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Black Eyed Peas bring their A game
Venue/Date:
Continental (New York, NY)
Concert Date: October 15th, 2005
Reviewer: admin
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9.33
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THE VIEW FROM OUR SEATS: Black Eyed Peas
Apollo Theater, New York, NY
The interesting thing about the
Black
Eyed Peas is that most hip-hop heads pishaw their popular (emphasis on pop),
colorful, multi-culti outfit as a gimmick not worthy of 'real' hip-hop (emphasis
on glocks and cocks). But actually, in the vein of hip-hop's beginnings – when
it was all about pure, unadulterated partying, the Peas make the grade. The crew
started their North American tour at the historic
Apollo
Theater.
BEP has been in existence for 10 years, but it wasn't until William 'will.i.am'
Adams, Allen 'apl.de.ap' Pineda and Jaime 'Taboo' Gomez added one Stacy 'Fergie'
Ferguson to their group in 2003 that they began to reach heights as awesome as
their powerful break-dance moves. The fashionable foursome hit the Apollo and
thoroughly rocked the audience (which even included a then-missing-in-action
Dave Chappelle).
opened the show with his rousing and politically astute raps. The crew
– always well turned out – Fergie, just as trendy as
Gwen
Stefani but with better moves; will.i.am in some sort of fashion fusion of
English aristocrat and b-boy; Taboo's long, lean brown fit, complete with thigh
high boots; and Ap with his sexy Mohawk (in itself a fashion statement) – ripped
into their seamless set of pop chart sweethearts for a solid hour and a half.
Like The Fugees, another hip-hopping, girl-sangin', mixed-gender crew, the Peas'
live show is what may turn many non-believers into the choir. By using classic
and contemporary hip-hop tunes mixed into their songs – everything from
Public
Enemy's 'Bring The Noise' to
Fat
Joe's 'Lean Back,' and even a little Snoop riff thrown in for good measure,
the Peas were able to show their breadth of hip-hop knowledge, but also to keep
even those not familiar with their songs entertained.
When they hit hits like "Where Is the Love?" "Don't Phunk With My Heart," "Let's
Get It Started," and "Shut Up" the whole place transformed into a giant karoke
session -- the balconies were shaking with people hollering the lyrics. The cool
thing about the Peas is that its audience is as diverse as the group --
everybody from soccer moms and their offspring, to very trendy twentysomethings
to grandpas who wouldn't be caught dead at a rap show, were all swaying to the
same syrupy tunes.
A former break-dancing crew (incidentally, one of the pillars of hip-hop – and
did you know they were signed to Eazy E's Ruthless Records before he died?),
each member is a serious dancer, and each had their own time to shine with flips
reminiscent of Cirque du Soleil. The Peas' funkin' multi-piece band included
guitar, sax, flute, keys, bass, drums and trumpet, and perfectly complimented
the onstage acrobatics. Just to keep it hip-hop, there was a DJ and MP3 player
in addition to live instrumentation. It was just a big old jam.
As far as they go in pop's landscape, the Black Eyed Peas' show proves that they
are in fact (in their words, deeds and moves) hip-hop for life. Like will.i.am
said to the Apollo audience, the Peas ''keep it real'' by ''paying homage to the
knowledge.''
Where is the love? Right on stage with the Peas, baby!
-Angela Bronner
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