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NKOTB: They still have the right stuff

 

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The old, now new again, New Kids On The Block concert in Moline Thursday night was a midlife crisis on a stage.

And it was AWESOME.

On so many levels.

There was Jordan Knight’s shirt-fluttering-in-the-breeze ballad, Joey McIntyre’s gold bomber jacket and matching gold and black high top sneakers, Donnie Wahlberg’s make-out session with a front-row fan, Danny Wood’s breakdancing and oh yeah, Jonathan Knight, being, well, just good old awkward Jonathan.

And that was just on the stage. Off the stage, in the audience, were throngs of 20- and 30-something women (and a few men) channeling their 1988 selves. And loving it.

There were side ponytails, scrunchies, hot pink and electric green, leggings, denim mini skirts, slouchy off-the-shoulder sweatshirts, sweatbands and more than a few tee shirts and jackets dug out of attics and basements. Oh and the REALLY big buttons with the boys faces plastered on them (the ones we all flaired out our Esprit bags with) they had those too.

Like the five middle-aged men on stage, we were kids again, if only for “Tonight.”

We embraced the cliches. And so did NKOTB. They rocked the classics and their patented swing-kick dance moves with as much oompf as the did 20 years ago.

And we rocked with them. The crowd, which filled the floor and lower bowl, but not the upper level, was on their feet waving their hands in the air and shimmying right along with the fellas for the nearly two hours they were on stage.

There were nods to Joey’s and Jordan’s solo careers, when each performed alone on stage. Donnie and Danny too got their chances alone with the audience.

But the magic truly happened when  all five took the stage. They opened with “Call it What you Want” from the early 1990s. Then they moved on to “My Favorite Girl,” from the Hangin’ Tough tour. Wisely “The Right Stuff” came next.

The rest of the show had a little bit of evertything. Old and new songs. Video montages. Back-up dancers. Odd interpretive dance interludes. And for a few songs, including “Tonight,” the boys left the stage and reappeared in the tunnel leading to the main floor where they climbed onto a small stage with a piano.

Then finally, after much anticipation, the group ended the show with the two songs everyone came to hear, “Step-by-Step” and “Hangin’ Tough.”

Fiftteen years later, the boys couldn’t let us down.

The opening act wasn’t a let down either JABBAWOKEEZ, the dance group that won “America’s Best Dance Crew” a year ago, were amazing. The group wears white masks and dances in sync to a medley of songs like Beyonce’s “All the Single Ladies” and Michael Jackson tunes.

If you haven’t heard of them, watch this video.

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyOxTDv7c40]

 

They play in the area again Monday (4/6) in Des Moines. It’s not too late to get tickets.

– Carly

3 Things to do this weekend

New Kids On The Block
Thursday, April 2 @ 7:30 p.m. and Monday, April 6 @ 7:30 p.m.

They’re no longer young enough to be considered new kids, but the fellas of New Kids On The Block (fondly called NKOTB by fans) are back on our block for the first time in nearly a decade and a half. These days, four of the five Kids have kids themselves. Jordan Knight, Jonathan Knight, Joey McIntyre, Donnie Wahlberg and Danny Wood are all grown up. And so are their fans. But that doesn’t mean they don’t still have the right stuff.

Seriously gratuitous references to past songs aside, NKOTB is trying to make a comeback and they know what their fans want. Classics like 1988s Hangin’ Tough and 1990s Step By Step. Those are the songs that inspired today’s 20- and 30-somethings to scribble “I heart Donnie” in their NKOTB Trapper Keepers. And the group promises to deliver. So tight roll those jeans and rock the side ponytail, tickets are still available.

New Kids On The Block
7:30 p.m. Thursday (4/2), i wireless Center, Moline, $28.50 to $65, www.iwirelesscenter.com
7:30 p.m. Monday (4/6), Wells Fargo Arena, Des Moines, $27.50 to $65, www.iowaeventscenter.com

Mission Creek Music Festival
Wednesday, April 1 to 5 @ Various venues, downtown Iowa City

Downtown Iowa City is about to be overrun with Mountain Goats, Fruit Bats, Bowerbirds and Liquid Swords. It’s not just another Saturday night on the Ped Mall. It’s part of the ambitious lineup for the fourth annual Mission Creek Festival, packing music, art and literary events into nearly every performance space, nook and cranny in the city over five days – six if you count the pre-festival party at the Mill at 9 p.m. Tuesday. The event’s biggest act hits the stage at the Englert Theatre at 8 p.m. Wednesday, when rapper GZA/Genius from the Wu-Tang Clan performs his seminal “Liquid Swords.”

Mission Creek Festival
Wednesday through Sunday (4/1 – 5), various Iowa City venues, cost varies by concert or $50 all-access festival pass, http://missionfreak.com/festival/

Paramount Theatre Reopening Benefit Concerts
Thursday, March 26 @ 7:30 p.m. and Wednesday, April 15 @ 7:30 p.m.

Like many local performance groups, the Cedar Rapids Community Concert Association, lost a favorite performance venue when the Paramount Theatre was ravaged by the Floods of 2008. The group, which has been a part of Cedar Rapids since 1930, used to play five shows a season to packed houses at the Paramount. And they miss it. So, they’ve organized two concerts to raise money for the cause. One-hundred percent of the net balcony seating revenue will be donated to the Paramount reopening fund. The first concert will present Side Street Strutters, a Walt Disney World show band. This seven-piece ensemble pays tribute to the big band music of Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, Duke Ellington and Count Basie. The April concert will feature The Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra’s greatest hits. The group includes a 16-piece orchestra under the direction of trombonist Bill Tole with vocalist Nancy Knorr of the Pied Pipers.

Paramount Theatre Reopening Benefit Concerts
7:30 p.m. Thursday (3/26) and Wednesday (4/15), US Cellular Center, 370 First Ave. NE, Cedar Rapids, balcony tickets $5 for student and $10 for adults, (319) 363-1888 or www.uscellularcenter.com

Three Other Things

Matthew Pearl, author, reads from latest novel, “The Last Dickens”
7 p.m. Thursday (3/26)
Prairie Lights, 15 S. Dubuque St., Iowa City, FREE, streamed live at http://writinguniversity.uiowa.edu

Tom Jackson, photographer
1 p.m. Sunday (3/29)
Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, 410 Third Ave. SE, FREE, www.crma.org

Tangovia
7 p.m. Saturday (3/28)
Wesley Center, 120 N. Dubuque St., Iowa City, $5, www.tangovia.com