As the night unfolded,they had it easy – handing off from one performer to another in a seamless show of deft dancing across genres (and across those pesky,argumentative demographics.)
Casey Donovan,the woman they call (rightly) the Queen of New Year’s Eve,was the constant throughout – opening in subdued form with a two-song Burt Bacharach tribute (Alfie,What The World Needs Now);coming back later for Tracy Chapman’sFast Car;then finally being plugged into her sparkle machine for a belting cover of the ultimate banger,ABBA’sGimme Gimme Gimme mashed with Madonna’sHung Up (a kind of reverse mash-up of Madonna’s original mix).
Donovan’s performances were scattered across a night that began with a killer set from Arnhem Land’s King Stingray –Show Me The Way,and their Like A Version take on Coldplay’sYellow.
Then Australia met Grentperez – introduced literally in his childhood bedroom in the western suburbs of Sydney,where he became a rather quirky YouTube star with a voice and manner that suggests the music progeny of two Michaels – Buble and Jackson.
Perez introduced himself aptly:“For those of you who might have missed that video or not know who I am…”
He had that bit right,but he carried off a tough national debut with aplomb,charming his way through originals (Cherry Wine) and covers (Harry Styles’Music For A Sushi Restaurantand Buble’s Sway).
Next up:Melbourne’s Angie McMahon,tasked with one of the toughest asks in music:coveringNothing Compares 2U,in the style of the late Sinead O’Connor. She followed up with originalsPasta andLetting Go,almost whispering in between those two songs a message:“Palestinians should be free.” It was so low-key as to be more a whisper than a wild protest.
From not-the-usual-suspects to very much the old and faithful,Mark Seymour proved age shall not weary him at 67,nor his anthemThrow Your Arms Around Me and the touchingThe Whole World Is Dreaming,a duet with his daughter Eva.
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Genesis Owusu is charisma on legs,and rolled through a three-song set (when one of them,Gold Chains,has the Barack Obama seal of approval on his end-of-year music list from 2021,you can safely assume the swagger is earned. And from left field,he served upon Devo’s 1980 hitWhip It Good.
You could hear heads being scratched when Brisbane dance crew Confidence Man took the stage – for the uninitiated,like me,I can only suggest watching the videoand checking their top-shelf festival pedigree – but the clue is in their stage names. Janet Planet and Sugar Bones want you to have fun,and the 90s-club-meets-Blue-Light-disco vibe of the thing is part of that plan. They are in on the joke. You can relax and enjoy it.
Then the race was on to the big bang.
There was genuine superstar power with Harry Connick Jnr,and the man who sang the soundtrack to the most famous New Year’s Eve scene in movies –When Harry Met Sally – was equipped for the occasion,even singing his own songWhat Are You Doing On New Year’s Eve?
As it turned out,what we were doing was waiting for an epic run towards midnight with the return of Casey Donovan – this time knocking the socks off a trio of Tina Turner songs (What’s Love Got To Do With It,Private Dancer andSimply The Best).
And then came an eight-song romp from a luminous Jessica Mauboy,who barely paused for breath dancing throughCan I Get A Moment?,Flashback,Give You Love,Little Things,Pop A Bottle (Fill Me Up),Mariah Carey’sFantasy,Dance The Night andYoung Hearts Run Free.She could have lit the harbour with her smile.
Then it was time for the real stars of the show.
My review of the fireworks:they went bang. Bang. Bang.
And so did this show.
If you didn’t sing and dance at least once,the problem was you,not the ABC.
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