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Posted: 12:22 am Monday, October 27th, 2014
Concert review: Susan Boyle shares her dream at Atlanta Symphony Hall
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By Melissa Ruggieri
How fitting that Susan Boyle includes “The Impossible Dream,” the sweeping “Man of La Mancha” standard, in her set.
Boyle’s really is a remarkable story – “This is my quest, to follow that star,” as she sang – that has escalated her from a competitor on a TV singing show to breaking album sales records (as she did in 2009) to performing for the pope to touring the U.S. for the first time.
Boyle is a bit more than halfway through her 21-city coast-to-coast run, and on Sunday night she brought her crystalline voice to a sold-out Atlanta Symphony Hall.
No, she wasn’t perfect.
A couple of cracked notes were evident on the opening “Out Here on My Own” (the gorgeous ballad popularized by Irene Cara in “Fame”) and she veered slightly off-key during her rendition of Sarah McLachlan’s “Angel,” from Boyle’s just-released album, “Hope.”
But throughout the two-set show, Boyle demonstrated her tremendous range with clarity and precision and exhibited an appealing confidence peppered with humor.
The result was a pleasant evening of familiar songs performed by someone with an undeniable gift.
“To me, singing songs is about telling stories,” Boyle said from the stage, and explained that she took acting lessons when she was younger as a way to combat her shyness. She wrapped the story by proclaiming, “Here I am, doing what I love doing.”
That was evident whether she was sitting on a swivel chair, tapping a high-heeled toe as her pianist Kennedy Aitchison glided through “”That Ole Devil Called Love,” or joining in a group sing-along of “I Can Only Imagine” with her two voluptuous female backup vocalists and singer Lance Ellington.
Clad in a pale pink gown for the first half of the concert and a violet sequined one for the second, Boyle, 53, defined transformation.
Long gone – at least on stage – is the frumpy lady who rendered Simon Cowell speechless on “Britain’s Got Talent.”
Instead, a glamorous chanteuse has emerged from her shell, one who delivers a punch line well (even though you get the feeling the script doesn’t change much each night) and can master covers as varied as The Rolling Stones (“Wild Horses”) and Barbra Streisand (“The Way We Were”).
Boyle’s four-piece band and three-piece string section cloaked all of her songs with pristine sound; a couple of times, the Sprayberry High School choir added sweet harmonies, notably on a gospel-pop rendition of “Oh Happy Day.”
In a recent interview with the AJC, Boyle noted that it’s taken five years to bring a tour to America because, “you have to hone your show to perfection.”
There is little Boyle could have done to surpass expectations for her devout followers – many of whom sported red scarves in her honor. They leapt to their feet with equal fervor whether to reward her soaring vocal journey on “You Raise Me Up” or to express their pride at her ability to hit the high notes in “Unchained Melody.”
Who knows when Boyle will return for another round in the U.S.? But at least the dream is no longer impossible.
Article on link below:
http://music.blog.ajc.com/2014/10/27/concert-review-susan-boyle-shares-her-dream-at-atlanta-symphony-hall/
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