The Confetti Clatter – March 2020 Newsletter

 Video Look-back

In this month’s edition of the Confetti Clatter, we will continue with our 35th-anniversary theme and look back at the earliest known video of an It’s My Party performance.

In 1987, Jim Morrow became a fan of the group. Jim, at that time, was a property manager who had connections throughout Monroe County. Jim would eventually hire us at the Panorama Outlet Mall in Penfield (now Tops Supermarket) and opened up an opportunity for us to perform at the Penfield Community Center in June of 1988, through his contacts with the Penfield Recreation Department and Lions Club.

An early adapter, Jim always seemed to have a video recorder present at our performances. We owe him a debt of gratitude for preserving some of our early history, including the following clip from a performance at Short’s Bar in Fairport, NY, which took place on Saturday, February 27, 1988.

If you have seen up perform recently, you will need some context regarding the group in the mid to late 1980s. Whereas we currently focus on the girl groups of the ’60s, back then, we also performed music from current girl groups that had the trappings of those older sixties recordings. Something that we are not averse to trying again.

The clip we are sharing today is one of the earliest video recordings of the group. It shows the opening of a set, most likely not the first set, as Jennie announces that we are about to perform a song again. The response from the “peanut gallery” shows how obnoxious a bar crowd can be at times. In truth, we weren’t cut out to be a bar band.

The lineup in the clip is from left-to-right: Charlene, Tricia, and Jennie. Jennie was the newest edition, while Charlene had been in the band since 1986. The girls picked out their matching outfits back then, so you get a good look at what was considered fashionable at that time. Also, a look at the hairstyles would give any current ’80s retro band some helpful ideas.

This performance is the Boomerang version of the song “When Phone Stops Ringing” from 1986. The song was also covered by Eighth Wonder, featuring Patsey Kensit, in 1987. Boomerang was a girl group comprised of three current and former singers of Kid Creole and the Coconuts. On an aside, Kid Creole and the Coconuts were one of the best live performances I have ever seen. They billed themselves as “That international band of renegades,” and it fit perfectly.

Some things to notice are the excessive treble on the picked bass guitar and the use of Simmons electronic drums, two hallmarks of ’80s instrumentation. Jim initially captured this recording on a VHS tape, then I digitally transferred to a DVD, and finally converted to an mp4 file. As a result, there is some skipping glitches here and there, but that doesn’t take away from Jennie’s excellent performance. 

I recently visited Short’s on the 32nd anniversary of this performance; yes, it is still in business with the same owner from 1988. It looked unchanged, save the pool table set up on the elevated stage area. According to the bartender, they rarely have bands performing, though they do advertise karaoke nights, something that Short’s spearheaded in the ’80s.

New Shows Confirmed

Here are some new performances confirmed since our last edition of the Confetti Clatter. You can click on each event to add to your electronic calendar and find directions to the venues through Google Maps.

30jun6:00 pm8:00 pmEvent CancelledBurgundy Basin Cruise In

28jul6:00 pm8:00 pmEvent CancelledBurgundy Basin Cruise In

04aug6:00 pm8:00 pmCharcoal Corral Concert Series

The Confetti Clatter – April 2016 Newsletter

Sing Street, a must-see

As we await the return of several band members from college, there isn’t much news to talk about other than some new shows booked for the summer. You can view our current dates on the events area of our website.

In the meantime, I would like to recommend Sing Street, a movie that I had the pleasure of screening this past month.

sing-street-poster

I have to thank my friend Sue, who has a AMC Stubs membership, for giving me the heads up on this movie. She thought it sounded like something up my alley, and through her Stubs membership, I was able a attain a screening pass for April 11 at the AMC Loews in Webster, NY.

The synopsis pulled in me: Set in 1980s Dublin, boy forms band with friends at school to impress girl. Boy learns a lot about himself in the process. The story was written and directed by John Carney, a name I was not familiar with.

Despite my bias against contemporary movies, which tend to be too short on plot and character development, too long on car chases, explosions, and crass content, I reasoned that this was costing me nothing more than an hour and a half of my time on a Monday night — no biggy! So, on I went to the Loews that Monday night.

I could not have been more pleasantly surprised! The acting, by a cast of unknowns, was first-rate. I found myself being drawn into the plot and feeling for each one of the main characters, especially Conor, AKA Cosmo, and his older brother, Brendan. And then there was the elusive, mysterious, Raphina. Raphina is the unattainable girl who drives Conor from a ruse to reality. In an effort to capture Raphina’s heart, Conor, forms a band called Sing Street, with some of the misfits from his new school. Although his motive is to capture Raphina’s heart, the creation of the band represents a pivotal moment in Conor’s maturation. The evolution of Sing Street the band becomes a metaphor for Conor working through his life hurdles, and the tale is brilliantly spun by John Carney. To top it off, the cinematography presented 1980s Dublin in a fairy-tale setting. This heartwarming story can’t be missed.

If you were not a teenager in the 1980s, John Carney’s Sing Street is likely to beguile you with the sweet, universal energy of youth. – A. O. Scott, New York Times

The soundtrack, revolving around the year 1985, will give anyone who was around at that time pause to smile. For me 1865 hits home, as it was in this year we formed IT’S MY PARTY! In addition to the artists of that day like The Cure and Spandau Ballet, Carney included nifty original tunes by the band Sing Street, each one inspired by 1980s hit songs — think That Thing You Do! 

The original tunes in the movie sound like they could have been recorded in 1985, save the Adam Levine contribution, though it was nice to actually hear Levine sing without auto-tune. There were no glaring anachronisms, although “Rio,” by Duran Duran would not have been on the TV show Top of the Pops in 1985, having charted years earlier.

So, if this movie is playing in a theater near you, you should consider going out to see it. Unfortunately, at the time of this writing, it is not showing in the Rochester, NY area, but I’m keeping my eyes open.

Here’s a link to the Sing Street Facebook Page, as well as a review by Bono of U2 and a link to the movie soundtrack.

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