As soon as I heard that Diana Ross was coming
to the Chautauqua Institution at the end of the week I was vacationing
there, I resolved to see her. I don’t believe she had ever given a concert in
this famous amphitheater in southwestern New York that had also seen such
musicians as John Philip Sousa, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, The Beach
Boys, and Michael Jackson; and, given her age, I didn’t know how many more
chances I might get to see her perform again.
As it happened, I counted myself lucky to see her at
all. The show sold out weeks in advance, and I was unsure, because of
Chautauqua’s revised amphitheater seating arrangements of the last couple of
years (notably, its “preferred seating” section), if I would even be able to
get in.
Luckily, armed with my weekly pass to the grounds, all I had to do was line up an hour and a half before the show. Even that far ahead of time, the line—senior citizens, the middle-aged, the young, the diehard fans and the merely curious—stretched down the hill.
I had never seen the Motown legend in concert. I
suspect that many in the audience that night did not labor under this handicap.
A middle-aged guy next to me, for instance, said his wife—sitting much closer
to the stage than us—had seen the singer seven times, on this tour alone.
“This tour” was being billed as the “75th
Birthday Tour,” but it could just as easily have been labeled the “60th
Anniversary Tour,” as Ms. Ross had signed her first professional contract, with
Motown, in 1959. Whichever title you prefer, the point is that Ms. Ross is a
show-business veteran. She knows what her audience wants and what she must do
to fulfill these expectations.
More often than not, those expectations boil down to
her greatest hits and a heavy dose of glamour—or, as another audience member
noted at the conclusion of the show, “19 songs and five costume changes.”
Ms. Ross and her troupe—four backup singers and a
tight set of musicians—have become quite adept at those wardrobe transitions.
As she changed rapidly into yet another sartorial stunner (e.g., a clinging,
gray sequined gown), her musicians used the additional two or three minutes
tacked on at the end of particular songs to jam, demonstrating their
considerable skill. (Saxophonist John Scarpulla was particularly impressive.)
Throughout the tour, Ross has not been afraid to vary
her set list and even her routine, depending on the locale and the occasion.
(At the Hollywood Bowl, for instance, backed by a full orchestra, she included
several less-familiar tunes; at New York’s Radio City Music Hall less than two
weeks before the Chautauqua gig, a number of tunes resonated very strongly with
fans celebrating Pride Month; and on another occasion, she took audience
questions, Carol Burnett-style.)
At Chautauqua, the opening number was—hardly a
surprise—“I’m Coming Out,” with much of the early going featuring such hits
from Ms. Ross’ Sixties heyday with the Supremes as “Stop in the Name of Love,” “Come
See About Me,” “You Can’t Hurry Love” and “Love Child.”
Later, solo career hits
from the Seventies and early Eighties also thrilled the audience, such as
“Touch Me in the Morning,” “Take Me Higher,” “Upside Down,” and the most
familiar tunes from her films Lady Sings the Blues, Mahogany, and The
Wiz. Some cover tunes (notably, of The Spiral Staircase’s “More Today Than
Yesterday” and Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers’ “Why Do Fools Fall in Love?”)
were also greeted warmly, as they have become concert staples of hers, too.
Like the ancient Roman huntress Diana, Ms. Ross has
achieved the status of a deity. Remarkably, she has lost little not only in
glamour but in the quality of her voice. While never powerful, even thin at
points, it retains its warmth and sweetness, reaching out to touch three
generations of fans. It was aided in Chautauqua by brief but effective stage
patter in which she not only expressed sincere gratitude for fans’ affection
but also conveyed a welcoming manner to many—notably, children she invited
onstage with hugs and statements like, “Don’t be shy—I’m a grandmommy!”
For all her undoubtedly sincere regard for her
audience, Ms. Ross became a decade-defying institution less out of love than
shrewdness and toughness—a canny calculation of her strengths and weaknesses
matched only by her ability to withstand an entertainment industry that places
a premium on trendiness and youth. In the eyes of some peers (notably, Supremes
colleague Mary Wilson), she has gone beyond being a diva to being a termagent.
But that endurance should be celebrated, too—as Ms.
Ross did, implicitly, with the final song, song made famous not by her but by Gloria
Gaynor: “I Will Survive.” The reaction at Chautauqua confirmed that she had
done so, emphatically, already.
Daughter Rhonda Ross, a singer-songwriter and
guitarist in her own right, preceded her mother in a 5-song, 15-minute set that
was respectfully received by the audience in the amphitheater. Respect, that
is, but not rapture, which can only be generated by goddesses like her mother.
Or, as a lyric from my favorite song of hers goes: On that you can depend, and never worry.
(Photo of Diana Ross taken by Harry Wad at the Nobel
Peace Prize Concert, Oslo Spektrum, Norway, Nov. 11, 2008.)
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