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And a great time was had by all. A great artist, singing great songs (her version of "Bring Him Home" was nothing short of magnificent) in a nice venue (the St. David's Hall). Plus, It was nice being back in Cardiff, despite the trouble I had going to and coming back from Wales (the first time because of the site on which I bought my train ticket from Paddington, the second time because of the number of passengers leaving London. But more on that later this week. Still, I enjoyed myself very much.
4th time since 1989 I saw The Cure, and they are stll excellent. Lots of highlights. I had Kyoto Song in particular on my brain for days after. The guests were pretty great as well. They had to stop the show midway through as someone in the audience got hurt, and then Robert did this while the Red Cross made their way, bless him.
I saw Local Hero, the musical based on the film, at Chichester and it was just as sweet and quirky as the original.
Duran Duran will now join Tom Jones, Paul McCartney, Herb Albert & Lani Hall, Sheryl Crow, Chris Cornell and Jack White as acts that I have caught who also did a Main Bond Theme (sadly, only McCartney and Albert & Hall did their Bond songs when at one of my shows, Albert & Hall played both THE LOOK OF LOVE and NEVER SAY NEVRE AGAIN).
I was never that familiar with the band, but I've always liked a few tunes, so I went. The band sounded great last night, but I'm getting too old to last a three hour show made up of songs that I mostly don't know. I'm glad I went, but I left about halfway into the show. I was surprised at how young much of the audience was, as well how deified Robert Smith seems to be by legions of diehard fans.
First musical (created in 1973) by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg (of Les Misérables and Miss Saigon fame), it's the first time it has ever been done professionally since its initial release, despite its success at the time (some of the songs have been sung by everybody at the time, and I should know because I sang them myself). The musical itself tells the story of the French Revolution, from may 1789 to the end of 1794). We see the different actors of these momentous events, from Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette to Robespierre (even Napoléon Bonaparte makes an appearance), and there's a tragic love story between a young man of the people, member of the Third Estate, and a young noblewoman. Trouble is, everything seems a bit rushed. But still, the songs are there, and they are enough to carry us through the two hours of the show, and the staging is great.