Event Reviews
Cyndi Lauper

Cyndi Lauper

with Jill Sobule

Orlando, FL • Nov. 30, 2005

Cyndi Lauper

Thirty years have passed since she first invaded mainstream pop radio with her cartoony punk looks and squeaky Brooklyn-ized voice, but no one told Cyndi Lauper. She may dress more “adult,” and she did tour with ultimate diva Cher last year, but Cyndi is and will forever be just a girl who wants to have fun.

The Cyndi Lauper audience of today is diverse and, surprisingly, a big party crowd. Between all the drinking and heavy petting they still managed to not only welcome, but honestly enjoy opener Jill Sobule. You remember her for “that annoying ’90s hit,” as she referred to it, “I Kissed A Girl.” A song that she jokingly (I assume!) revealed as being written about her secret love affair with morning show nazi Kathie Lee Gifford. Sobule was charming, funny, and treated the large crowd with small coffee shop intimacy. When playing a new song she invited a girl from the crowd onto the stage to hold a laptop for her to read lyrics from while she sang. She ended her set by inviting the crowd to join her at her merch table where she’d be signing t-shirts, “because I’m so desperate.”

Cyndi crawls
Jen Cray
Cyndi crawls

When the curtain parted next a blond, busty woman in black walked onto the stage and up to the microphone, and I thought, What is Drew Barrymore doing here? Take a look at Cyndi and then go back and watch Never Been Kissed or The Wedding Singer. The ’80s popstar is Drew in about 20 years, and the future looks good for her!

Cyndi hammers
Jen Cray
Cyndi hammers

Starting strong with some classic stand- bys, “All Through the Night”,”I Drove All Night” and “Change of Heart” (for which she pounded out the begining beats on the stage floor using a hammer!), Lauper alternated between arranging the songs in the style we all grew up hearing, and her newly reworked acoustic renditions. She is touring to promote The Body Acoustic which premiered these acoustic mixes so I’m not surprised when she plays “She Bop” as a slowed down, bluesy folk tune, but come on! It’s “She Bop!” I wanted some more energy and so did most of the crowd, on whom the acoustic numbers fell flat on. When she stayed true to the original recordings, her performance soared, as on “Money Changes Everything” and “Time After Time.”

Jumping, twirling, and often crawling to the edge of the stage to reach out to her fans up front, Lauper showed no signs of having grown out of the orange-haired, newspaper-skirted strange little girl of yesteryear. And her unique set of pipes have only strengthened as the years have passed. Cyndi Lauper can never be imitated, for her style and voice is as unique as she is.

Cyndi Lauper: http://www.cyndilauper.com


Recently on Ink 19...

Cheerleaders’ Wild Weekend

Cheerleaders’ Wild Weekend

Screen Reviews

Cheerleader’s Wild Weekend, aka The Great American Girl Robbery, entered the fray in 1979 with its odd mashup of hostage drama, comedic crime caper, and good old fashioned T & A hijinks. Phil Bailey reviews the Blu-ray release.

Garage Sale Vinyl: Nazareth

Garage Sale Vinyl: Nazareth

Garage Sale Vinyl

In this latest installment of his weekly series, Christopher Long discovers and scores a secondhand vinyl copy of one of his all-time favorite LPs: 2XS (To Excess), the splendid 1982 flop from the iconic Scottish powerhouse, Nazareth.

Denude

Denude

Music Reviews

A Murmuration of Capitalist Bees (Expert Work Records, Dipterid Records). Review by Peter Lindblad.

Garage Sale Vinyl: Bonnie Raitt

Garage Sale Vinyl: Bonnie Raitt

Garage Sale Vinyl

Author and longtime Ink 19 contributor Christopher Long kicks off the 2025 edition of his popular weekly Garage Sale Vinyl series with a bona fide banger: the blues-soaked, whisky-injected, self-titled 1971 debut record from Bonnie Raitt.

Facets of Love

Facets of Love

Screen Reviews

Phil Bailey reviews quirky sexploitation film Facets of Love (1973), a saucy Hong Kong costume drama from director Li Hsang-han of kung fu powerhouse Shaw Brothers, now out on Blu-ray.