Elton John: It’s A Little Bit Funny
Upstairs at The Gatehouse
Reviewed – 20th February 2020
โ โ โ โ
“Itโs poignant, entertaining, exciting and, often, โitโs a little bit funnyโ”
For the best part of fifteen years Elton John had made Vegas his second home until he gave it a memorable farewell last September with a spectacular and emotional three-hour retrospective gig. Itโs part of his ongoing โFarewell Yellow Brick Roadโ, booking until next year, after which he will retire. Or so he says, Frank Sinatraโs farewell tour lasted twenty years. Leaving Las Vegas must have been a wrench. His โRed Pianoโ residency ran for five years and the later โThe Million Dollar Pianoโ for seven years.
Imagine you are a devoted fan of Eltonโs, growing up with his songs and learning to play the piano by listening over and over to the music. He is the reason you chose your perilous career as a musical performer. Youโre doing okay at it. In fact, more than okay. Youโve got theatre, television and concert, recording and writing credits to your name, and youโve now landed a job in a touring musical which, on its North American Tour, takes in some dates in Vegas right next door to Caesars Palace where Elton is playing. On a rare night off youโre hanging out late one night, doodling away at a piano in a hotel foyer, when Elton John walks in and joins in, starts chatting, buys you a cocktail, takes you gambling โฆ
This is not imagination, but fact, for Martin Kaye, pianist, singer, songwriter and all-round showman. Well โ almost. It is the whole truth โ except the last bit might be made up. But it was a real possibility. Martin and Eltonโs paths could so easily have crossed. And if they hadโฆ well, that is the show: โElton John – Itโs A Little Bit Funnyโ. It tells the tale of that night in Vegas. A night of confessions, anecdotes, jokes and songs.
Anybody expecting a โtribute actโ or Elton impersonator will be disappointed. Everybody else will be blown away by the musicianship of Kaye and his totally relaxed stage presence. A soft and cheeky Mancunian accent – the perfect voice for the self-deprecating one liners that trip off the tongue. Written by Chris Burgess this definitely has the feel of a collaborative labour of love. Over thirty of Elton Johnโs songs make up the set list. Many are extracts from which Kaye breaks away to pick up the thread of the story. It is a three-way conversation between him, the audience and Elton.
We donโt learn much more about Elton Johnโs colourful life than we already know, but the key facts are given a personal touch which are further emphasised in the music with their autobiographical context. Many of the old favourites are there; โGoodbye Yellow Brick Roadโ, โDonโt Let The Sun Go Down On Meโ, Candle In The Windโ, โRocket Manโ, โTonightโ and the poignant โSomeone Saved My Life Tonight; but also some lesser known ones such as โSkyline Pigeonโ, โBitter Fingersโ or โFeed Meโ which give a deeper insight into the man.
Backed by a tight three-piece band, with Morgan Rickman on guitar, Johnny Wells on bass and David Talisman on drums, Kaye pounds and caresses his piano. He is a truly talented pianist who has both the technique and expression to make the instrument an extension of his own personality. Some of the songs are direct replicas of the original, but many are reinterpreted. His jazz-inflected re-phrasing of โBennie And The Jetsโ is a stunning opening to the show.
It closes with โYour Songโ from which the showโs title gets its name. It is a song which, over the years, has become a faded wallpaper to the music world. But, like much of Eltonโs repertoire, Kaye strips it down and re-pastes it with a fresh sheen. This is far from an Elton John gig. This is a Martin Kaye gig. You certainly donโt need to be a fan of Elton to appreciate this show. Itโs poignant, entertaining, exciting and, often, โitโs a little bit funnyโ.
Reviewed by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Ben Hewis
Elton John: It’s A Little Bit Funny
Upstairs at The Gatehouse until 1st March
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Bad Girls The Musical | โ โ โ | February 2019
Strike Up The Band | โ โ โ โ | March 2019
The Marvelous Wonderettes | โ โ โ โ | April 2019
Flat Out | โ โ โ โ | June 2019
Agent 14 | โ | August 2019
Pericles, Prince Of Tyre | โ โ โ | August 2019
Working | โ โ โ โ | September 2019
A Modest Little Man | โ โ โ โ | October 2019
I Do! I Do! | โ โ โ ยฝ | October 2019
42nd Street | โ โ โ โ | December 2019
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