the arrangements: shades of bluegrass ("This
Ole House") and “lite” pop-dance elements ("Come
On-A My House” and “Mambo Italiano"). But Midler’s
charm is never overwhelmed.
“I’ve known Rosemary’s music since I was 3 years
old,” the artist says. “So it’s in me. But when
I do these songs, I try to add some sense of refreshment.”
Midler has dipped into a variety of material over the years, from
Broadway tunes to Southern blues. And she always leaves an indelible
mark on a song.
The Divine Miss M, the singer’s platinum-selling 1972 debut
and finest album to date, was a potpourri of swingin’ ’40s-style
pop, ’60s girl group confections and jazzy balladry. It featured
a vibrant cover of the Andrew Sisters’ “Boogie Woogie
Bugle Boy,” Midler’s first Top 10 hit and a mainstay
in her live show. She revisits that classic and many others in “Kiss
My Brass,” whose theme and set evoke an old-style boardwalk
and carnival-like atmosphere. The tour, which stopped at Washington’s
MCI Center in January, is on its second leg, ending Dec. 10 in Denver.
“I’m traveling with a brass section for the first time,”
Midler says. “I figured that since I have that, I may as well
advertise it. And [the title] was like saying something naughty.
With the set, you know, I wanted it to have a feeling that you’re
gonna romp around and change your clothes - your mental clothes
- and just have fun.”
Paoletta, who’s been with Billboard for six years, caught
the first leg of “Kiss of My Brass” when it stopped
at Madison Square Garden earlier this year.
“It’s signature Bette,” he says. “She kinda
takes you to Betteland and you forget what’s going on in the
world. But she makes pointed comments and jokes about the current
administration.”
Midler says she feels a need to create some kind of elaborate escape
to counter the heaviness of the Iraq war, the election, the debates.
“I try to be a little bit of an antidote,” she says.
“The show is an escape for me because it’s creativity.
I do it for myself. But fortunately, the product that I do uplifts
people. People don’t need to be beat up anymore. I consciously
try to give a balance. I try to remind people that they’re
human. People don’t enjoy themselves anymore, you know'”
Wrapped in Midler’s trademark kitsch and grandeur, “Kiss
My Brass,” her first tour in four years, boasts fully orchestrated
hits ("The Rose,” “Wind Beneath My Wings,”
“Friends") and cuts from the Clooney album. Like a blond,
petite Millie Jackson, the performer piles on the raunchy banter
and jokes throughout. She even pokes fun at her failed sitcom, Bette,
which came and went quickly four years ago.
“There are moments in the show that are really brassy, no
pun intended,” Paoletta says with a chuckle. “It’s
very in-your-face. But she’s very in-your-face. So it just
goes with the whole Bette package. But there are some tired moments.
When she goes into the Sophie Tucker-like songs and jokes and that
mermaid-in-the-wheelchair skit, it may be time for her to retire
such things. How many times have I seen that stuff' But people still
love it. Obviously.”
When she’s not on the road, on a movie set or in the studio,
Midler, who has been married to performance artist Martin von Haselberg
for 20 years, is a shamelessly doting mother of one, a 17-year-old
daughter named Sophie.
“My husband and I, we’re the helicopter parents,”
the singer says. “We hover. Sophie’s great, though.
She’s a college freshman now and doesn’t want us to
call so much. One of the reasons I went out on the road was to be
away from the house and my husband,” Midler says, laughing.
“It’s odd that my daughter is away. And I’m not
ready to deal with that now.”
Copyright © 2004, The Baltimore Sun
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