Miami Herald (Sunday)

Meet The Sunset Four, Miami Beach’s teenage answer to the Beatles

- BY HOWARD COHEN hcohen@miamiheral­d.com BY JOEY FLECHAS jflechas@miamiheral­d.com

Seems everybody is talking the Beatles again thanks to the streaming and Blu-ray release of the new three-part Disney+ documentar­y “The Beatles: Get Back.”

But one of the more heartening Beatles stories of late may be the coming performanc­e of The Sunset Four. Billed as “the world’s youngest Beatles Tribute Show,” The Sunset Four are four 13-yearold Miami Beach Nautilus

Middle School students who are set to play the Fab Four’s tunes at the Sand Bar Kitchen.

The Sunset Four features Oliver Lieberman on guitars and vocals in the John Lennon role. Warren Bromley on bass in Paul McCartney mode. And sisters Zoe Lyons on lead vocals and Evangeline Lyons on drums — the instrument Ringo Starr played, naturally.

The free concert, on Wednesday, is designed to commemorat­e the 58th

Attorneys representi­ng the city in negotiatio­ns to lease public land for Miami Freedom Park were not consulted before Mayor Francis Suarez said they had a deal.

When Miami Mayor Francis Suarez announced last month that a proposal to build a profession­al soccer stadium and commercial complex on a city golf course was finally ready for an allimporta­nt vote, the news surprised a team of attorneys who thought they were still hashing out unresolved issues in the billion-dollar deal.

According to a legal memo sent this week to elected officials, lawyers working since 2019 to negotiate a series of complex agreements for the proposed Miami Freedom Park still had concerns about unresolved financial terms, deadlines and the lack of evidence that the developer can finance the project when Suarez declared the deal done.

“We were not aware that any final agreement had been reached, and we were not given any advance notice with respect to release of the documents,” reads the Jan. 12 memo, authored by attorneys at Shutts & Bowen, O’Melveny & Myers and Fowler White Burnett.

The memo, obtained by the Miami Herald, suggests there was a behindthe-scenes disagreeme­nt between Suarez and the city’s team of private lawyers about a deal that would radically transform 131-acres of public land next to Miami Internatio­nal Airport and bring profession­al soccer to Miami.

Among the outstandin­g issues laid out by the attorneys: the amount the team would pay in a security

“Rather than take money that may penalize a teacher or student because of the actions of some union-controlled school board members, my view would be — let’s not do that,” DeSantis said at a news conference deposit on the no-bid, 99-year lease, and the lack of evidence to prove the developmen­t team is financiall­y capable of building the project before a lease is signed. The memo also suggested the team should pay a higher rent that ought to be adjusted for market conditions in the future using appraisals, a provision that is not in the proposal.

Suarez was surprised Thursday and said he had not seen the memo when a reporter asked him if he had consulted with the city’s legal team before publicly stating that negoin Marianna. “But what you could do is say, any parent whose kid was illegally force masked this year in Florida, in any of those districts, they should have the right to sue if

anniversar­y of The

Beatles’ landmark performanc­e on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in 1964 that was broadcast from inside the Deauville hotel.

No accident. That Sand Bar location was chosen because it’s across the street from the Deauville, which, controvers­ially, faces demolition this summer.

“It’s super upsetting that they’re taking down the Deauville. Everybody that lived in Miami Beach knows that The Deauville is the hotel where the Beatles played for the ‘Ed Sullivan Show,’” Oliver said.

“Being in a band that is inspired by the greatest musical act of all time, and having an iconic property where the act stayed, played, and partially broke through to America, yeah, this is a statement,” said Oliver’s father Brian Lieberman, who helps manage the Sunset Four’s affairs.

“Growing up as kids on Miami Beach and knowing you have a connection to the history of the property musically means something. The group feels like this show will be historic as it will be the last time Beatles music could be played on the anniversar­y while the hotel is still standing. Matter of fact, the first name for their tribute act was going to be The Deauvilles but they felt it would be too hard to spell for people,” Lieberman said.

BEATLES MUSIC ENDURES

The idea of the concert is gratifying, too, perhaps because it reveals what “Get Back” makes clear: The Beatles’ music has endured for 52 years after the group’s breakup and splitting off into solo careers in 1970. The current generation appears to be cutting through all of today’s competing distractio­ns to focus on that music in 2022.

Oliver said he discovered the Beatles’ music when he was in the second grade at North Beach Elementary. His teacher, Mrs. West, was reading a book on the Beatles to the class.

The inspiratio­n lingered. “So in around fourth grade, like mid-fourth grade, we decided to make the band and we have been playing ever since then,” Oliver said in a telephone interview with the Miami Herald alongside the other Sunset Four.

That name, by the way, is a combinatio­n of the Sunset Islands in Miami Beach and the Fab Four — “The Sunset Four,” Brian Lieberman said.

The Sunset Four, finalists in the 2021 Young Talent Big Dreams competitio­n sponsored by Actors’ Playhouse and The Children’s Trust at the Miracle Theatre in Coral Gables, also like the music of the Foo Fighters, Coldplay, U2 and Amy Winehouse.

“Oliver and the Sunset Four were playing today’s pop hits like ‘We Are Young’ by fun, and ‘Valerie’ by Amy Winehouse, but it wasn’t until they played “Twist & Shout’ for the first time that I saw a change in audience participat­ion,” Brian Lieberman said. “People really liked that song — and all knew it. That’s when we decided to start a side gig as the world’s youngest Beatles tribute show.”

Their first show four years ago was at a twins’ first birthday party hosted by one of Lieberman’s friends. An executive from Norwegian Cruise Lines who was at that family gathering would later ask The Sunset Four to play the ship’s onboard club, “The Cavern Club,” which was the name of the original club the Beatles played at in Liverpool before the worldwide 1964 breakthrou­gh.

“COVID ruined that though,” Lieberman said.

Since forming, the young band has played to audiences as large as 1,500, with live streaming drawing 18,000 views, Lieberman said.

JUGGLING SCHOOL AND THE BAND

But amid school, homework and sports five days a week — Oliver and Warren practice on local swim clubs and Zoe and Evangeline are teammates at Miami Beach Rowing — the Sunset Four fit in twice- or thrice-weekly band practices. And occasional gigs, like the coming performanc­e, which will help raise money for their school, Miami Beach Nautilus Middle.

The music’s appeal helps make the grueling schedule fly by, they all say.

“I do have a lot of schoolwork but the band doesn’t feel like it’s like a job. It feels more just like something I do. I’m really passionate about the band and I love it. Me and my sister are taking exams and still practice but it doesn’t feel like add-on work. It just feels like fun,” Zoe said.

THE BAND’S SETLIST

The four say they can pretty much play the Beatles’ catalog — from the early rock ‘n’ roll raveups like “Love Me Do” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand” to the latter Beatles’ period that saw more complex tunes like “Hey Jude,” Get Back” and “Don’t Bring Me Down.”

“When we play the Beatles it’s kind of a little bit of an older audience, who knows more about the Beatles,” Zoe said. “So when we play it we want them to be proud. It’s like music that makes them happy.”

Oliver says the Beatles’ musical range is part of the appeal.

“They have different genres of music, like blending. I don’t really know how to explain it but I listen to their music all the time and whenever I’m listening to music that’s like my first option.”

Zoe appreciate­s the breadth of the Beatles’ 1963-1970 songbook.

“I feel like with the Beatles it gave us so many songs choices because they’re all really good songs,” she said.

“A lot of the beats are actually really similar for most of the songs, so it’s a lot simpler,” Evangelina added.

That’s no offense to Ringo, by the way. He was an economical, steady drummer and generally not given to adding fills. After all, there’s only one drum solo on a Beatles recording. (On “The End” that closes the medley on side two of the Beatles’ “Abbey Road” album in 1969.)

Favorite Beatles’ song to play?

“Early Beatles,” Oliver says. “Please Please Me.” “I Want to Hold Your Hand.”

“She Loves You” is another favorite, even though the Sunset Four also chronologi­cally sequence their sets to advance to the “Get Back” ending era of the Fab

Four.

“People really love watching our heads and hair shake during the ‘woooooooo’ part,” he says of that 1964 chart-topper, “She Loves You.”

A BEATLES BEACH FAMILY

For the Liebermans, the Sand Bar Kitchen concert near the Deauville, which is being co-produced by the Sand Bar’s music coordinato­r George Coz Canler, former guitarist for The Romantics, is also a homecoming of sorts.

Leiberman’s father Edward Lieberman — Oliver’s grandfathe­r — was at that Ed Sullivan taping in February 1964 at the Deauvillle.

“I am a fourth-generation Miami Beach guy whose father was at the original ‘Ed Sullivan

Show’ at the Deauville Miami Beach on February 16, 1964,” Lieberman said. “My first introducti­on to the Beatles was finding a clear red record among all black vinyl which looked cool so I played it. The first thing I ever heard was the thundering intro to ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand.’”

Having granddad Ed,

67, in attendance in such proximity to where it all went down so many years ago is special to his grandson, too.

“My grandfathe­r, when he was 8, ended up going to the ‘Ed Sullivan Show’ to watch the Beatles and he’s in Miami Beach and he still remembers it. And he always talked to me about it, how it was such a wonderful show. And like how great the Beatles are and how it changed the world. He loves watching us play all the time,” Oliver said.

“The music is the soundtrack to our lives,” Brian Lieberman said. “You can ask people of all ages if they know a Beatles song and some might say ‘no’ until you remind them of the lyrics and it comes to them, they do know. John Lennon once said he could be in a little town in the middle of nowhere and someone would be whistling “Yesterday.’”

MEETING THE BEATLES

So what would the teen mop tops tell the two surviving Beatles — McCartney and Starr — should they ever meet one or both of their idols at one of their Sunset Four shows — like in Miami Beach, which is far from the middle of nowhere?

Stranger things have happened.

“I would need to be thanking them for making this music. It’s literally carried us on throughout the years and has made people super happy,” Oliver said.

“We are really happy to play your songs,” added Zoe.

IF YOU GO

What: The Sunset Four commemorat­e the 58th anniversar­y of The Beatles’ performanc­e on the Ed Sullivan Show from Miami Beach’s Deauville Hotel

Where: The Sand Bar Kitchen, 6752 Collins

Ave., Miami Beach. The concert will also be streamed live on Facebook on The Fest for Beatles page at m.face book.com/beatlesfes­t/

When: 8 p.m. Wednesday

Admission:

Free

Howard Cohen: 305-376-3619, @HowardCohe­n

 ?? ARQUITECTO­NICA/Arquitecto­nicaGEO/MANICA ?? Rendering of Miami Freedom Park, the proposed future stadium of Inter Miami CF.
ARQUITECTO­NICA/Arquitecto­nicaGEO/MANICA Rendering of Miami Freedom Park, the proposed future stadium of Inter Miami CF.
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 ?? Courtesy Brian Lieberman ?? The Sunset Four are Oliver Lieberman (guitar/vocals portrays John Lennon), Zoe Lyons (lead vocals), Warren Bromley (bass portrays Paul McCartney) and Evangeline Lyons (drums playing Ringo Starr’s position).
Courtesy Brian Lieberman The Sunset Four are Oliver Lieberman (guitar/vocals portrays John Lennon), Zoe Lyons (lead vocals), Warren Bromley (bass portrays Paul McCartney) and Evangeline Lyons (drums playing Ringo Starr’s position).
 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks during a press conference at Vizcaya Museum & Gardens in Miami on Feb. 1.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks during a press conference at Vizcaya Museum & Gardens in Miami on Feb. 1.
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 ?? APPLE CORPS LTD. / EMI MUSIC Apple Corps Ltd. / EMI Music ?? The Beatles in 1969, the year the group performed its famed rooftop concert atop the Apple Corps headquarte­rs in London. The music appeared in the ‘Let It Be’ album in 1970. Left to right, George Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr.
APPLE CORPS LTD. / EMI MUSIC Apple Corps Ltd. / EMI Music The Beatles in 1969, the year the group performed its famed rooftop concert atop the Apple Corps headquarte­rs in London. The music appeared in the ‘Let It Be’ album in 1970. Left to right, George Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr.
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