Las Vegas Review-Journal

Quartet’s bringing back the Motown

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

OVER the past decade in Las Vegas, singing and grooving to Motown has been second nature for Human Nature. The Aussie quartet is marking its 10-year anniversar­y in residency here with a renewed emphasis on the Detroit sound, with “Australia’s Human Nature Sings Motown & More.”

Human Nature will formally unveil the new format to a national TV audience on NBC’S “Today” show in the 10 a.m. hour Monday. They’ll sing a Motown song featured in the stage show.

Motown’s prominence in the show coincides with the legendary music label’s 60th anniversar­y. The new show’s conversion has been gradual, since the group returned from a tour of their homeland in the spring.

“We thought maybe there’s a real passion from people for Motown in Australia again, and then we found out it was the 60th anniversar­y coming up,” Phil Burton, who joins brothers Mike and Andrew Tierney and Toby Allen as the only performers ever in the act. “All the stars were aligned.”

The quartet has learned, over time, that Motown simply sells well. Fans in Vegas, and on group’s frequent tours, always gravitate to those classics.

“We actually put a whole bunch of Motown in the show for the Christmas show,” Andrew Tierney said during a recent interview in the band’s dressing room at Sands Showroom at The Venetian. Burton cut in with, “And the audience was incredible. It was like, when we hit that point and we all kind of looked at each other and thought …”

There was no need to finish the sentence. The show’s title and song list again remind of Motown. Lest we forget, Motown legend Smokey Robinson has endorsed the act since it opened in 2009

at the then-imperial Palace. The guys shifted to “Jukebox” in April 2016, incorporat­ing such artists as The Beatles, Bee Gees, Beach Boys and even Meghan Trainor and Justin Bieber in the show.

Some “Jukebox” numbers will remain, but the guys have always soared and scored with “My Girl,” “Stop in the Name of Love,” “Baby I Need Your Lovin,’” “Dancing in the Street,” “Uptight” and “Runaround Sue.”

Even given its impressive longevity, Human Nature has had to adjust and tighten its budget to remain profitable. Popular trumpet player Isaac Tubb, a five-year member of the act’s backing band, was let go for financial reasons in June. The band still rocks with Tommy Alvarado on sax, Otto Ehling on keys, Blaise Sison on bass, Carlos Guerrero on guitar and Greg Babcock on drums. But cutting live musicians, or dancers (no dancers in the “Motown” show, as there were in “Jukebox”) is typically a sign a production is offsetting potential shortfalls.

“It’s just difficult, I think now, with so many residencie­s and bigger acts, really big names that are filling a lot of those bigger rooms,” Andrew Tierney said. “It’s hard to find the pocket for the smaller shows, where they fit in, how to find an audience.”

I asked a question to the group: “What would you do if you were to produce a new show in Las Vegas?”

Allen was quick to say, “Not put our money in.”

There was a group laugh, harmonious as always. Ten years after opening on the Strip, Human Nature gets it.

Hey, Paula!

Paula Abdul opened her “Forever Your Girl” residency at the Flamingo on Tuesday night. Pussycat Dolls founder Robin Antin was in the mix; she has been frequentin­g the Strip scene while looking for a venue for a PCD revival in Vegas (as previously noted, the “Magic Mike Live” room at Hard Rock Hotel/virgin Hotels Las Vegas is one target).

Also of interest is the contributi­ons of Nappytabs choreograp­hy team Napoleon and Tabitha D’umo. The duo have extensive TV and Strip experience (“So You Think You Can Dance,” “Jabbawocke­ez,” “Viva Elvis” and Jennifer Lopez’s “All I Have” residency). Though not confirmed to be formally directing the Abdul show, the couple has been working with the cast, and this is shaping up as a serious dance party. Abdul can still bring it, and her backing dancers are stellar.

Cool Hang Alert

The last time Michelle Rohl appeared at Myron’s Cabaret Jazz, a group of attendees including Drew Carey had to help me pull a lost dog out of my car during a Vegas monsoon. True story. The doggie somehow fled to The Smith Center and dove into my vehicle at valet.

Carey, a friend of music director/trumpet ace/producer Lon Bronson, was on hand to see Rohl’s Janis Joplin tribute, and it’s a powerful trip to the late ’60s.

“Kozmic Blues” returns at 7 p.m. Saturday, celebratin­g the 50th anniversar­y of Woodstock and Joplin’s own tenacious performing style. As we’ve learned, Rohl can touch off a storm.

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands operates The Venetian.

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. As of 9 p.m. Wednesday:

1. Real estate firm buys property west of the Strip for $42M

MCA Realty announced Tuesday it purchased a seven-building complex at Desert Inn Road and Polaris Avenue for $42 million and plans to rename it Central Seven Commerce Center. 2. Suspended Las Vegas lawyer’s ex-boyfriend receives prison sentence

The ex-boyfriend of a suspended Las Vegas defense attorney was sentenced Wednesday to up to eight years in prison for drug and weapons possession offenses.

3. Las Vegas real estate broker Gragson faces new suits in fatal crash

Three victims, including a mother of three who was killed, in a suspected DUI crash did not know how much alcohol real estate broker Scott Gragson had consumed when they agreed to ride in his SUV, lawsuits filed Tuesday alleged.

4. Strip bus revenue drops, spurring possible route changes

If bus revenue continues to trend downward, some bus routes could be eliminated or the frequency of service could be reduced within the next four years, said RTC officials, who are exploring new ways to draw riders on the Strip.

5. Pair arrested in Las Vegas after toddler ingests illegal drugs

Two people were arrested this month after an 11-month-old boy ingested illicit drugs during feeding at his home in the northern Las Vegas Valley.

 ?? Robert Kley Photograph­y ?? Human Nature marks its 10th anniversar­y as a Strip headliner. From left : Phil Burton, Toby Allen, Mike Tierney and Andrew Tierney.
Robert Kley Photograph­y Human Nature marks its 10th anniversar­y as a Strip headliner. From left : Phil Burton, Toby Allen, Mike Tierney and Andrew Tierney.
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