Gary Puckett,
Association Turn Back Clock at T-Hall Rock: Double Play
Clicks!
Date: Sunday, November 18 @
03:34:00 EST
Topic: Arts & Entertainment
WPCNR Record Review Board. By Big Melvin Mead of
Your Saturday Night Rock N Roll Party. November 18,
2007: They’re the rock and roll show
pioneers: Allan Freed, Murray the K, Dick Clark, Sid
Bernstein, Bill Graham. Move over, cats! Welcome
another legendary rock n roll show producer, White
Plains own Susan Katz of the producinest Westco
Productions. Suzy The K produced her third consecutive
sell-out Gold Star Rock N Roll Double Concert Saturday
night. The "Double Play" packed the Tarrytown Music
Hall with clapping-along, singing-a-long, juking-and-jiving-along-in-the-seats 50-and-Uppies
who came to groove with Gary Puckett and The
Association. They made us all young again once more with
hits that were new all over!

Gary Puckett
at the "Giant Jukebox," Tarrytown Music Hall performing
for Westco Productions, singing Woman, Woman taking
the 50-and-Uppies back into time -- and sounding better
than ever.

"The Men in
White": The Association making their "boss" individual
solo introductions of their big rock and roll band. They
knocked out a rockin medley in the nightcap that made my
life flash before my eyes.
The skins were
pounding, guitars flaring, the keyboards out of sight,
the songs more powerful than ever. Big bass backbeats
and snappy snarly twanging lead guitars cranked the old
Victorian Victrola of a theater, starting the memories
jumping, the moment the long, tall, blonde cool one,
Gary Puckett strode on stage singing his anthem,
Lady Will Power. The over 800 fans in attendance,
old enough not to, started singing right along .
Mr. Puckett
was personable, at ease and easy-going, and must have
felt right at home in the sound enhancing old jukebox of
the Music Hall. He shared memories in between songs, of
sharing studios at Columbia Records with Janis Joplin,
Paul Revere and the Raiders on Sunset Boulevard in Los
Angeles in the 60s. He reminisced about his start, how
he put together his military tunic uniform in Tijuana,
Mexico.
His band of
keyboardist, drummer and lead guitarist laid down a
robust bed for Puckett’s lusty voice on Over You,
and This Girl is a Woman Now.
Slipping into
a somber mood he revived “Let’s Get Together Now”
and staying in that mood, he did a very classy thing:
He asked all
veterans of military service to stand up so the audience
could recognize them. This was a meaningful moment with
many vets standing in the lower orchestra section, while
the audience applauded them, with Mr. Puckett then
recognizing their sacrifice with a poignant, meaningful
ballad, Back Home.
His show took
off when he started snapping fingers and singing "dom
da da da, dom da da da…hurt hurt" and to the audience’s
delight, launched into Runaround Sue. The
audience up onto a new level when Mr. Puckett sequed
into Pretty Woman with masterful base guitar
interplay. We were all shifting our shoulders and
clapping our hands on this baby.

Gary
Puckett and his sidemen slung their guitars aside
gathered to stage right, and snapping their fingers
revived the old Steam hit, Kiss Him Goodbye in
a cappella style – they out do-wopped Bowser
and Sha Na Na.
Snapping their
fingers and shifting their feet, Gary and his boys just
charmed the audience -- just like the street corner doo
wop boys. I asked Mr. Puckett afterwards if he was a
White Sox fan, “Sha Na Na, Hey Hey, Kiss Him Goodbye”
was sung after every White Sox victory in old Comiskey
Park in the 1970s – but Gary said he and the boys just
wanted to do the song that way. Give us more doo wop,
please, boys! It was the highlight followed by his
signature finale, Young Girl

Puckett and the gang bring
the audience into a warm finale on Young Girl
Mr. Puckett
still has the lusty voice that made his sound so unique:
an overwhelming sexuality to it that still I imagine
excites the female listener and observer. He is backed
by a drummer that drives the music and gives a new more
danceable, driving rhythm to the original Puckett
anthems when they were more studio-orchestrated. Now the
Puckett signature songs are clean, crisp, thundering
“driving rockers” Mr. Puckett shared how he started
rehearsing in his garage at 17. Last night he had a
great big cavernous garage to work with and the vibes
were everywhere!

Saturday night the Tarrytown Music Hall was one giant
garage the place energized by the rockers that won’t
stop a-rockin and they rock better every day. Even
intermission was exciting.
At
intermission, the Puckett equipment was moved off and
the audience that hung out in their seats got to watch “
The Men in White” – The Association the 6-man rock band
set up their equipment. Twanging, tweaking volume pods,
mixing sounds, adjusting. It was cool. It was a slow
build-up of anticipation watching this legendary band
get ready.
After a half
hour of tinkering and adjusting (this had great cache
and fascination) – they were ready…and the first song of
course was “Windy” – my favorite because it
reminded me of an old crush – (Jeanne Fernandez where
are you today?)
Well this
started out a string of songs, and inbetween, banter
and liquid free-flowing, loud rockin that entertained
with (as they used to say on 77 WABC when it was
MusicRadio), one great hit after another, and one great
joke after another. A sample joke, introducing Walk
Away Renee, and I paraphrase here: “This song
represented some of the feel of the 60s, that if you
loved a person, you’ll let them go, and if they didn’t
love you, you’d go out and kill em.”
Another great
joke was delivered before Along Comes Mary. The
lead pointed out that this, their first hit had a hard
time getting play on the radio because of its
controversial lyrics, then dead-panned: “Have you heard
the crap that’s on the air today?”
This was met
with high amusement and applause – then into Along
Comes Mary they went. Such is the instrumentation
intensity of these men that again the same old songs are
new again – fresh, "open house, frat party loud" that
showcase the dancing keyboardist, the maniac pounding
skins, and the elegant bass and lead guitarists.
Inbetween the rockers, were tributes to the New Christy
Minstrels (Green,Green), the Mamas and the
Papas(California Dreamin).

The
Greatest Medley of them all ended The Association Set.
The
Association just kept playing higher and higher cruising
into an endless medley to end all medleys, where the
60s hits kept on coming: Heard It Through the
Grapevine, My Girl The Weight, Bad Moon Rising, Joy to
the World, Same Old Song – and that wasn't all of
them -- it was like a fraternity open house where you
just kept on dancin! The lid on the old Music Hall was
lifting. “The Men in White” ended with their signature
song, Windy playing after an hour straight.
The old songs
sounded better than ever. The Association’s riffs were
snappy. They laid their baselines with gusto that got
into your body, the beat got into your soul, and you
felt young again! Everyone had a great time and the good
times rolled once more.
But I do not
do these songs justice. As I was walking out with the
friends we went with, we were discussing how good these
songs made us feel – because they captured times and
feelings that all experience in one’s life and
articulate real feelings right on. You feel them again
with fondness, bittersweetness and wistfulness.
The songs of
the 60s and early 70s were like a soundtrack to the
events of those years that recreates them . They are
living history.

Gary
Puckett hung out for The Association set and signed
autographs and chatted with fans after the show -- one
of the unique features about attending a Westco Gold
Star Concert! You get to meet the legends.

Candyce Corcoran, the prominent White Plains personality
with Mr. Puckett. Also seen at the old Victorian
Victrola Tarrytown Music Hall of memories were Serena
and Jim Russell, and Melody and Councilman Glenn Hockley
of White Plains.

Susan Katz
and Peter Katz have staged two previous successful rock
n roll double concerts and Gary Puckett and The
Association was the best yet. The Gold Star Concerts are
Westchester's Best Rock! The First Lady of Westchester
Theatre and the "Phantom of Westco," Peter
Katz celebrate another successful Katz & Katz Hit.
Coming up on
the Westco Productions Katz Memory Machine will be The
New Christy Minstrels March 15, 2008 at Irvington Town
Hall Theater; The Lettermen also at Irvington on April
5, and Felix Caviliere’s Rascals on May 3 – and just
booked – The Fifth Dimension. Go to
www.westcoproductions.org for more

What becomes a rock legend most? White patent
leather shoes on a member of The Association. Rock N
Roll Is Here to Stay in Westchester County -- 50 years
and still Rockin. |