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Elvis is king in this rock-n-roll fever dream of a jukebox musical

By Kate Herbert, Kate Jones, Cameron Woodhead, Tony Way and Mahmood Fazal
Updated

This wrap of shows around Melbourne includes Punjabi star Dilijit Dosanjh in front of a full house at the Rod Laver Arena, the world premiere of Elvis: A Musical Revolution, the return of Mamma Mia! The Musical, a five-star performance by a much-loved band, an elegant performance of Mozart and Beethoven concertos, Bell Shakespeare’s touring production of Twelfth Night, a five-star performance by Academy of St Martin in the Fields with Joshua Bell, and a cathartic gig by Tems at Forum Theatre.

MUSIC
Diljit Dosanjh ★★★★★
Rod Laver Arena, October 13

Diljit Dosanjh emerges from beneath a smoke-filled stage to a packed-to-the-brim stadium of South Asian diaspora at fever pitch. Multi-generational fans couldn’t contain their excitement as they stood and danced on their seats and spilled into the aisles to witness the Punjabi superstar.

Diljit Dosanjh at the Rod Laver Arena: the singer and actor has had an incredible year.

Diljit Dosanjh at the Rod Laver Arena: the singer and actor has had an incredible year.Credit: Rick Clifford

Hailing from the Jalandhar district in Punjab, India, Dosanjh’s profile has increased significantly since his debut album Ishq Da Uda Ada was released in 2004. The singer and actor has had an incredible year: performing at Coachella and now being the first Indian artist to sell-out Rod Laver Arena.

Alongside Australia, the sensation has garnered a large international following across the US, UK and Canada. It’s his first trip back in 10 years, with his management revealing that local demand played a big part in his return to the region.

Dosanjh performed for about two hours with an intermission in-between, a customary format for most Indian shows. The singer started almost 45 minutes late due to delays from crowds milling around in the foyer, which is to be expected from a community-driven event such as this.

Dressed in a white kurta and tehmat with Nike sneakers, the performer opens with an explosive rendition of the title track from his 11th studio album G.O.A.T. as smoke and flames shoot up from the stage. He opts for edgier, all-black street-style fashion for the second half, performing rap hits including Peaches.

Diljit Dosanjh is the first Indian artist to sell-out Rod Laver Arena.

Diljit Dosanjh is the first Indian artist to sell-out Rod Laver Arena.Credit: Rick Clifford

No expense was spared on the event production. The audio-visual, lighting and pyrotechnic effects, along with sporadic bursts of confetti and streamers, elevated the fervour of an excitable crowd. The screens behind and side-of-stage mirrored the action while also displaying music-video style footage, such as a romance between an astronaut couple and a full moon sitting above the clouds.

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The sound quality and clarity was incredible, enabling the singer and full live band to be heard above the loud cheers and clapping. A crew of Bhangra dancers armed with props, including saaps and khundas, often accompanied Dosanjh as he danced on stage.

A global sensation who set the stage alight.
Reviewed by Vyshnavee Wijekumar

MUSICAL THEATRE
Elvis: A Musical Revolution ★★★★
Athenaeum Theatre, from October 6

Elvis didn’t die. He was abducted by aliens, or so the conspiracy theory went. Clearly that fantasy represented the denial stage of collective grief, though you could be forgiven for a sneaking suspicion – between Baz Luhrmann’s glossy, overstuffed biopic, and the world premiere of this slick jukebox musical in Melbourne – that the King is indeed living on Mars and has taken to beaming messages directly into the brains of Australian artists.

Rob Mallett takes us beyond Elvis impersonation in Elvis: A Musical Revolution..

Rob Mallett takes us beyond Elvis impersonation in Elvis: A Musical Revolution..Credit: Daniel Boud

You can be glad the creatives left their tin-foil hats off this time.

Elvis: A Musical Revolution is, like Luhrmann’s film, a rock’n’roll fever dream, but it doesn’t cram so much into the frame and it’s also the most classic form of jukebox musical. Fusing biography and discography from the era of actual jukeboxes, its closest relative is probably Jersey Boys, the international smash hit based on the career of Frankie Valli.

Pinned to the legend’s 1968 Christmas special, it begins and ends with Elvis at a crossroads. Under immense stress, the spectre of his decline foreshadowed, Elvis encounters the memory of boyhood to remind him of his roots.

Elvis Presley is at a crossroads in his life  in Elvis: A Musical Revolution.

Elvis Presley is at a crossroads in his life in Elvis: A Musical Revolution.Credit: Ken Leanfore

What could’ve been a corny device works like a charm. Portraying Elvis as a kid proves a poignant touchstone, and the formative influence of what were then known as “race records” is soulfully explored.

A young Elvis gets introduced to gospel music and the blues by kindly black folks (Charly Williams, Joti Gore, Jo-Anne Jackson, Zuleika Khan), a crucial step in developing the sound that made him famous, though the show doesn’t shy from how the realities of the segregated South shaped his early career.

Rob Mallett takes us beyond Elvis impersonation.

The curled lip, trembling thigh and rockabilly quiff are all present and accounted for, but this charismatic incarnation stitches brilliant artist into flawed human being, unfurling from a mamma’s boy prone to stage-fright into the overworked superstar whose music and image conquered the globe.

A fast-paced episodic structure fillets the biography, focusing on a close relationship with his mother Gladys (Noni McCallum), a co-dependent one with manager Colonel Parker (Ian Stenlake) and the romance with Priscilla (Annie Chiswell).

A brilliant artist and flawed human being: Rob Mallett as Elvis and Annie Chiswell as Priscilla in Elvis - A Musical Revolution.

A brilliant artist and flawed human being: Rob Mallett as Elvis and Annie Chiswell as Priscilla in Elvis - A Musical Revolution.Credit: Credit: Ken Leanfore_

There’s too much good material to summarise. Highlights include a comic sequence mocking Elvis’s starring role in increasingly terrible Hollywood movies, a show-stopping rendition of Blue Suede Shoes during army service, snapshots of camaraderie with and antagonism towards fellow musicians.

Despite a drift towards soap opera in the second act, there’s no dull moment. Director Alister Smith keeps it remarkably swift and tight, and the performers dial the energy up to eleven.

With vibrant period choreography and costume, a pitch-perfect balance of conversation and action, and a huge playlist of songs, this new jukebox musical is primed to delight Elvis fans.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead

MUSICAL THEATRE
Mamma Mia! The Musical ★★★
Princess Theatre, until 10 December

Dust off your sequined jumpsuit and knee-high boots and revisit those phenomenally successful ABBA hits that rocked the ’70s. Mamma Mia! The Musical is back, and the stars remain Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus’s songs.

Deone Zanotto, Elise McCann and Bianca Bruce in Mamma Mia! The Musical

Deone Zanotto, Elise McCann and Bianca Bruce in Mamma Mia! The Musical Credit: David Hooley

Catherine Johnson’s narrative focuses on former wild-child Donna (Elise McCann), who now runs a taverna on a Greek island. Her daughter, Sophie (Sarah Krndija), is marrying Sky (Lewis Francis) at the ripe, old age of 20 – far too early according to her ’70s feminist single mother.

Wedding preparations take a dizzying turn when – unbeknown to her mother – Sophie invites three of mum’s past lovers to the wedding: Sam (Martin Crewes), Harry (Drew Livingston) and Bill (Tim Wright), in the belief that one is her dad.

In Mamma Mia! wedding preparations take a dizzying turn when, unbeknown to her mother, Sophie invites three of mum’s past lovers.

In Mamma Mia! wedding preparations take a dizzying turn when, unbeknown to her mother, Sophie invites three of mum’s past lovers.Credit: David Hooley

The lyrics of ABBA’s memorable, singable songs tell stories about love found, love lost and life’s other hiccups, all of which make them eminently suited to musical theatre. The tissue-thin narrative is contrived to incorporate a repertoire of 20+ tunes and the lyrics effectively act as dialogue, illuminating characters, revealing their inner lives and relationships, and advancing the story. In contrast, much of the unsung dialogue is uninspired or trite and works best when threaded into songs or underscored by music.

McCann has fine vocal technique, a clear tone and impeccable control. Her Donna is the heart of this production, shifting from cheerful confidence to tremulous anxiety and confusion. Her emotional meltdown triggers a frantic, funny rendition of Mamma Mia, and her The Winner Takes It All is impassioned and moving.

Crewes’ voice has power and warmth; his duet of SOS with McCann is a show highlight, and he transforms Knowing Me, Knowing You into a poignant ballad about Sam’s divorce.

Donna and her pals, naughty Rosie (Bianca Bruce) and saucy Tanya (Deone Zanotto), revive their ’70s girl group, donning glittering blue, ABBA-lookalike jumpsuits for a super version of Super Trouper. As Sophie, Krndija is pert and effervescent with a sweet vocal tone, but her voice occasionally lacks control, while Zanotto’s audacious, sultry Does Your Mother Know is a thrilling showstopper.

L-R: Kadesa Honeyhill, Sarah Krndija, Nina Carmen.

L-R: Kadesa Honeyhill, Sarah Krndija, Nina Carmen.Credit: Getty Images, James D Morgan

Gary Young’s production is exuberant, with a tight, sassy band and a spirited, boisterous chorus performing Tom Hodgson’s energetic choreography that pulsates with dance party rhythms.

ABBA’s hits keep coming, and, once the narrative is complete, the temperature rises for a rousing finale comprising Mamma Mia, Dancing Queen and Waterloo that has the enthusiastic crowd dancing in their seats.

Let’s face it: ABBA’s melodies get the crowd singing, clapping and cheering, so despite its flaws, Mamma Mia! The Musical is failsafe.
Reviewed by Kate Herbert

MUSIC
Mozart + Beethoven Concertos ★★★★
Melbourne Chamber Orchestra, Melbourne Recital Centre, October 8

Making the most of the many musical gifts of Finnish pianist Paavali Jumppanen, the Melbourne Chamber Orchestra afforded its audience a rare opportunity to hear Mozart’s last thoughts in the piano concerto medium alongside Beethoven’s first essay in the genre as part of a program that was both thoughtfully conceived and engagingly executed.

Finnish pianist Paavali Jumppanen with the Melbourne Chamber Orchestra performing Mozart & Beethoven Concertos.

Finnish pianist Paavali Jumppanen with the Melbourne Chamber Orchestra performing Mozart & Beethoven Concertos.

Inviting comparison, both concertos are cast in the key of B-flat major and scored for the same instrumentation. Jumppanen brought clarity and understated elegance to his reading of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27, K. 595, enabling seamless exchanges between orchestra and soloist that were enhanced by refined orchestral tone.

In Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 19 (the numbering reflecting the order of publication rather than composition) Jumppanen underlined the expressive role of the piano by bringing stylish wit to the cadenza of the first movement, a profoundly reverential quality to the central Adagio and an abundance of playful drive to the Rondo finale. These elegant, light-footed performances paid fine homage to the formative influence of Haydn on both composers.

By way of contrast, Melbourne composer Stuart Greenbaum’s 2017 work The Rotation of the Earth provided an appealing, upbeat curtain-raiser; its rustic rhythms and modal flavour suggesting echoes of Aaron Copland.

In a nod to Jumppanen’s homeland, Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara’s suite Pelimannit (The Fiddlers) preceded the Beethoven. Taking its inspiration from tunes found in the notebook of an 18th-century folk fiddler, the composer’s Op. 1 was originally a piano suite that was subsequently arranged for string orchestra. Under the spirited leadership of MCO artistic director Sophie Rowell, the orchestra vividly realised these brief, albeit quirky, glimpses of village musical life.

Such polished music making sets the seal on Rowell’s first, fine year with the MCO, whetting the appetite for what is to come in next year’s season.
Reviewed by Tony Way

MUSIC
Weezer | Indie Rock Road Trip ★★★★★
John Cain Arena, October 6

There’s something wonderfully wholesome about US indie rockers Weezer. Their songs won over a generation of ’90s grunge kids, but it’s clear from the turnout at John Cain Arena on a rainy Friday night that they haven’t stopped pulling fans.

Much-loved indie rockers Weezer keep pulling in the crowds.

Much-loved indie rockers Weezer keep pulling in the crowds. Credit: Rick Clifford

Two merch lines snake back at least 20 metres as 40-somethings, some with their kids, and a new wave of listeners in their 20s queue for tees with the iconic W logo.

After a hit-filled set by fellow ’90s-era band Regurgitator, who bounced on the stage wearing nun costumes, the near sell-out crowd is ready to rock some more.

My Name is Jonas, a cult favourite, is a strong opener for the Australian leg of the Indie Rock Road Trip tour.

With his black-rimmed glasses and shaggy hair, lead singer Rivers Cuomo is the lovable rock equivalent of Marty McFly. He rips through guitar solos, jogs up and down the stage and gets the crowd clapping along to the band’s trademark nerd-rock.

Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo performs at John Cain Arena on Friday night.

Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo performs at John Cain Arena on Friday night.Credit: Rick Clifford

During In the Garage – an ode to a safe haven with Kiss posters on the wall – Cuomo sings, “I’ve got Ace Frehley, I’ve got Peter Criss, waiting there for me, yes, I do”. Afterwards, he excitedly tells the Melbourne audience that Weezer will be supporting Kiss in Sydney the following night.

“It’s a dream come true for me,” he says.

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Despite touring across the US and Canada, performing more than 30 shows since June, Weezer have plenty of juice in the tank. It’s hit after hit, mostly from The Blue Album, the band’s 1994 debut album.

After a brief encore, the show wraps with Buddy Holly – a song that endeared the band to fans more than 30 years ago with its upbeat rock as much as the Spike Jonze-directed music video filmed on the set of Happy Days.
Reviewed by Kate Jones.

THEATRE
Twelfth Night ★★★★
Bell Shakespeare, Monash Performing Arts Centre, October 3

Twelfth Night is an evergreen gender bender; Bell Shakespeare productions over the decades have felt unusually attuned to the zeitgeist. John Bell himself blazed a trail for a distinctively Australian style of Shakespearean performance, skewering histrionic pretension as the haughtiest of Malvolios, while director Lee Lewis took a graver and gentler approach to the play, transforming it into a memento mori, a quietly cathartic comedy risen from the ashes of the Black Saturday bushfires.

The latest production of Twelfth Night by Bell Shakespeare offers a fresh and enjoyable interpretation.

The latest production of Twelfth Night by Bell Shakespeare offers a fresh and enjoyable interpretation.Credit: Brett Boardman

This latest national tour offers a fresh and enjoyable interpretation, with cross-gendered casting that leans into the 21st-century focus on gender and sexuality, showing just how mutable and diverse the experience of those things can be.

Director Heather Fairbairn knows this isn’t a radical idea. Shakespeare has a protean, sometimes contradictory perspective – he entangles elements of gender suspender, defender, extender and upender – and Fairbairn reaches back into history, seeking a contemporary dramaturgical analogue to the playful artifice of Elizabethan performance.

Here, shipwrecked fraternal twins Viola and Sebastian are gender-flipped to disorienting effect. Isabel Burton first appears as Viola, but when she cross-dresses as a boy, Alfie Gledhill takes over, with Burton reverting to the role of Sebastian. The romantic confusions that follow are a knot too queer to untie.

It’s no coincidence that the names of their paramours, Orsino and Olivia, begin with “O”. Garth Holcombe and Ursula Mills play them as empty, comically infatuated vessels, leaving the balance of interest and sympathy in the shenanigans of their subordinates.

Following in the footsteps of Tamsin Greig (who first played Malvolia as a woman for the National Theatre in London), Jane Montgomery Griffiths gives an extraordinary performance. She’s a prim stickler, a lesbian appointed to serve a mistress who has literally abjured the company of men.

The design of Twelfth Night might be static in the first half but blossoms in the second.

The design of Twelfth Night might be static in the first half but blossoms in the second.Credit: Brett Boardman

Gendered violence infects the confrontation with Sir Toby (Keith Agius), who drunkenly gropes Malvolia, leading her to snap at the servant Maria (Amy Hack). The sharp cascade of abuse sparks a vengeful prank – a betrayal worse for the absence of a love (the courtship between Maria and Sir Toby has been excised) to explain it, and the abject cruelty of Malvolia’s fate stops the comedy in its tracks.

Though emphatic about the extent of Sir Toby’s alcoholism and disorder, the male clowning still entertains. A kilted Agius is as charming as he is alarming, and Mike Howlett brings a precise and likeable haplessness to the follies of Sir Andrew.

Another drawcard is Sarah Blasko’s music. Her songs achieve a haunting and ethereal melancholy. They’re sung in an exquisite, almost epicene register by Tomas Kantor, whose vampy, cabaret-style Feste seems to hover charismatically between feminine and masculine worlds.

The design might be static in the first half but blossoms in the second, and the eye doesn’t need constant distraction in the presence of such a clever and imaginative engagement with the text.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead

Twelfth Night is touring to Geelong Arts Centre, Oct 5-7; Canberra Theatre Centre, Oct 13-21; Sydney Opera House, Oct 24-Nov 19.

MUSIC
Academy of St Martin in the Fields with Joshua Bell ★★★★★
Melbourne Recital Centre, October 4

In a truly ebullient start to its first Australian tour in six years, the Academy of St Martin in the Fields left no doubt it remains a uniquely compelling force in a crowded field of fine chamber orchestras, especially under the dynamic leadership of violin virtuoso Joshua Bell.

The Academy of St Martin in the Fields left no doubt it remains a uniquely compelling force in a crowded field of fine chamber orchestras.

The Academy of St Martin in the Fields left no doubt it remains a uniquely compelling force in a crowded field of fine chamber orchestras.Credit: Laura Manariti

On paper its first program seemed highly conventional: Mozart’s Overture to The Marriage of Figaro and Symphony No. 40 in G minor interleaved with Beethoven’s Violin Concerto. However, the execution of these standard works was anything but routine.

Leaping to life with incredible verve, the overture pulsed with joyous rhythmic energy, born of incisive attack and well-considered articulation. The orchestra’s prodigious weight of sound, coloured by fine winds, was full but not forced, underlining the music’s vibrant sense of occasion.

This immediacy of sound lent profound emotional impetus to Bell’s powerful account of the Beethoven concerto. Maintaining the dramatic tension of the opening allegro throughout, a dazzling cadenza by Bell himself brought the movement’s titanic struggle to an exciting close. A contrasting air of quiet recollection characterised the central larghetto, eliciting beguiling soft playing, before the rondo finale established a sense of infectious joy, capped by yet another bravura solo display.

The orchestra’s prodigious weight of sound, coloured by fine winds, was full but not forced.

The orchestra’s prodigious weight of sound, coloured by fine winds, was full but not forced.Credit: Laura Manariti

Bell and the orchestra captured the fevered opening mood of the symphony well, shaping its lines with admirable flexibility, a trait that also benefitted the flowing andante and ensuing menuetto. A sharply etched finale, with excellent contributions from Fiona Cross on clarinet, once again saw the orchestra’s evident pleasure in making music together paying enormous artistic dividends.

An encore – the waltz from Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings – provided an elegant moment of decompression after the intensity of the main program.

After such a memorable and immersive musical experience, it was no wonder the capacity audience offered the players a rapturous ovation.
Reviewed by Tony Way

MUSIC
Tems ★★★★
Forum Theatre, October 3

Tems struts beneath orange flashing lights. The Nigerian R&B star is performing live at the Forum as part of her debut Australian tour.

Tems performs at the Forum.

Tems performs at the Forum.Credit: Martin Philbey

She loops around her bouncing back-up dancers, as her white scarf tornados around her. “I said five in the morning, wake up to fight for my earnings.” Raising one hand in the air, she sings, “I really need, I really need time now, I really need, I need a free mind now.”

Tems’ loyal fans haven’t stopped swaying to the gently ebbing groove, hanging on her every word. They call out to her, shouting, “The Queen of Afrobeats!” – a Nigerian music genre that brings west African music together with American funk, jazz and soul.

In February, the 28-year-old musician picked up her first Grammy Award. She has collaborated with the likes of Drake, Rihanna and Beyoncé.

Tems’ performance was fierce, nostalgic and warm.

Tems’ performance was fierce, nostalgic and warm.Credit: Martin Philbey

On stage, west African drum rhythms underscore her fierce presence while her nostalgic and warm R&B chords imbue the room with a deep sense of soul.

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In interviews, Tems says her debut EP, Broken Ears, was a response to toxic relationships and depression. In concert, she lays her broken feelings bare in tones that aren’t alarming but are accessible. As the crowd lose themselves in dance, healing by way of sharing in the emotional soundscape becomes something really cathartic.

Towards the close of the performance, the beat for Tems’ hit track Essence drops. “I feel it comin’, time is of the essence, I tried to teach you, but I need some lessons.”

The dancers slowly drift backwards, and the musicians strip their sound to a clap from the cymbal, giving Tems a moment to speak for herself. She cries, “You don’t need no other body, you don’t need no other body, you don’t need no other body!”
Reviewed by Mahmood Fazal

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