Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gibbons to headline at new Sand Dollar

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES 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

THE Plaza is doubling down on the Dollar. Billy F. Gibbons is dealing the hand. Casino metaphors aside, ZZ Top’s legendary frontman and a Vegas resident is headlining opening night at The Sand Dollar Lounge Downtown on May 26. Another rocking Las Vegan (a city native, in fact), Franky Perez, is backing him up.

In a text Sunday, Gibbons said, “The infamous Sand Dollar has continued serving up the finest in Las Vegas rockin’ revelry since ’76, and I’ll be spankin’ the plank with all the blues you can use.”

“Spankin’ the plank” is a reference to playing guitar, which Gibbons does as well as any rock ’n’ roller ever. And for more blues equity, harmonica virtuoso John Popper of Blues Traveler is also in the opening-night show.

“The Plaza is known for its vintage Vegas character, and The Sand Dollar Lounge Downtown will be a perfect complement to the experience we offer our guests,” Plaza CEO Jonathan Jossel says. “We are very excited to welcome The Sand Dollar Lounge Downtown, which will create a late-night destinatio­n for live music and craft cocktails unlike any other in downtown Las Vegas.”

The club will seat about 300 for shows in its 4,000-squarefoot space just off the Plaza’s casino floor. According to a news release from the hotel, the new Sand Dollar will resemble the original club on Polaris Avenue and Spring Mountain Road with vintage-rock elements, chandelier­s and dark-stained wood paneling.

The stage is larger than the original, the groove space (or, dance floor) is expanded, as is the club’s booth seating.

“The Sand Dollar has become known as an unpretenti­ous good time for Vegas locals and industry employees,” Sand Dollar co-owner Nathan Grates says. “Now we’re excited to be able to bring that vibe to downtown and Las Vegas visitors.”

The Sand Dollar Downtown should bring a new element of hip to the Plaza. The last live show I saw at the place was a fully costumed ’70s-disco tribute act at the now-closed casino lounge. Fun time, but none of those folks ever opened for Jimi Hendrix. We’re looking forward to seeing Gibbons and the band loosen the lug nuts, which is another term favored

by the guitar great.

Pop music

Two years ago, I chatted with David Perrico about the travails of the pandemic shutdown. His entire live-performanc­e schedule had been pulled. That included his corporate and private bookings, which accounted for about 70 percent of business for his Pop Strings, Pop Retro, Pop 40, Pop Soul, Pop Latin and Pop Evolution bands.

A year ago, Perrico was writing music for entertaine­rs who had been booked on cruise ships and small-capacity shows, working on jingles, some new music and upgrading his website. He invested Paycheck Protection Program and U.S. Small Business Administra­tion money back into his company and kept industry profession­als working. The process has included five CD projects, with a 60-piece Pop Symphonic project resurrecte­d that had been latent during COVID.

Today, as we are well aware, Perrico leads the Raiders House Band. Wednesday, members of that collective played the pool deck of the Palms. Thursday through Saturday, Perrico’s crew threw it down at the NFL Draft Theater stage during the live selection telecast.

Tens of millions watched the broadcast on NFL Network. Tens of thousands turned out for the live draft. All of them know of Perrico’s band today.

“We came from having a big question mark about the future to this fantastic run,” Perrico says. “We’ve worked with the Raiders, which has been incredible, and now we’ve worked with the NFL side of it. We had four stage managers assisting me, for whatever we needed. The sound teams, incredible. The video teams, incredible.”

Drag it out

”Frank Marino’s Red Carpet Brunch” performed four shows at the newly named Frank Marino Red Carpet Lounge on Saturday and Sunday. Marino’s lineup featured the familiar tributes to Cher, Bette Midler, Diana Ross, Tina Turner, Liza Minnelli, Celine Dion and Whitney Houston. New to Marino’s lineup of divas is Taylor Swift. Marino was in top form Sunday, delivering some new shtick and donning classic gowns while still seizing on his Joan Rivers adaptation.

The food was great (Monte Cristo Sandwich for this non-diva) and delivered before the start of the show.

It all felt like the start of something big, such as an ongoing residency in a swanky room. Not so fast. Marino is working on road dates and won’t return to the venue until at least July. Might be the fall. He’s due to leave “Legendary Divas” at Tropicana by October. What we saw this weekend was a showcase, with Marino and producers Alan and Kathi Glist conceiving a promising brunch and supper club show. The creative team and hotel reps now need to follow through. July’s a long way away, on a showbiz calendar. October, even longer.

Cool Hang Alert

Stirling Club is establishi­ng its “Night of Comedy” at 7 p.m. Tuesday at its Stirling Room, with host Barbara Brighton, featured comic Penny Wiggins (famous as Psychic Tanya with The Amazing Johnathan) and Michelle La Fong headlining. No cover, go to 702-732-9700 for reservatio­ns.

 ?? Nigel Bardsley ?? While staying in his Las Vegas home, Billy Gibbons has gardening and thrashing on “the gee-tar.” He headlines at The Sand Dollar Lounge Downtown on May 26.
Nigel Bardsley While staying in his Las Vegas home, Billy Gibbons has gardening and thrashing on “the gee-tar.” He headlines at The Sand Dollar Lounge Downtown on May 26.
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