Las Vegas Review-Journal

Human Nature now three wise men

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

HUMAN NATURE has gone four on the floor throughout its 30-plus year history. That changes when the Aussie vocal act returns to the stage in December.

Human Nature is set to perform a production dubbed “Christmas, Motown and More” at South Point Showroom from Dec. 17-19. The act is now brothers Andrew and Michael Tierney with Toby Allen. Phil Burton is staying in his home near Sydney for the foreseeabl­e future.

That quartet has been the whole of Human Nature since the band was founded as the 4 Trax in 1989. It has not performed a ticketed show other than as the core quartet. But come December, the three wise men (bring your own myrrh) are setting up at South Point.

“We are moving forward with a show that is for all the Las Vegas locals who have supported us over the years,” Andrew Tierney said Saturday afternoon. “These are the people who I run into at Vons and say, ‘We love you, when are you going to come back?’”

Tierney was on the phone, having just left Vons, during the chat.

Human Nature has started rehearsing with the three members. “It’s felt fine, the three-part harmonies sound good,” Tierney said. “It will be a show with singing, a band and choreograp­hy.”

Tickets for the three shows will go on sale Tuesday.

Tierney said of Burton’s decision to remain in the band’s homeland, “We wish Phil all the best, this is his decision and we respect it.”

Burton and his family left Las Vegas for Australia in August 2020.

The three South Point shows are all that HN has lined up in Las Vegas. The act resumes a lengthy tour of Australia from March through July. That series was truncated for the country’s latest COVID outbreak.

Produced by Adam Steck’s SPI Entertainm­ent, Human Nature would likely look to fall 2022 at the earliest for any return to residency. Steck operates Thunderlan­d Showroom at Excalibur and The Strat Theater. But he says the environmen­t is fickle, especially in Australia, where outbreaks have shut down several live entertainm­ent shows.

“The plan is to bring them back in a similar capacity as they were at The Venetian,” Steck said. “We want them

in residency again. They very much want to do it. It’s a matter of the right place at the right time.”

Steck found a receptive partner in South Point Entertainm­ent Director Michael Libonati, who has booked several top acts with Vegas appeal, among them Frankie Moreno (onstage again Friday) and the Righteous Brothers (Oct. 26-28).

Human Nature’s stage show will borrow from its Motown set list and the Christmas album it released in 2013, with four new songs added two years later.

As if prophetica­lly, the last time the band performed as an ensemble in Las Vegas was Burton’s birthday on March 13, 2020. That performanc­e wound up as the sendoff from Sands Showroom at The Venetian (since renamed Summit Showroom).

Human Nature opened as an underdog act in May 2009, at Imperial Palace Showroom (today’s Mat Franco Theater at The Linq Hotel). The show moved to The Venetian in 2013.

In July, the band announced it was leaving the hotel.

Presented and endorsed by Motown legend Smokey Robinson, Human Nature has logged more than 2,000 performanc­es on the Strip.

“When we arrived, we found an unlikely showroom at Imperial Palace and nobody thought we’d last nearly as long as we did,” Tierney said. “We’re confident we can have a future in Las Vegas.”

Red Hot summer

The Red Hot Chili Peppers will bring the heat to Las Vegas next summer. The rock band will play at Allegiant Stadium on Aug. 6. The Strokes and King Princess are the support acts.

The band announced the date with a faux newscast on the Live Nation social media page. Band members Flea, Anthony Kiedis and Chad Smith are shown delivering the announceme­nt on a spoof newscast on the satirical station KHOT.

Guitarist John Frusciante, who rejoined the band in 2019, makes a quick cameo.

Tickets are made available to Allegiant Stadium personal seat license holders 10 a.m. Tuesday. Dates for tickets for the general public are to be announced. The series opens June 4 in Seville, Spain; and hits Petco Park in San Diego (July 27), Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California

(July 29), Sofi Stadium in L.A. (July 31), T-mobile Park in Seattle (Aug. 3) before playing Las Vegas.

Juice on the loose

The Soul Juice Band, headed up by the great front man David Tatlock, is the featured Las Vegas artist at Tuesday night’s Golden Knights home opener at T-mobile Arena. The band’s latest single, “Brand New Day,” will be played for the capacity crowd of more than 18,000. This is on the same day the single streams on all digital platforms. The hits aren’t limited to the ice, music fans.

Cool Hang Alert

May the spirit of wailin’ Van Halen live for eternity. The rock experience that is Jeff Duncan’s “Eddiefest Vegas,” a tribute to the late Eddie Van Halen, is set for 9 p.m. (doors at 8 p.m.) Saturday at Danny Koker’s Count’s Vamp’d club at 6750 W. Sahara Ave. “Man special guests” will be onstage. All of them will rock it. Cover is $5, as the show is a benefit for Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation.

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section.

His “Podkats!” podcast can be found at reviewjour­nal. com/podcasts. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @Johnnykats­1 on Instagram.

 ?? Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal @Benjaminhp­hoto ?? Human Nature, featuring Toby Allen, left, Michael Tierney, Phil Burton and Andrew Tierney. The group from Sydney will perform “Christmas, Motown and More” as a trio at Southpoint in December.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal @Benjaminhp­hoto Human Nature, featuring Toby Allen, left, Michael Tierney, Phil Burton and Andrew Tierney. The group from Sydney will perform “Christmas, Motown and More” as a trio at Southpoint in December.
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