Sunday, April 29, 2012

Dateline Florida: Beaverhausen & Billboard

It's Dj Buddy B's last night in the Florida gulf, where I have mostly blogged about aging divas and their birthdays. Afternoon showers, nice and breezy, not as hot as the past few days since I arrived. I'm seated under an Arabian-styled gazebo, me and my laptop atypically atop patio furniture, typing as the palm trees around us sway and the gazebo linens flap.

Finally looking over last Thursday's top 25 Billboard dance/club charters, below are my views and feelings on what interests moi at this time:

Gotye (featuring Kimbra) has a #1 smash on the week's Billboard Top 100. The video for their fresh hit, "Somebody That I Used to Know," was in constant rotation on my little DirecTV monitor on the Jet Blue flight down here.  The dance mixes of this Belgian/Australian indie-pop artist's song arrive at the dance chart's 4th spot.

Madonna's "Girl Gone Wild" slowly slides to #6, off its peak #1 perch, while Katy Perry jettisons two spots upward, to this week's #2 with "Part of Me."

Debby Holiday is the daughter of singer/musician Jimmy Holiday (who co-wrote Jackie DeShannon's "Put a Little Love in Your Heart").  This club diva is consistently a dance-music success, artistically and commercially, and her latest tune, "Never Give Up," will make you wanna move. It leaps to 9th place, from #14 last week.

Up from #22, Jennifer Lopez' "Dance Again" is another great contempo dance anthem that is dominating both pop and dance charts, and it's one of JLo's best efforts to date. On the latest chart, it hits lucky number 13 and looks like it could soon conquer the top spot.

Melanie Amaro's "Respect" and Beyonce's "Love on Top" nestle at numbers 15 and 16, respectively, after peaking at #3 and #1 (also respectively).

Beyond Beyonce, little of interest to me, Buddy B, on Billboard. Time now for Buddy B's banana daquiris, dahlings! Peace, love & disco for all! This week, special, much-requited love back to Brazil, Indonesia, the UK, Mexico, Germany, Russia, Spain, France and Canada! Keep dancing, everyone; and kisses out to all.




Saturday, April 28, 2012

H.B., A-M!


Happy Birthday to Sixties sex kitten (with a whip!) Ann-Margret, 71! The iconic redhead got famously vivacious with Elvis in Viva Las Vegas, taunted as Tommy's tart of a Mom, came well-versed in Carnal Knowledge, and even made a mean Blanche Duboise in the tv-movie version of Streetcar Named Desire.

But, for Dj Buddy B, I'll always recall her fabulous '70s disco number:



No doubt, she'll best be remembered for her Bye Bye, Birdie debut. I present the "Telephone Hour" production number:



Happy Birthday, Ann-Margret!

Friday, April 27, 2012

Happy Birthday to a B-Girl

B-52s Birthday Girl, Kate Pierson
Punk-rock enchantress Kate Pierson, one of the founding members of The B-52s, turns 64 today.  She's a Jersey Girl -- like Patti Smith and me -- born in Weehawken and raised in Rutherford. She's also a fellow Taurean. Kate currently runs Kate's Lazy Meadow, groovy retro-moderne rustic lodging in New York's Catskill Mountains, near Woodstock.

Here is Kate with Cindy Wilson fronting The B-52s, "Roam," 1990.

http://www.lazymeadow.com/





HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KATE!

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Lady Gaga in Versace Goes Bollywood

Lady Gaga looking like a lady in Versace. But who wouldn't?

peek-a-boo!

Lady G, says OMG! on-line, "looked better than ever upon arriving in South Korea to kick off her highly-anticipated Born This Way Ball concert tour. The fashion-forward songstress – who tends to find herself on my weekly worst-dressed list (What Were They Thinking?!) – turned heads in a cream-colored Atelier Versace gown, which featured a deep plunge and gold detailing. Accessories, including a pearl-adorned mask and sheer white gloves, completed Gaga's stunning ensemble."

  Below, a beautifully Bollywood remix of "Judas":

Beyonce, the World's Most Beautiful Woman?

"Is it wrong that sometimes when people call me, I break out into 'Telephone,' my mom always does Beyonce's part?" Lady Gaga wants to know on her Facebook post. Is that a sly dig, mayhaps?

Beyonce & Lady Gaga turn their backs on one another
"Beyonce, the international superstar singer, wife of Jay-Z and mother to four-month-old Blue Ivy has been named People magazine's world's most beautiful woman, it was revealed on TODAY Wednesday morning," TODAY entertainment on-line announced.

Magazine senior editor Alexis Chiu told TODAY's Matt Lauer and Ann Curry that Beyonce is "flawless, she's gorgeous, she's at the top of her game career-wise, she's this music icon at 30 years old and on top of it she has this glow going on ... She's a new mom."

Blecch!

"I feel more beautiful than I've ever felt because I've given birth. I have never felt so connected, never felt like I had such a purpose on this earth," Beyonce told People in an interview to appear in the issue, which will hit newsstands in two more days (April 27 at time of writing).

Blue Ivy & mommy dearest
"The best thing about having a daughter is having a true legacy," she added. "The word 'love' means something completely different now." Gag!

Also included among the mag's "most beautiful" categories are names that include Jennifer Aniston (!), Michelle Obama, Jennifer Hudson, Kristen Wiig, Jennifer Lawrence and Selena Gomez.

TODAY's Kathie Lee Gifford and NBC's Meredith Viera also made the list. "All beautiful women who are very of-the-moment," said Chiu. Very kiss-assy, no?

Last year's choice was Jennifer Lopez. (And blecch! again.)

Lauer wanted to know if anyone bald had ever made the list. "We're thinking about you for next year," said Chiu, who said they'll take it under advisement.

Ok, I have to confess I've had the hots for Lauer since he was a lowly announcer on HBO. And he had hair. But, hey, I'll take this 6-foot hot dog, hair or hairless!

Talking about Selena Gomez & Jennifer Lopez as Most Beautifuls, what is latina lovely Salma Hayek up to these days?







Don't Rain on Streisand's 70th Belated Birthday

Happy Belated Birthday, Babs!
We paid tribute to Babs' milestoner yesterday. Today, just a little after-party tidbit; a motion picture sequence that has become iconic. And, just a reminder, it's an anthem I embrace, as should you. (Incidentally, I face a milestone birthday this year, too.) Don't let anybody rain on our parades, babies!


Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Hello, Gorgeous! Barbra Streisand Turns 70

Rosie O'Donnell's  appearance on today's "Today" show was her first TV appearance since the Oprah Winfrey Network cancelled her ill-begotten series. After getting into an argument with "Today's Professionals" fellow panelist, Donny Deutsch(bag), Rosie, just before the segment wrapped up, interrupted  to wish Barbra Streisand a happy birthday. "Can I just say it's Barbra Streisand's 70th birthday today?" O'Donnell asked. A relieved Matt Lauer laughed and said ok. "Happy Birthday, Barbra Streisand!" O'Donnell yelled excitedly.

And so it is. Barbra's birthday. Not any birthday. 70th fucking birthday! Can you believe?

Per Huffington Post, "The singer and actress has two Academy Awards, five Emmys, eight Grammys, a Special Tony and a Peabody.... She went on to record an astounding 33 studio albums and appeared in 20 films. She has been featured on 47 soundtracks"

For 70, she doesn't look bad by any standard. But, as my mother used to remind us, "Neither would I if I had her money." First, she was a Funny Girl, then she was a Funny Lady, now she's a Funny Alta Caca! Still, I gotta say, "Hello, gorgeous!" as I celebrate, tonight, with some Streisand music and maybe some Manischewitz wine!

When I lived at 12 Fifth Ave. in the Village, I'd give friends the Babs tour. The Lion's Den on West 9th St. (off 6th Ave.), where she got her start, was the first stop. It's now a restaurant called The Lion, but was a very popular, largely gay cabaret. Then, we'd go to the site of the old Bon Soir on 8th St., now shuttered down. Here, at this once chic location, Streisand was famously discovered. She was an opening act for Phyllis Diller.


"We shared a dressing room at the Bon Soir club in Greenwich Village. It was the size of a pea pod and usually you could smell fear in there. But she wasn’t a bit nervous – at least not that I noticed," Ms Diller once told US magazine. "I admit, I was unimpressed when I first met her. She was so young. She said hello, and that was it. She told me her shoes were antique and they cost her 35 cents. But then she went out and did her numbers and when she hit about the third note, every hair on my body stood up. It was unbelievable. She opened with ‘Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf,’ and I thought, Oh, my God, what a fabulous choice. She also sang Harold Arlen’s ‘A Sleepin’ Bee,’ which really showed off that voice. It was scary. I knew she was going places. At the end of the week, I said to her, “I know it’s bold to say this but don’t you ever cut your nose.” I knew lousy, insensitive agents would come along and say, ‘Hey, baby, do this, do that.’ Now everyone takes credit for telling her not to get a nose job, but I had her first."

Here's a dance-music video to help you celebrate Babs' 70th:

 
 

Night of 1,000 Super Troupers: the Bistro Awards

The 27th Annual Bistro Awards presentation was the first I've attended and I found it a total embarrassment... of riches! Unfortunately for me, although I was thoroughly enjoying the generous parade of entertainment, I had to leave before it all wrapped up and consequently missed two major Awards winners: Dee Dee Bridgewater (as in one over troubled) and Melissa Manchester. (And you don't know how they talked about her! (Only good things, though, I hear.))


My friend, novelist Kevin Scott Hall, who is also cabaret columnist for Edge New York and writes reviews for Bistro Awards on-line (http://bistroawards.com/), told me that Dee Dee Bridgewater gave great show. "She had missed her plane but got in just in time to come directly to the Bistros," he told me confidentially. "She was wearing sweats and had her little dog on a leash, but she tore up the place with her two songs. Then Marvin Hamlisch accompanied Melissa. She was great ...and very gracious."


Kevin is a Bistro Awards committee member, and he was also a presenter last night along with the show's associate producer, Richard Skipper, and such fabulous icons of entertainment as Annie Ross, Marvin Hamlish and especially journalist Liz Smith, still looking great at 89. "I'm the only intellectual ever fired by The New York Post," Liz quipped, modesty be damned!

Ms Smith then introduced her friend, entertainment legend Kaye Ballard, winner of this year's Bob Harrington Lifetime Achievement Award. Regretfully, Special K Kate opted to appear beamed to us, via Skype, from L.A., still as sharp and funny as ever at 86. She will be at Feinstein's in June, presumably not by satellite or holographic image.

Indeed, all legendary ladies present were joys to behold -- and can we, any of us, help but have a special flow of love for the show biz idols with whom we grew up? And so the love flowed, as did two bottles of lite beer over glasses full of ice for me, and we were equally awed by a new generation of talent creating a new and exciting vibe permeating the cozy theater at the Gotham Comedy Club in Chelsea.

Early on, Terese Genecco performed, as did Shaynee Rainbolt and Nicolas King, all of whom I previously experienced at one of Genecco's Tuesday night shows at Iridium recently. It was a treat to enjoy them all over again. Amy Beth Williams' coloratura soprano, stage presence and interpretive skills always delight. As does Justin Sayre's foppish comic persona. (I mean, it is a persona?)


"As a gay, Justin has excelled at scarf placement, devilish quips, and a healthy, but firm, love of the American musical," reads his bio; his show at the Duplex has been going strong for over two years for good reason. Aaron Weinstein's comedy mixed with violin virtuosity won me over, as did the faux tacky-lounge act of Max and Maxine, somewhat in the tradition of Bette Midler's Vicki Eydie and Kiki & Herb.

Jim David's hosting was wry and irreverant, an act in and of itself. Jon Weber's musical direction was consistently divinely inspired. Always good to see Don't Tell Mama's Sidney Myer (here as announcer). And producer Sherry Eaker pulled off a Monday night miracle, looking cool, calm, elegant and fetching in a black, diaphanous gown with sparkling embroidery and thong; something that Cher might wear when feeling sheepish. Ms Eaker had much reason to feel good about herself.

So, what wasn't to like about this Awards ceremony? Not a thing if you're asking me. It was a thoroughly entertaining one fueled by inter-generational star power, and that energy is what keeps New York cabaret an essential, vital stage medium. In terms of the onslaught of entertainment, joy of performing and the length of the event, it was a lot of bang for your buck.

Last night, the medium was indeed the message. And what a merry message it was indeed!

Below, a very 1984 Melissa Manchester on Solid Gold, featuring The Solid Gold Dancers.
















Sunday, April 22, 2012

If She Could Turn Back Keys



"Cher has come under fire from officials in Adelaide, Australia after her key to the city turned up on eBay.com," WonderWall tells us. "The pop superstar was presented with the freedom of Adelaide back in 1990 after she performed at the Formula One Grand Prix there. However, the key and its memorial plaque have now been listed on Internet auction site eBay.com and Adelaide Mayor Stephen Yarwood is furious about the impending sale.

"He says, '[I am[ exceptionally disappointed ... I just think that it is more a reflection on her than the city of Adelaide. It must be very embarrassing for her if she is selling it because she needs the money.'

"The city's former mayor, Steve Condous, who presented Cher with the honor, adds, 'I think that's pretty poor. I'm disappointed. I would have thought that getting the key to a city like Adelaide would have had some value to her, but obviously it doesn't because she wouldn't have got rid of it [sic]. I've been given a couple of keys to cities and I felt pretty privileged to be given those. If she didn't want to keep it she should have returned it back to the city.'

"On Sunday, the item had reached a price of more than $80,000 with 137 bids. The auction ends on Thursday."
 
AdelaideNow.com put it a bit more harshly:

"AGEING diva Cher is selling her key to the city of Adelaide on eBay, infuriating the lord mayor who presented it to her.

"Steve Condous yesterday voiced his disgust that the honour, which he presented to the singer and actress at the 1990 Adelaide Grand Prix, was up for sale.

"'I think that's pretty poor,' he told The Advertiser."


GLAAD to Be Gay 2012

Last night, the GLAAD (Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) Awards ceremony took place.

"Call it GLAAD's Year of Chaz," says The Hollywood Reporter.


 "The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation on Saturday handed out two additional prizes to Chaz Bono as part of the watchdog group's 23rd annual Media Awards," they explicated. "Bono, whose transition from female to male was chronicled in Becoming Chaz, was joined on stage at the Westin Bonaventure in Los Angeles by directors Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato to pick up the prize for outstanding documentary for the OWN release.
 "In addition, Bono was also honored with GLAAD's Stephen F. Kolzak Award, which is presented annually to an openly lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender media professional who has made a significant difference in promoting equality. Cher presented her son with the award and was joined on stage by Rep. Mary Bono Mack.
 
"Bono's two awards come a month after the organization recognized ABC's Dancing With the Stars as outstanding reality program after a season in which Bono became the reality competition series' first transgender contestant.

"In other categories, ABC's Modern Family took home the GLAAD Award for outstanding comedy series, with star Jesse Tyler Ferguson accepting the honors. The Steve Levitan/Christopher Lloyd comedy shared the honor in the category last year with Fox's Glee.

"Drop Dead Diva's Josh Berman and Brooke Elliott and Hot in Cleveland's Betty White, Jane Leeves and Wendie Malick accepted honors for their respective series for outstanding individual episode, for "Prom" and "Beards," respectively.

"Focus Features' romantic dramedy Beginners, starring Christopher Plummer, Ewan McGregor and Melanie Laurent, was honored as outstanding film, wide release. Plummer took home a supporting actor Academy Award for the role.

"The Hunger Games star Josh Hutcherson received GLAAD's Vanguard Award, which is presented to media professionals who have increased the visibility and understanding of the LGBT community.


"The actor, 19, is a founder of the LGBT ally organization Straight But Not Narrow and has remained outspoken about equality. Hutcherson co-starred as the son of a lesbian couple in the 2010 pic The Kids Are All Right, which took home the GLAAD Award for outstanding feature, wide release. Benicio del Toro presented the award.

"Bono and Hutcherson were joined by Smash executive producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, who picked up the Vito Russo Award earlier this year.

"During the ceremony, Ohio mom Jennifer Tyrrell, along with her partner Alicia Burns and their four children, appeared on stage to gather signatures from attending celebrities to petition the Boy Scouts to end the exclusion of gay scouts and parents. Tyrrell was ousted as her son's den leader earlier this month because of her sexual orientation. Thousands have already signed Tyrrell's petition.

"Additional honorees and awards -- including drama series -- will be June 2 in San Francisco. Glee's Dianna Agron will host."

Tomorrow night, Dj Buddy B will attend the NYC's cabaret Bistro Awards ceremony. Will tell you all about it. ;)

Friday, April 20, 2012

Thank God It's Colton

Because, thank God, it's Friday and because it's rumored that the newly constructed, metal-and-glass, vaguely art-deco building two doors down the street will be a dance club, it's time to celebrate. See how your Dj, Buddy Beaverhausen, brings the disco back to Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, home of Saturday Night Fever? (They also need to turn Bay Ridge's Spectrum back into a gay club. It has the authentic, lit-up Saturday Night Fever disco floor as seen in the film. I used to actually come in from Manhattan to see acts like Hazell Dean, Carol Jiani and The Village People, back in the '90s, and the place was packed and always attitude-free.)


I therefore present the official video for Colton Ford's dance version of R.E.M.'s "Losing My Religion" (their 1991 smash). And thank God for Colton Ford, who is one hot dude and one really sweet guy. Not to mention, he can sing! Hot song, hot man, it's Friday, let's celebrate and let it all hang out!



The Billboard Awards

Adele, Rihanna, Lady Gaga and Katy Perry are four diva finalists for the 2012 Billboard Music Awards, which will be broadcast live (from Vegas) Sunday May 20, 8 pm est on ABC.


Below is the complete list of Billboard's finalists:

Top Artist: Adele,  Lady Gaga, Lil Wayne, Katy Perry, Rihanna

Top New Artist:  Bad Meets Evil, Big Sean, Foster the People, Scotty McCreery, Wiz Khalifa

Top Male Artist:  Justin Bieber, Chris Brown, Drake, Lil Wayne, Bruno Mars

Top Female Artist: Adele, Lady Gaga, Nicki Minaj, Katy Perry, Rihanna

Top Duo/Group:  The Black Eyed Peas, Coldplay, Lady Antebellum, LMFAO, Maroon 5

Top Billboard 200 Artist:  Adele, Justin Bieber, Michael Buble, Lady Gaga, Lil Wayne

Top Hot 100 Artist: Adele, LMFAO, Bruno Mars, Katy Perry, Rihanna

Top Digital Songs Artist: Adele, LMFAO, Bruno Mars, Katy Perry, Rihanna

Top Radio Songs Artist:  Adele, Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, Nicki Minaj, Rihanna

Top Touring Artist:  Bon Jovi, Taylor Swift , Take That, U2, Roger Waters

Top Social Artist:  Justin Bieber, Eminem, Lady Gaga, Rihanna, Shakira

Top Streaming Artist:  Lil Wayne, LMFAO, Nicki Minaj, Bruno Mars, Rihanna

Top Digital Media Artist:  Adele, Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, Lil Wayne, Rihanna

Top Pop Artist:  Adele, Lady Gaga, LMFAO, Katy Perry, Rihanna

Top R&B Artist:  Beyonce, Chris Brown, Cee Lo Green, Miguel, Rihanna

Top Rap Artist:  Drake, Lil Wayne, LMFAO, Nicki Minaj, Wiz Khalifa

Top Country Artist:  Jason Aldean, Zac Brown Band, Lady Antebellum, Blake Shelton, Taylor Swift

Top Rock Artist:  The Black Keys, Coldplay, Foster The People, Foo Fighters, Mumford & Sons

Top Alternative Artist:  The Black Keys, Coldplay, Foster The People, Foo Fighters, Mumford & Sons

Top Latin Artist:  Mana, Pitbull, Prince Royce, Romeo Santos, Shakira

Top Dance Artist:  David Guetta, Lady Gaga, LMFAO, Rihanna, Britney Spears

Top Christian Artist:  Casting Crowns, MercyMe, Skillet, Laura Story, Chris Tomlin














Thursday, April 19, 2012

Dick & La La



La La Brooks told a very interesting and heartfelt story about her relationship with Dick Clark to her "Facebook Family" of Friends. La La was one of the original vocalists of The Crystals, working with Phil Spector in the Sixties. La La is an amazing, accomplished singer with an electric stage presence. She will be at Iridium in September (dates to be announced). Writes La La:

"I know you, my friends know by now about the passing of Dick Clark. As some of you may or may not know, I worked with Dick on many of the Crystals' tours. These tours were called the 'Caravan of Stars.'

"You may not know this, but I was very close to Dick Clark. When I was on tour with him in the 60's, Dick would always call me to ask if I could cover for any of the artists who got sick and couldn't perform; I would fill in for those artists and still do my show with The Crystals. One day the Dixie Cups' singer, Barbara Hawkins became ill and couldn't sing, so Dick asked me, "La La, could you fill in for another artist?" And so I sang "Chapel of Love" with Rosa Lee Hawkins and their cousin Joan. Another time I filled in for the singing duo, Paul and Paula. This was a White couple and when Paula became sick, Dick asked me to fill in for her. I thought it was crazy!! I didn't know how people were going to accept me as the Black Paula!! But I did it and I made it through. I remember that the audience was laughing when we came out on stage to sing. But somehow we made it work. After our set, Dick gave me a big hug and said, 'Wow! You made it!' He always could count on La La to fill in for the sick singers.

Years later when I was living in Vienna, Austria, my son called me from New York saying that he saw Dick Clark in a restaurant on 72nd street. My son ran in there and approached Dick and said, 'You know my mother!' Dick asked, 'Who is your mother?' When my son told him who I was, Dick remembered me and asked where I was and what I was doing. My son said that I was living in Vienna and Dick responded by mentioning that he and his wife were going to be vacationing in Vienna in a few days. What a coiincidence! He said that each year he and his wife traveled abroad to different countries. He asked my son for my number and said that he would call me when he got over there. My son called me and told me what had happened and I said, 'Yeah, right. Dick Clark isn't gonna call me. He's too busy and I haven't seen him for years.'

Well, one day in Vienna, my phone rang and it was Dick Clark. I was shocked! He asked me to meet him and his wife for dinner. I met them at their hotel, we went to a restaurant and strolled down memory lane for hours. He remarked as to how good I looked and suggested that I come back to the States and get work. I told him that I was afraid and unsure as to whether I'd be able to find any work there. I had recorded a CD in Austria, 'La La Brooks & Friends, which I said that I would send him so that he could hear how I sounded now. But I was still apprehensive and fearful about returning to America.

"Shortly thereafter, Dick wrote me two letters insisting that I return home; he said the CD was THAT GOOD. He told me that if I came back, I should call him. Eventually when I did return I phoned him and he said that he was happy that I was back and that if I needed him for any assistance, I should call him. I said that I didn't want to trouble him and that I was just thankful that he had been so persuasive in getting me to have the courage to come back to America. And over the years, I would keep in touch and call him just to see how was doing. So it's all because of Dick Clark that I returned home and I'm here today.

"So I want to thank Dick for believing in me and may he rest in peace. He was such a good guy."

La La and The Crystals on American Bandstand:

When Dick Clark Met Madonna

‎"Even though I told him in 1984 that I wanted to rule the world, it’s Dick Clark who ruled the world. He loved what he did and his energy and enthusiasm were boundless. A great man. I bow to his memory and everything he did with his life." - Madonna




The year was 1984 and I clearly remember seeing this when it first aired. (From my playpen.) Madonna sang "Holiday," then had this exchange with the late Dick Clark. Madonna had just released her debut album and was already displaying her blonde ambition, American Bandstand was still going strong and Clark was a power player in the world of pop music. His influence, from the '50s through the '80s via his show, cannot be overstated.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Dick Clark Has Left the Bandstand


"America's oldest teenager," Dick Clark, the perennially youthful, clean-cut host of American Bandstand during 1956 through 1989, was a true television icon.

Says Wikipedia of Bandstand: "The show's popularity helped Dick Clark become an American media mogul and inspired similar long-running music programs, such as Soul Train and Top of the Pops. Clark eventually assumed ownership of the program through his Dick Clark Productions company."

The only person to ever co-host Bandstand with Dick Clark was Donna Summer, who joined him to present a special episode dedicated to the release of the Casablanca film Thank God It's Friday in May 1978.

Eight years ago, Dick Clark suffered a massive stroke. His severely impaired speech proved no obstacle as Clark still returned to his New Year's Rockin' Eve show on December 31, 2005 and appeared on every New Year's Rockin' Eve through the 2011/2012 show.



As a trivia aside, not only is Mr Clark's nickname "Dick," his middle name is "Wagstaff." Below, Barry Manilow sings "American Bandstand," a tribute to the show and its host, in an unfortunately goofy video. (Hey, it was the best I could come up with!)



Goodnight, Dick Clark, we will especially miss you come New Year's rockin' eve.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Dj Buddy Beaverhausen's Book Nook: "Redefining Diva" by Sheryl Lee Ralph

The purported purpose of Sheryl Lee Ralph's prose in her recently published book (Simon & Schuster trade paperback), "Redefining Diva," is exactly as the title propounds. "I am the Ultimate Diva," Ms Ralph writes, spending a great deal of time, early on, to elucidate that statement and illuminate the very nature of divadom to anyone who reads her tome.

Ms Ralph clarifies that she is not a "diva" in the sense of that term being used synonymously with "bitch." Off the record, I've heard otherwise, but I digress. "A Diva is an acronym: Divinely Inspired Victoriously Anointed," our Dreamgirl insists. Well, Babycakes, I'm sure Joan Crawford felt the same way.

Sheryl Lee Ralph, star of stage, screen, television and music, has even been a disco diva, beautifully belting out the dance classic, "In the Evening"-- which, she briefly points out, was a top ten hit --  as well as the equally discolicious "You're So Romantic" and, notably, a hi-NRG cover of The Eurythmics' "Here Comes the Rain Again." Ms Ralph rose to fame when she took Broadway by storm as one of the original Dreamgirls in the 1981 musical. (She had the Deena Jones role, played by Beyonce in the motion picture.)

The ulterior purpose of this memoir, it turns out (and not entirely a shocker), is to settle scores, put Ms Ralph's spin on past events and spread a little gossip. Ok, so here we have the juicy stuff! The reason I buy books of this sort. Regretfully, I must tell you, Her Nibs does this sheepishly. You just know she has so much more mud to fling, and so much dirty laundry she could generously air without things becoming libelous but, rather, Ms Ralph skims over events, skimps on details, deflects animosities towards her arch-nemeses onto others and always puts a happy face on things, as if all conflicts in her life have found closure and she, as a diva, has found inner peace. Yeah, right, Ralph!

There's a sense of disingenuousness to the writing. This isn't a tell-all; it's a tell-some! Just a few teaser bits, some inferences and a gloss of being above it all. Very passive-aggressive if you ask me, not only to her enemies or frienemies, but to her readers. That's not divaesque; that's just being a bitch!

Cast in the notorious Broadway flop, Reggae, 10 days before opening night, Sheryl allows, "...they needed a star leading lady now, as the beauty queen playing Faith had been fired. The word around the show was she'd been hired for her looks and not her acting abilities.... It was obvious she couldn't act to save her life." Well, that's catty! But you see the problem? Name please! The "beauty queen" (pageant queen or model?) isn't mentioned by name and, since she was dismissed during previews, I have no idea who this unnamed individual is. (Yes, I Googled it, but no luck.) So, snarling about one's "acting abilities" is, consequently, a pretty toothless snarl under the circumstances.

Ms Ralph scores brownie points when talking about Nell Carter, to whom she does not give a break. The late Ms Carter was cast in the Effie role (famously portrayed, in the original cast, by Jennifer Holliday, and on-screen by Jennifer Hudson) during the show's previews. Carter's erratic behavior during rehearsals is detailed; for example, when she left the room in the middle of singing "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going," ironically.  (Irony that was lost on the author.) Where did she go without telling anybody? Ralph found Nell in the ladies' room, red-eyed and covered in vomit.

"At times a prickly personality, Nell had demons she was fighting," the author would only write. In fact, it's already documented outside this book that Nell had a cocaine habit and an alcohol-abuse problem for many, many years.

Ralph discusses, to some extent, her feuds with Broadway co-star Holliday, "Dreamgirls" director Michael Bennett, Diana Ross and Moesha co-star, Brandy. With that many heads to butt, it's hard to imagine that she's not... oh, shall we just say "a wee bit difficult to get along with."

Although she is especially harsh on Bennett, there are flashes in the book that she pulled the diva act with him, Divinely Inspired Victoriously Anointed as she hoped to be.  She attributes the bad blood between JHol and herself as being stirred up by their director, although she takes a few well-timed digs at Holliday throughout: "As I got smaller, Jennifer seemed to get larger. She'd always struggled with her weight, and she coped with the stress by eating." The Scribe explains how, years after her experiences on Broadway, she met Ms Holliday and they got over themselves and became sisterly. However, might I add, things may not stay so chummy should Holliday read the above quote.

The Moesha situation also points to difficulties, if not deeper issues, with our wordsmith. She clearly was out-diva'd on that series' set by Brandy who is described as being "surrounded by 'yes' men." Undeniably, Ms Ralph was envious, even though she realizes, "...the show was called Moesha, not Moesha's Mom."

Unselfconscious or oblivious that she was having a breakdown at the time (obvious to this reader), Ralph substitutes the words "young cast members" when she clearly is writing specifically about Brandy, whose "enjoying herself behind closed door" caused our self-described diva to act out and storm off the set. (Hubby and kids needed to be fed, rationalized Ralph. I assume she didn't have hired help at the time.)

In an age-inappropriate diva debacle reminiscent of Joan Crawford taking over Christina's role on "Secret Storm,"  Ralph explains how she returned for the second season of Moesha wearing Brandy's trademark braids. Wait! Huh? Ralph doesn't see any problem with this and continues along as if she's grounded.

Brandy "wasn't at all happy with my wearing braids," the author writes, as if stunned. "According to her, the braids were her style. Her thing." Talk about cluelessness!

Asked by the director to remove the braids or put on a wig, Ralph quit the show. I'm glad the diva knows how to choose her battles wisely. Braids are worthy of all-out warfare, I have often been known to say.

"I don't have time for petty drama," the diva then adds with no hint of sarcasm.

Now, Diana Ross is a horse of a different color. She felt ripped off by Dreamgirls, felt it was a theatrical roman a clef about The Supremes (Sheryl denies, but of course it was; didn't make Miss Ross entitled to anything) and resented the fact that Sheryl Lee Ralph, as Deena Jones, was parodying her.

Well, wouldn't you know, Diva Ralph had either the lack of judgment -- or the cajones -- to get up from her seat in the Russian Tea Room to greet/confront Miss Ross, who had made an entrance and was posing, finding her light and flashing her grin.


"I stood up and walked right over to her." Uh-oh! "'Miss Ross,' I said." Get ready! "She stopped and turned around dramatically with that gleaming smile of hers." Duck! "I had to speak to her...." No, stop in the name of love! "'I'm Sheryl Lee...."

"'Ralph,' she cut me off instantly. The smile disappeared from her face.... 'I. Know. Who. You. Are.' she hissed, glaring at me.... With that, she turned on her heels, flipped her huge mane of hair and walked away from me."

The happy faces? Many years later, at the urging of Diana's son, Sheryl spoke with Diana about their children. Even Michael Bennett made peace with Sheryl on his death bed, dying of AIDS.

"Forgiveness." So our diva intones. Sheryl Lee Ralph founded The Diva Foundation, now 21 years strong, raising awareness to AIDS/HIV.

"I think that inside every gay man  -- no matter his color -- is a black woman trying to get out," Sheryl Lee hypothesizes. Honey, I got in touch with my inner black diva and it's Moms Mabley. Bless you, Miss Diva!

  












Monday, April 16, 2012

Cine Beaverhausen: The Cabin in the Woods

Tonight, I went to the theater in the hood to see The Cabin in the Woods. Welcome to film as virtual funhouse. I agree with the theory that we all have a desire to be scared in the dark; to gasp or even scream together and, then, to laugh at ourselves for being so collectively silly. Well, welcome to the movie as mass catharsis; maybe as elementary group therapy, too.

The cabin of this film's title is, of course, set out where no one can hear you scream. (Sometimes, I could use a place like that.) The movie is, in essence, of the haunted house sub-genre and it certainly gets around to hauling out plenty of scary monsters to do the haunting. Very deadly and violent ones at that.

When was the popular horror film reduced to the group-of-teens-get-slaughtered-one-by-one in grisly detail? Perhaps with John Carpenter's Halloween? Certainly by its imitator, Friday the 13th. Babies, believe Buddy B when he tells you that if these are "slasher" films, it's because what got slashed were the plot lines. And how can you be horrified when you're rooting for the next obnoxious young adult to get whacked? (Like Paris Hilton, for example, in House of Whacks... err, Wax!)

The Cabin in the Woods deconstructs the slasher film's blueprint, though the themes and Jungian archetypes for this type of horror movie are as old as our dark fairy tales from the Middle Ages and equally as moralistic.

This film is directed by Goddard. Not Jean Luc (Breathless, Alphaville). Drew (Buffy the Vampire Killer, Cloverfield). Goddard One was of the New Wave; Goddard Two's of the New Flave (of the Month, I mean).

Five young people enter the Dark Forest after getting a bad vibe en route by -- who else?  -- the creepy gas station attendant. It doesn't take long before they arrive at ye olde log cabin and it's "Don't go in the cellar!" followed by "Don't read that incantation!" followed by "Don't stand in front of that window!" ad nauseum.


The Cabin in the Woods is post-modernly, painfully aware of these cliches and sends them up with scares. It also sends in the clowns -- in the form of killer zombies. In fact, there's also a killer clown on hand! No monster-movie detail too remote for this movie it would seem.

The film begins with two male co-workers at the office coffee machine, shooting the breeze. But the mundane normalcy of this scene gives way to the increasingly bizarre. Ultimately, this storyline and that of the five young people in the cabin merge. What starts as a surreal concept ends as an excruciatingly ridiculous one, however.

By climax, I didn't care what happened because... well, it was all so stupid! To top it off, a famous screen actress, who seems to have seen better days vis-a-vis her participation in this mess, is dragged in, to make it all the more ridiculous and absurd. All I wanted, at this point, was that the film end and put me out of my misery. Is this a whole new type of horror? Fear that the film could drag on forever?

It's amazing how much mutilation and torture movie slasher-victims can endure and still carry on. They needn't bother, I tell you. And, hey, you know what would be really scary? Having to sit through this creature-feature a second time.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Trust Matt Zarley

Hot & funny. How I like it. New Matt Zarley video, cool club number.

Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" -- Almighty's Dance Cover

 It's a beautiful day here in New York. And I love this Almighty (UK) production of the Leonard Cohen song as a diva-driven dance tune. Enjoy!

Friday, April 13, 2012

Divas, Djs, Buddy & Billboard

By and large, the Billboard dance chart and I frequently part company when it comes to top tunes, though there are some things on my turntables that also make it on that chart.

Hey, I'm a populist! Give the people what they want, I concur. But, also, I believe a dj's set should expose people to new music, to help shape tastes and mix things up. Contemporary chart music, underexposed club productions and disco classics can all live in harmony. I think it excites a crowd to hear the unexpected, the fresh, the new and exciting when they're out to dance. Nobody hits the dance floor if he or she is uninspired (unless pleasing a date; Buddy B knows all too well) or gagging on a Billboard hit for the umpteenth time. Throw in a little retro, embellish with some camp, include plenty of uplift in the melody and the messages, give good diva drama, et voila!

So let's begin with a peek at Billboard's top club hits. Billboard says it's "compiled from reports from a national sample of club DJs." But does anyone know who these dj's are exactly?  I'm just going to address the songs from the chart that I, as a dj, like and play. It will prove painlessly brief:

Despite Madonna's record drop in album sales of MDNA, her club-friendly "Girl Gone Wild" is sitting pretty in first place as "Give Me All Your Luvin'" drops, still comfortably entrenched in the 10th spot. That song already ascended to #1 two weeks ago and has made a meteoric rise and fall in just eight weeks.

Melanie Amaro's cover of "Respect" is at 3; Katy Perry's "Part of Me" is one of this week's Greatest Gainers at #6, followed by "Love on Top" by Beyonce, having already topped the chart.

The always welcome Debby Holiday's new one, "Never Give Up," floats like a butterfly to #16; Yoko Ono gets down to #18 with "She Gets Down on Her Knees." And, beyond that, I'm afraid, is where Billboard and I part company.

My divas, oh my divas! I do love my divas. They are almost everything to me in terms of putting across the emotional elements of a song that help make it be exciting. So against diva-wannabe drama in real life, I say save drama for the stage, movie, tv or the disco, where it belongs.

Unlikely, at this point, to make it onto Billboard's top 25 club songs, is Gladys Knight's return to dance floors with her cover of "I Who Have Nothing." This classic tune was composed by Carlo Donida with English lyrics written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, and originally recorded by Ben E. King in 1963. Sylvester previously did a disco version of it, and now it's Gladys whose distinctive voice helps make this newly exciting to club-goers. Best remix is by Tony Moran/Warren Rigg. And, truly, Nicki Minaj's pathetic "Starships" beat this on the US dance/club chart? Pshaw!

It was Tony Moran, also, who produced a number that is an instant club classic, in my estimation, though it didn't chart the way I thought it would. "Magic," a true diva thrill-ride sung by none other than Jennifer Holliday, was indeed club magic. Released at the beginning of the year, it was certainly a hit in the gay clubs. So who, exactly, are these Nielsen-family djs? That's what I'd like to know!

Of the latest crop of promos, I am enjoying the 2012 club mix of Rich B's "Revolution" featuring Marcella Puppini (of Puppini Sisters fame, and already discussed in a recent post). "Tonight" is the new dance offering from St Etienne, the original extended mix preferred. I love Sarah Cracknell's voice; it's somewhere between Kylie and Deborah Harry, floating beautifully above her band's dreamy instrumentals.

Again, it's the original extended mix to go with when it comes to the trancey "Sunshine in My Life" by FunkySober with true diva vocals by one Sharlene Hector. Beautifully dancetastic despite simplistic lyrics. (Not always a drawback when you just need to work it out on the disco floor.)

From the tv series, Smash, it's Katherine McPhee who's lifted to disco-diva status at last, just like she was lifted on the show during that number by chorus boys. The original tv episode's version was clearly meant as a club tune. Right now, I'm digging the original extended club mix. Let's hope for brilliant remixes and that this will be a Smash.

Every Carol Hahn song's worthy of a celebration. Her newest release is no exception. "If This Is Love" is a great, contemporary hi-NRG number. Talk about uplift in message and melody, this is brilliant! I like the Julian Marsh mix best, fyi.

"Dance Again," Jennifer Lopez' newest, is a guilty pleasure and sure to pleasure the Billboard crowd. Adam Lambert offers "Better Than I Know Myself," of which I'm loving the Mike Rizzo club mix best. And beloved club divas Toni Braxton and Suzanne Palmer are back, people! And that is good news indeed!

Mark Picchiotti is always brilliant and his re-working  of "I Heart You" by Ms Braxton is no exception. May he guide her to the top where she belongs, at least for the club crowd. Suzanne's soulful "Keep on Keepin' On" is a dance delight with a few good remixes on hand to enhance. Right now, I like Gustavo Scorpio's work the most.

May I add that dancing is not only fun, it unites? Peace and happiness to all! Haters are losers. Clubs are where the happy people go. Thanks to all my viewers around the world. Love to all! Shout outs to Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Singapore, Indonesia, United Arab Emirates and everyone else! It's one world. Love each other, love the music, dance, peace and out. It's all about the music.



Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Madonna Makes Scents

I'm not one in favor of natural odors. In fact, I'm not crazy about natural anything! Artifice is always better, always an improvement. If you've ever had an armpit in your face, summer in the subway, I'm sure you agree that man-made scents and applications are the way to go.

So it's eau de colognes, eau de parfums, eau de toilettes, eau babies!

Everyone rich and famous has a scent on the market nowadays, it seems. The Yankees have one! Well, it's no wonder. You know how men's locker rooms can get! (I wouldn't mind seeing Derek Jeter in a towel, but that doesn't mean I'd want to get a whiff of him hot, sweaty, stinking after a game! Or..., hmm, wait a minute here...!)

The Yankees have scents for men and women, and bath and beauty products, which they sell online on their website. So the team understands the need to smell good and exploits it to the general public in their concern for the fight against plebian body odors. Never let them smell you sweat.

Madonna, who will be appearing tonight, 7 pm, at Macy's in Herald Square, will kick off her new scent, Truth or Dare, for all the b.o.-challenged masses.

I fear old girl may be wearing out her welcome through overexposure recently. Gravely concerned since Billboard reported: "This week, Madonna's "MDNA" earns the distinction of the largest second-week percentage sales drop for a No. 1-debuting album since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking sales in 1991. The album slides from No. 1 to No. 8 on the Billboard 200 with a 86.7% sales decline (falling from 359,000 to 48,000 according to SoundScan)."

Rumor has it that tomorrow's new Billboard dance chart will, however, find Madge in the number one spot with "Girls Gone Wild" (largely lifted by her gay fans, I suspect).

The superstar's Super Bowl appearance was a true tour de force that lifted her back to the tippy-top of public attention and re-elevated her fame. Then, there was that flop movie she directed around the same time. MDNA, her album, arrived in the wake of "Give Me All Your Luvin'," the single that topped the dance charts and blazed her way back in the wake of Super Bowl.

But Madonna, busy with rehearsals for her upcoming (and, frankly, overpriced) tour, has not made much time to plug her album on the tv-and-radio circuit. She has had time to hawk her new perfume at Macy's and even do a video for same. See what I mean about "over-saturation"? Like drowning in too much perfume.

Now, can you seriously imagine Madonna shopping at Macy's? Puh-leeze! But she sure does like to sell there. Remember the Lourdes line launched in 2010 for juniors?

I think Madge would sell lots more perfume if she showed up at Duane Reed and sold it there, but not at 55 bucks for a 1.7 oz. bottle, honeys!

Tweeted Kathy Griffin: "Just pre-ordered Madonna’s Truth or Dare perfume. Can’t wait 2 smell like fake accents & hormone replacement therapy!"

The Huffington Post pondered if all this perfume business meant Madonna has too much time on her hands.

They later added: "We had a good laugh a few months ago when Madonna introduced her new "Truth Or Dare" fragrance with this confusing description:

"'Truth: Duality. Sin is my twin. Contradictions push and pull.
Dare: To expose what lies beneath. Infinite possibility.
In this tension, we find our true selves.'

"Um, OK. We weren't sure what Madonna was getting at, but now that we've seen the fragrance's new TV commercial, it's pretty clear what "exposing what lies beneath" meant." (TV ad appears below.)


Above is the print ad for Truth or Dare: the Scent. I don't know how much truth there is in the hype compared to the dare. Posing in front of a bottle that looks as if it might contain holy water, missy virtually makes love to herself in a mirror. Narcissism is such a stretch for her! Note the images are not exactly alike. Gasp! She's so edgy!



Macy's touts: "Truth or Dare by Madonna is a contemporary and sexy reinvention of a classic, robust signature white floral. The unique blend of narcotic florals, balanced with addictive woods and vanilla, create a scent that is timeless yet modern, simultaneously dark and light. The addition of gourmand notes such as Vanilla and Caramelized Amber makes the fragrance stand out from traditional floral fragrances and gives it a contemporary edge. Experience the opulent and sensual scent of Truth or Dare by Madonna with the new fragrance collection for women."

Shouldn't they have thrown pheromones in for good measure? (It's "addictive... narcotic." Get it? Maybe you can snort it or shoot it up!)

As for my personal tastes in "scents," I gravitate toward the powdery and soapy. I eschew the woodsy, floral (I hate men who smell like a lawn), piney (Attack of the Pine-Sol People), spicy, musty and the vanilla-y.

Sorry, Madonna, I shpritzed a 14th St. knockoff on my wrist today and it made me gag.

But I do love my Gravity cologne (by Coty). 1 oz. bottle at Duane Reed for just a little over $12. Hey, what ever happened to Aramis?








Sunday, April 8, 2012

Clark Sisters Disco/Gospel Classic (Danny Krivit remix)

The Clark Sisters had a disco hit in 1981 with "You Brought the Sunshine," a girl-group influenced gospel tune that heated up dance floors. Very Ellie Greenwich/Jeff Barry-inspired, though the Wall of Sound here is strictly in the intensity of the vocals, not the production. Just a way for me to say it's still Easter Sunday; take it with you & groove. Danny Krivit's mix is subtle, keeps the original's integrity as a song, and can anyone resist the rhythm and driving vocals of this number?




Dj Buddy B Goes to Church

I may be a fallen Catholic but it's not like I've fallen and I can't get up and, hallelujah!, I made it to church this Easter Sunday (albeit not a Catholic one). And, no, lightning did not strike either me or the church! At least not yet. 

I must confess (the Catholic deep inside, much like Madonna, loves a good confession whether on the dancefloor or an Act of Contrition for commercial purposes) that it was definitely watching GCB on the boob-tube every week that got me to thinking, "Hmmm, maybe church isn't such a drag after all!"

So, I tagged along with my friend to his place of worship, Middle Collegiate Church, in the East Village, this Easter morning. I mean, they have a float every year in the Gay Pride march, so how could I go wrong? Right?

MCC is a Protestant (Dutch Reform) house of worship that delivers truth in advertising with their motto: "Welcoming. Artistic. Inclusive. Bold." Gee, that should be my motto!

Because I had to use the men's room before I could get seated, we entered through the backdoor (my favorite way of entering and exiting a joint, anyways).  Here, I got to meet three female preachers and a Facebook Friend I'd yet to meet in real-life, who was every bit as fabulous as expected. I desperately wanted a cup of their java from what is essentially "backstage" to the church itself, but taking refreshments to your pew is a no-no, wouldn't you know know.

If all the world's a stage, I guess I can respectfully say that Middle Collegiate Church puts on a boffo show!  I realized that church service can be fun because it's basically performance art, although deeply felt and intended to drive home a message. I think, in my childhood, I heard so many negative and scolding messages from the (bully?) pulpit, I just tuned out. But today's messages were all very positive and I needed uplift! I needed to be inspired! I needed a positive word or two. I needed to see some of the men in the congregation wearing fabulous Easter bonnets!

The first thing that I check out in any church is its interior design, and Middle Collegiate passed my Cathedral Taste Test with flying colors. (I just couldn't pray in some whitewashed shack with a church bell on top, after all. Think about my reputation! (Ok, don't think about that.))

Gothic wooden rafters, stained glass windows, nicely designed pulpit and choir corral. Thumbs up!

To a packed house of adoring fans, we were treated to a choir that sang traditional hymns beautifully (these included Mendelsohn's "Prelude in C Major" and Handel's "Hallelujah!"); a brass quintet; organist and percussion that impressed. Plus a separate gospel choir (my Facebook Friend being part of this) that had people on their feet.

"He Lives," a rockin' gospel number featuring soloist Tina Owens, blew me away. I was movin' on up to the lower east side, children! Big Woo!

Honestly, I missed the incense, plus the little man-made grotto where the statue of St Bernadette prayed to the statue of the Virgin Mary under a string of twinkling colored lights, where we could kneel and light devotional candles at Our Lady of Lourdes, church of my childhood days. But we did not have entertainment on the order of Middle Church by any means! (Guess I'm saying it's a trade-off.)

My inner old-school Catholic got a little freaked by the touchy-feely stuff with strangers and even with my friend. (Holding hands, hugging? Yecch!) (Intimacy issues much?) I was also taken aback by the participation of the congregation. Applause! Clapping in rhythm to the gospel choir! Even standing O's! "Church shouldn't be this much fun," a voice within me warned. (Sister Mary Elizabeth, is that you in there?)

I loved the prayer and sermon (by a wonderfully animated preacher, Dr. Jacqui Lewis) that both touched me and was, on a personal plane, very relevant today. Even the puppet show with Frog and Toad won me over with its Easter message.

Middle Collegiate is church service the way it should be the world over, spreading the Christian message of unconditional love of fellow man, nurturing humanity with Jesus' message of peace, love and understanding. (And what's so funny about that, as Elvis Costello posed?)

I look at my program now for today's service. I read the message from the "Proof of Life" sermon. And, if anything, I'm glad to have taken this message away on Easter, to try to meditate on this week; this Spring; this time of rebirth and renewal that includes a milestone birthday:

"Every day, we have the opportunity to let old behaviors die so we can live into our best, higher self. What needs to die in you so that something else can live?"


Saturday, April 7, 2012

Melanie's Easter Message at B. B. King's

The fact that Melanie opened her Saturday night set, at New York's B. B. King's, with one of my personal favorites from her oeuvre, "Beautiful People," set me in a proper mood for her show. But this was to be no night for nostalgia as the 65-year-old folk singer let us know early on.

The 2012 version of Melanie's act exposed us to to how she has evolved as a songwriter and singer throughout the years, keeping the ethos of love, peace and happiness (which made her a Woodstock-era darling) a constant theme, keeping it interesting.

Another constant is that voice! Like sister Queens native, Cyndi Lauper, Melanie can sound disarmingly squeaky and cutie-pie-ish, then soar to powerfully belting out a number, all to grand effect. Her phrasing is unique and has certainly become more sophisticated and polished over time.

Expressing her disdain for being pigeon-holed as a cultural token of the hippie era, she recounts participating in a "Hippie" theme show, where she was asked to only do hits. Not only did she sneak in a non-hippie non-hit, she sang "Those Were the Days" at the event -- a song actually done by Mary Hopkin. Nobody noticed.

I saw Melanie at B. B. King's a few years back. At the time, she seemed pleased to do her heyday's hits. But she's obviously rethought her gig for New Yorkers as something more refined. The 2-hour performance had the club rudely turning on the bar's lights as a signal to the performer, but Melanie blithely ignored that.

A delightful raconteur who scatters patter throughout her song list, Melanie may go overboard when interrupting her singing too frequently for witty asides.

With a keyboardist and her son, Beau, on hand (a genius on strings), both providing back-up vocals, Melanie's impressive later -career songs included "Jammin' Alone," "Crazy Love," "Make It Work" and material from her new album, Ever Since You Never Heard of Me. The cd can be purchased from her website at melaniesafka.com.

Cute as a bunny, hunky Beau wore rabbit ears in honor of Easter and leaped about athletically to gleefully adjust mom's guitar strings. Melanie is no slouch on guitar and -- forget about its strings! -- she uses the damned thing for percussion as well. She commented about her youngest child: "I won't call him my baby any more. I did that at my last show here, and a woman near the stage yelled: 'You go, girl!' I had to explain I didn't mean 'baby' that way!"

Melanie did give us a long, rousing version of "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)" with a segue near end that incorporated Plastic Ono Band's "Give Peace a Chance." A master of inspiring audience participation throughout her act, she had the audience on its feet, singing and clapping for that number. (The Woodstock diva quipped, "I can tell this is a pan-generational crowd. I see some people holding up real candles, some holding lighters, and some apps!")

An abbreviated version of "Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma" was presented, as well as an annotated "Brand New Key."

So, love, peace and happiness.... Melanie's keeping the candles, lighters and apps lit in the rain of today's American political scene. And doing it with a mix of style, professionalism and gorgeously raw talent.  Happy Easter!