
Don't start thinking this is the latest in a band cashing in on musicals by winding a vague story around their hit songs. It's not. With the exception of the title song (which was The Kinks' last hit single in 1983) all the songs are new and pretty damn good too.
This is a new musical with quality songs that eloquently tell a story of Ray's family's life based around the local Palais dancehall in the late '50s, with his parents and older sisters going dancing every Saturday night. Everyone goes dancing on a Saturday night - it's what people do. Survive the mundane world of work and live for the weekend. Meet friends and potential friends, fall in love, marry and, when they're old enough, start bringing the children. But the world changed in the late '50s with the invention of teenagers and rock'n'roll, immigration, building new towns in the countryside, ambitions and hopes for the world to be different. It all makes for a nice backdrop to Ray's story which is partially autobiographical.


Back to the show and the songs. There's a good range of songs, some are there to take the story forward and others make statements, in different styles - show tunes, rock'n'roll, sultry blues, hard rock and seering ballads, they're all in the mix. I must single out Wendy Mae Brown for an excellent performance and a great voice as the blues singer in a club that exists side by side with the local Palais but they're in different worlds. She has a couple of show-stopping moments powered by Ray's songs. Mind you, all the cast put their all into it. I hope there's a cast recording of this show - it deserves to be recorded. The fact that I couldn't stop yakking about what I'd seen and heard at half time is a good sign.

There is a downside. There's always a downside. In this case it's the seats in the stalls which must be the lowest seats in any theatre in London - why on earth are they so close to the floor? But that's a minor niggle in the scheme of things. Go and see the show while you can, you won't regret it!
No comments:
Post a Comment