Just got back to CT from Boston, where I saw DK last night at the B of A Pavilion. I am pleased to have seen DK on two of three nights, but I must say the first was by far the better of the two shows. The venues had a lot to do with that, I was entirely unimpressed with the Pavilion, in which we and 5K-ish others were seated in small(!), folding metal chairs!?!?! It felt like a high school assembly. Second was the, sadly, utterly forgettable opening act. A guy and his guitar. Poor fellow simply hadn't the chops to pull off this gig by himself, and deprecated himself first thing when he walked out on stage (may have simultaneously done something that rhymed with that, chuckle). He, sorry to say, belonged in a much smaller venue. A pleasant enough fellow, and I kinda felt bad for him. The contrast with Chris Botti could not have been more stark.
Finally, likely because Thursday night was after a layoff of a day likely spent at home in New York, and, moreover, last night was the third night DK and the band played in succession, well, last night gets a generous B-, as opposed to a singular A+ for Thursday night's show.
The setlist, best as I can recall:
I Love Being Here With You
Let's Fall In Love
You Call It Madness (the high point, quite lovely)
Deed I Do
Exactly Like You
Let's Face the Music and Dance
Devil May Care
A Case of You (the other high point, superb)
I Was Doin' Alright
Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You?
I Just Found Out About Love
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'S Wonderful
How Can You Mend ... (quite nice)
The Wallingford, CT show left me and my friend and several others around us buzzing, shaking our heads at how marvelous it was, from the opening act to the last note of the last song. I still reckon it the best show I ever saw. It far exceeded my expectations. The Boston show started strong, then slowly descended into what I would have reckoned an average DK show (not having seen many, just based on expectations, DVDs and Thursday's superb show). Then went on and just became a somewhat, sorry to say, sloppy, uninspired effort. The venue had a lot to do with it. An open-air, oversized tent, really, it lacked the atmosphere and cozy, friendly feel of the Oakdale (Chevy Theater), which is a superb place to see a show. There was only a little of the crackling banter between DK and the audience found in CT. (One nice note: the Pavilion is an oceanside facility, so a nice seabreeze blew through on occasion, nicely whispering its way through Diana's lovely hair. Perhaps the only thing the otherwise lousy venue had to recommend it.)
I think, simply, DK was tired and it permeated the show. She spoke early on of being the "tired, slouched-over mom in the Park (probably the Boston Public Garden next to the Common) pushing the Hummer baby carriage in the tunic and high heels." She also said she had seen a beautiful woman in the park with very short hair, tempting her to cut her own locks, she said teasingly (to the horror of the audience), so her twins would not pull so forcefully on her golden strands. I think the gal was tired on the third day performing in succession with the kids in tow. She leaned heavily on her accompanists, giving them a lot more solo time, like three times as much, as on Thursday. They performed two fewer songs in the same time frame as Thursday, due to extended solos.
Thursday night she was demonstrably melancholic, Saturday she was sunnier and happier. The relatively foul mood of Thursday fueled an astounding effort. The sunny side of the street, perhaps due to fatigue, gave us a much lesser show.
So, I am THRILLED I got tickets to the Thursday show. I only wish DK.com had notified me of it as it did the Boston show, so I could have nabbed even better seats. But I am ever so pleased I caught that special Thursday show.
Anyone else see a less than sublime DK effort along the way? They can't all be first rate. I'm glad I caught a great one Thursday. One needn't dwell on the less stellar outing, and that's for sure.
-CS





