|
With
the snow falling all around and the roads a slippery mess, we made
our way to Potowatomi Bingo and Casino's Northern Lights Theater
for the 6th Annual Christmas Extravaganza with the Brian Setzer
Orchestra. I have little doubt that Brian and the band flew in on
a 1957 Chevy Sleigh with swingin' tunes blaring from the speakers.
This is the second year I have reviewed this show. Last year was
the first time I had ever given an A+ to any concert, and my expectations
for this show were as high as Rudolph flying on Christmas night.
 |
This
year's stage setup was slightly more subdued without the snowman
and nutcracker soldiers from last year, but still packed with Christmas
spirit and warmth. The band has mostly stayed the same with 20 members
(including Brian and the 2 vocal vixens Julie Reiten and Leslie
Smith along with new drummer Tony Pia). And while all this was the
same, the night turned out to have quite a few surprises. First
up was the beautiful classic Wurlitzer Juke Box center stage. Talk
about your focal point. Then next was not just Santa
but SANTA
ELVIS who came out to drop some coin in that jukebox. With a swivel
of the hips and his finger pointed high, Santa Elvis got the crowd
in the mood as the guitar slinger himself strolled out to center
stage. But wait, what's this? It's Brian Setzer in a three piece
suit! Taking his place in front of that Wurlitzer, he jumped right
in and told the band to "Take a Break" with one of his
new songs from the "Wolfgang's Big Night Out" CD, a swing
version of "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen." With that the
band was off and swingin'. They jammed through classic Setzer Christmas
tunes and new songs from his latest CD with "Dig That Crazy
Santa Claus," "One More Night With You," and "Boogie
Woogie Santa Claus," featuring solos from trumpet to trombone
and everywhere in between. "Sleigh Ride" took us on a
romp and Julie and Leslie's sweet sultry voices made us wish we
were their "Honey Man." Damn those ladies can sing.
Running
his fingers through his trademark pompadour, Brian took us back
and rocked the house with a full-band version of "Stray Cat
Strut" which transitioned nicely into "You're A Mean One
Mr. Grinch," featuring a guitar-slinging Grinch in a Santa
suit playing front and center with Brian. The crowd went nuts as
the Mean One himself strutted around the stage. Next up was "Jump
Jive N Wail," the swing song that brought Brian and the big
bands back to prominence, followed by a raucous version of "Angels
We Have Heard On High."
Taking
a small break to reset the stage and bring the standup snare and
standup bass out front, we were treated to another of Brian's newest
songs "For Lisa," his take on "Fur Elise." He
was joined on stage by the "Jazzy Cats," John Hatton on
bass, Tony Pia on drums, Julie Reiten on violin, Tim Messina on
Clarinet and Steve Reid on Trumpet. This ensemble had almost as
much fun playing as the audience had watching them. I don't think
they ever stopped smiling the entire song, but then again the audience
never stopped cheering either. After a standing ovation, the "Jazzy
Cats" stripped down to just Setzer, Hatton and Pia and went
full bore into a rock-a-billy set to blow the roof off. Starting
off with "Cat's On A Hot Tin Roof," the combo then blazed
into the 50's homage "Gene & Eddie" followed by the
crowd favorite "Fishnet Stockings." With the curtains
opening and the band back in their places, the three pieces up front
were joined full swing for "Route 66" and the classic
Stray Cats song "Rock This Town." People were dancing
in the aisles and rockin' the joint in every corner. Then with a
wave of his hand like Santa, he was off stage and gone leaving the
band in their seats and riling up the crowd.
Now
you know this wasn't the end. There had to be an encore. People
were on their feet and cheers were near deafening when Brian strode
back out. This time the suit jacket was gone and Brian looked ready
to kick it up a notch. It was time to get serious. A stage hand
brought out his music stand and the sheet music. It was "Nutcracker"
time. Nodding to Tony Pia, the band kicked off this classic in full
swing mode with even Brian reading from the sheet music to follow
along. It was sheer heaven to hear. Driving to the crescendo, the
crowd was in time with the band for every second. Then he took it
even further. With sleeves rolled up and tats out, you knew he was
"In the Mood." The band jammed full steam into this Glenn
Miller classic made new again with Brian's well-matched lyrics.
People were dancing all over and I even saw the waitresses dancing
as they made their way through the aisles. As we came down to the
last song it was befitting that the Christmas Extravaganza close
with a Christmas song, and what song says Christmas better than
"Jingle Bells." But not just "Jingle Bells,"
it was a full-out swing version of the holiday classic that brought
the show to a triumphant close. Smiling and waving as the band joined
him on the front of the stage, Brian waved as the audience screamed
and yelled for more. It was a great way to wish us all the happiest
of holidays.
Last
year I gave the show my first ever A+ and I have to be very honest,
this show was very different in some ways and very much the same
in others, but everything mixed just right like grandma's Christmas
cookies. So with that said all I have to say is: Thank you Brian,
thank you Julie and Leslie, thank you John and Tony, thank you Tim,
Sean F Eric, Charlie and Jim, thank you, Steve, Sean B., Jamie and
Brian, and thank you Jason, Robbie, Jeremy and Greg for making this
a great show. A+ to all of you and Merry Christmas!!!
As
always I want to thank the whole staff at Northern Lights, especially
Shay for treating us like royalty and Steve for letting us get some
great pictures. Merry Christmas to you all!
Photos:
Paul Kloiber
Printable
version |
Back
to Archives |
e-mail
this review
|