With Willie Nelson as President, natch.
We went to see Dolly Parton in concert here in Manchester last night. She was superb, as expected.
Two minor negatives first before I gush about her brilliance though. First off if you bother to get a box at the MEN Arena to see someone like Dolly why the fuck do you then spend the entire concert talking and laughing loudly as as to irritate everyone else? People like that should be kicked out and never allowed to return, the tits.
Also we were slightly disappointed she didn't do her version of Put A Little Love In Your Heart which we had as the recessional at the wedding, btu since it's not one of her big hits we weren't really surprised she didn't. It's just a song that means a lot to us so it'd have been brilliant to hear her doing it live. The fact she didn't do it doesn't however detract from the rest of the concert.
I was sort of hoping that she'd do a moslty bluegrass concert but wasn't surprised that it was a little more mainstream than that. I guess she tailors her concerts to the type of audience that she can expect and in Europe I would think more so than America people will be going to see her for the big mainstream C&W hits she's had rather than the bluegrass. That said the bluegrass songs she did do for the most part got the audience going more than some of the more mainstream ones.
Anyway, so she did all the stuff you'd expect like Her You Come Again and Jolene and 9 To 5 and Islands In The Stream, all of which were fabulous. She also really showed how good her voice is when she did a mostly acapella version of Little Sparrow and the Norah Jones version of The Grass Is Blue (one of my favourite Dolly songs) that was just her playing the piano and the backing singers joining her for the last verse. She really does have a brilliantly clear and note perfect voice that most pop starlets of today would die for. She also seems to be able to play every single musical instrument in the world. As well as singing (and chattering away) for two hours she played the piano, the banjo, the harmonica, a whistle, a steel guitar, acoustic guitar, rhythm guitar and a dulcimer. All with inch long nails. It makes you sick, ti really does. The fact that she's that good a singer, that good a musician and a very, very good business woman. Plus she comes across as being a genuinely nice person.
Some of her banter was probably very well rehearsed but it didn't really come across like that. She told stories about her songs and her career and her family and made tons of jokes at her own expense. At one point she was talking about her hair and her boobs and them all being fake and said 'Lord, I'm so phoney. The only real part of me left is my heart' which kind of summed up perfectly why she's so good. She knows she's about the glitz and the camp and the show but she's also, deep down, just a very, very good musician with a brilliant voice. She gives you this impression of being one thing and then hits you with the real Dolly afterwards.
After she'd done Coat Of Many Colours (again mostly just her singing and playing the dulcimer) she said she'd got a letter from a little boy who had coem to see the concert for his 9th birthday and has always wanted to meet her. She said she probably wouldn't be able to meet him (whetehr because she really couldn't or because she just doesn't do meeting fans after concerts isn't really important) but she dedicated Coat Of Many Colours to him because it was his favourite song and then got the entire arena (since it was sold out that must have been 20,000 people at least) to sing Happy Birthday to him. That's something he's not going to forget for a while.
So all in all an utterly brilliant night. Sometimes you go to a concert fully expecting teh performer's singing voice not to live up to the standard of their recordings and sometimes, as with Dolly (and k d lang and Willy Nelson) they prove to be even better than their recordings. She's marvellous, she really is.
Oh, and as to the newspaper reviews I've seen that have been spectacularly snotty about the whole thing especially the performance of I Dreamed About Elvis, poo to them. That song was silly and fun and the guy being Elvis wasn't half bad and it was just a moment in the show where she fully embraced the silliness of some her her persona and enjoyed it for what it is. there aren't many performers that can encompasse silliness, camp and glitz and then turn around and perform a song with so much heart and soul that you feel like they're singing just to you. Dolly does that.