Distinguished Concerts International New York (DCINY) presents Total Vocal with Deke Sharon in Review

Distinguished Concerts International New York (DCINY) presents Total Vocal with Deke Sharon in Review

Deke Sharon, Guest Conductor, Arranger & Creative Director

Special Guests: The Barbershop Quartet from the Broadway revival of The Music Man: Phillip Boykin, Eddie Korbich, Daniel Torres, Nicholas Ward

Face Vocal Band

Chesney Snow, Beatboxer

Luke Hawkins, Tap dancer/Singer

Distinguished Concerts Singers International

Carnegie Hall, Stern Auditorium, New York, NY

April 10, 2022

To invert the finale of Deke Sharon’s peppy, long-awaited return of Total Vocal: He definitely has found what he’s looking for—a life of great meaning and inspiration at the peak of a cappella vocal art in this country, quite possibly worldwide. I would like to know where he keeps his fountain of youth, for he seems a perpetual twenty-four or twenty-five.

Some of the participating choirs have been on hold for just over two years, so there was a palpable sense of joy at finally being able to make music in person again. I have had the opportunity to review this endeavor a couple of times in these pages, so I won’t dwell on the obvious, that this is a feel-good entertainment, sometimes a bit relentless in its positivity. (Note to self: check the anti-depressant dosage.) If you ever wanted to ‘step into’ one of the Pitch Perfect movies, this is the concert for you.

The massed choir, here only 103 strong, hailed from California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, and Maine, and was quite varied as to age. At various times, extremely poised and self-assured soloists stepped out from the group, to have their memorable moment on Carnegie’s main stage.

The afternoon began auspiciously with the awesome precision and expression of the barbershop quartet from the current Broadway revival of The Music Man. In It’s You and Lida Rose, their ability to make tones travel, swell, and diminish, with crystal bright diction was superb. Keeping the pace quick, Mr. Sharon pivoted to the full choir in an arrangement made for his Disney-sponsored group DCappella, from Aladdin: Friend Like Me. Then fourteen soloists stepped out in front for a soulful rendition of Corinne Bailey Rae’s Put Your Records On (Will any kid even know what a record is?). This was followed by the Edwardsville (IL) High School Choir in a poignant rendition of Loch Lomond, which despite Deke Sharon’s program note, is a Scottish song, not Irish! The group’s young ladies wore matching red sashes and the young men charming red bow ties and suspenders.

Total Vocal with Deke Sharon. Photo credit: Dan Wright

Mr. Sharon then related how material always gets cut in the making of movies (in this case, the first Pitch Perfect), and he gave the premiere of one of his mash-ups that was never heard before: Just the Way You Are (Bruno Mars) and Lights (Ellie Goulding).

Next a group took the stage that claims the distinction of being the first one eliminated on the first episode of the first season of a competition reality show The Sing-Off–  Face Vocal Band (aka “Face”). That was in December 2009, and since then (prior to the pandemic) they have performed over 1000 concerts worldwide. They are now in their twenty-first year, take that competition show! They are clearly esteemed by Mr. Sharon, who gave them three selections: Harder to Breathe (Maroon 5), Come Together (Beatles), and From Now On (from The Greatest Showman) where they were joined by the choir. It was a fantastic display.

Inserted (not on the program) was a featured performance by the one choir who flew across half the Pacific Ocean and the entire continental US to be here from Hawaii. In their discreet but telling traditional garb, they sang a Hawaiian folksong beautifully.

Total Vocal with Deke Sharon. Photo credit: Dan Wright

Now Chesney Snow was introduced, a regular on these Total Vocal programs. It is truly astonishing what a range of sounds one human mouth assisted by an amplified mike can achieve. He is a master beat-boxer, and he got to riff before launching into Rogers and Hammerstein’s Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’ (Oklahoma), underlining the choir and Mr. Sharon’s vocal solo with his rhythm. By the way, need I make clear that there was not one instrument (other than human voices) used in this afternoon. Next, eight soloists came forward for Elton John’s Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me, which was backed by the choir and Chesney Snow. Luke Hawkins, a Broadway tap dancer, singer, and television actor, got his turn to shine (also as Deke Sharon’s newly-discovered relative) in Randy Newman’s I Love L.A., replete with audience participation. Then Face Vocal Band regained the stage for the finale: Bono and The Edge’s I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For. What a triumph!

A traditional built-in encore is the audience-participation The Lion Sleeps Tonight, with all forces arrayed onstage, just before all the individual conductors who have given so much of themselves in preparation received their lusty bravos.

Mr. Sharon so strongly believes in the redemptive power of choral singing that he offers anyone who reaches out to him help in finding a group in their community- now that’s leadership!

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