Drummers' LA beat hits town Monday

Street Beat has entertained audiences around the country with a high-energy drum and break dance show.

The Los Angeles urban percussionists can strike up a beat on just about anything, and the dancers make spinning and moving across the floor look easy. The eight-member group mixes street-style moves with urban rhythms.

Local audiences will get to see them in action during a performance 7 p.m. Monday in the David Reid Theater at the Chapman Cultural Center.

"The best way to describe Street Beat is a modern day version of Stomp meets Blue Man Group in a Southern California way," said founder Ben Hansen in a telephone interview from Los Angeles. "The difference between us and other groups is we deliver a whole night of entertainment with percussion-based music, comedy and audience participation."

Hansen said the group sets up three huge drum stations on risers made of different industrial cylinders and shapes. The drummers are also accompanied by a musician playing conga drums.

"Our drummers are very high energy," he said.

Before organizing the troupe, Hansen, a native of Copenhagen, Denmark, moved to Los Angeles in 2002 and worked as a freelance drummer. He played with a variety of groups and Grammy Award-winning artists until he decided to focus on another direction.

Hansen started visiting elementary schools and teaching children to play the drums to help them learn the basics of music and designed workshops for classes.

"It was always a dream of mine to give back," he said. "My focus and direction changed."

Street Beat was formed in 2004 as a creative outlet. The group has played for a variety of audiences and performed more than 400 shows in 2008.

"This kind of show has never been seen in Spartanburg," said Steve Wong, marketing director for The Arts Partnership of Greater Spartanburg. "The show is right off the streets of L.A., and it is very urban and somewhat gritty."

For those who want a deal on a Las Vegas show, discount kiosks can help

Living in the entertainment capital of the world means nothing to Las Vegans who can't afford show tickets. At the same time, an increasing number of struggling shows no longer can afford to let unsold seats simply go empty -- or free to casino high rollers.

Discount kiosks are solving both problems. They sell same-day seats that, producers realize, probably won't fetch full price by showtime.

Exactly how much do they discount, and for which shows? The R-J recently conducted a random weekday comparison of the two major players. Los Angeles-based Tix4Tonight and All Access Entertainment operate 16 kiosks along the tourist corridor.

The information we gathered was intended only for those who traveled to a kiosk in person on that particular day -- a model patterned after New York's TKTS booths, founded by the Theatre Development Fund in 1973. Show producers demand that kiosk companies maintain this level of inconvenience; otherwise, they fear, few consumers would ever pay full price. It's why neither Las Vegas discounter maintains a public Web site or phone number, and why Tix4Tonight asked the R-J not to publish the names, or prices, of any of the shows it offers.

For the major shows offered by both companies, Tix4Tonight discounted slightly more. For example, All Access listed $104.70 "Jersey Boys" tickets for 16 percent off ($88); Tix4Tonight for 23 percent off ($80.40). All Access listed $69.90 "Criss Angel Believe" tickets for 17 percent off ($58); Tix4Tonight for 27 percent off ($51.35). Both listed $59.40 tickets for Jon Lovitz at the Excalibur at half off ($29.70).

Prices did not drop as the day progressed, and new listings were not added. Both discounters also charged a per-ticket service fee. (Tix4Tonight's is $5, All Access' $5 to $7.)

As the discount booths become more the cart that pulls the horse, their original rules -- all tickets the same day and half-price -- have morphed into an average of 35 percent off Ticketmaster's price for the most popular shows. (Half-off was still the norm for less-popular ones.) In addition, the opportunity occasionally arises to purchase tickets a day in advance. (Tix4Tonight had next-day seats for Liza Minnelli at the MGM Grand for $73.75, or 48 percent off.)

Our comparison showed more disparity in show selection, the edge again going to Tix4Tonight. It offered 49 shows to All Access' 34, with many more top names. Notable Tix4Tonight exclusives included "Blue Man Group," "KA," "The Lion King," "Love," "Mystere," "Peepshow," Penn & Teller, "Phantom -- The Las Vegas Spectacular," "Terry Fator & His Cast of Thousands" and "Zumanity." (The rare All Access exclusives included "The Soprano's Last Supper," Dr. Scott Lewis and "Magic's a Drag.")

Again, these discounts averaged out to 35 percent. But using Ticketmaster for a full-price comparison -- as both companies did -- occasionally leads consumers astray. At the same time Ticketmaster charged $104.70 for its lowest "Jersey Boys" seat the same evening, The Venetian's Web site charged $62.75, lower than either discounter.

And tickets to Terry Fator's show were available to locals for 30 percent off through the MGM/Mirage Web site, a discount only 3 percent less than Tix4Tonight (before its $5 fee).

If kiosks seem like the ticket for you, your mind must be as open as your calendar. Some shows may not show up on the night you do; others will never show up. ("O" is one, according to Tix4Tonight, and you're not likely to see Cher this way, either.)

Also, be aware that you're buying vouchers, not hard tickets. Extra time must be spent waiting at the box office for the exchange.

Tix4Tonight operates kiosks at the Showcase mall, Hawaiian Marketplace, Bill's Gambling Hall, Casino Royale, Fashion Show mall, Four Queens and Peppermill. All Access has locations at Slots-a-Fun, Palace Station, Aztec Inn, South Point, Fashion Show mall, Tuscany Suites and Tahiti -- plus two inside Circus Circus. (Vegas.com also operates a kiosk, called Vegas Tix 4 Less, at the Showcase mall.)

Ben Aiken, 71, passionate singer and barberBen Aiken, 71, passionate singer and barber

Ben Aiken, an Army veteran and dedicated family man, whose gospel and R&B groups made a name for themselves performing in various area venues in the '60s, died of cancer Oct. 20 at the age of 71. Besides his wife and brothers Gilbert and Joseph, he is survived by three sons, Tyrone, Benjamin and Brian; a sister, Marian, and three grandchildren..

And he managed successes in both endeavors.

The barbering came about because the Aiken family had operated barber shops in the city since 1940, and Ben enjoyed the work.

But he was also fascinated by music from an early age and took up the guitar to accompany his smooth tenor voice.

Ben Aiken, an Army veteran and dedicated family man, whose gospel and R&B groups made a name for themselves performing in various area venues in the '60s, died of cancer Oct. 20 at the age of 71.

His father, the Rev. George D. Aiken Sr., was a well-known pastor who gave his five children their religious education. Ben and his brother, Gilbert, were founders of Mount Pleasant Memorial Baptist Church on Germantown Avenue, where Ben served as minister of music and chairman of the trustee board.

Ben and Gilbert, along with another brother, Joseph, joined fellow singers Gene Drew and Wallace Millsaps to form the gospel group Welcome Travelers.

The group performed at churches throughout the region, and also played the Club Harlem in Atlantic City, where such artists as Sam Cooke, Sarah Vaughn and Sammy Davis Jr. were often in the audience.

When the group switched to rhythm and blues, contracts were signed with Philly International Records, Warner Bros. and RCA.

The group's most popular song was "Stay Together Young Lovers," released in 1965. It received a lot of airtime in the city and the group made appearances on radio shows, including Georgie Woods'.

One day in the late '60s, Ben and some friends were playing a pickup game of football in Fairmount Park when a comely young lady caught his eye.

Perhaps an omen of the future was the fact that he found a four-leaf clover that memorable day. He and the former Deborah Duval began dating and were soon married.

Ben was something of a philosopher. He stuck little phrases on the mirror of his barbershop:

"There are none so blind as those who don't wish to see."

"He who knows and knows not that he knows is asleep. Wake him. He who knows not and says he knows is a fool. Shun him. He who knows and knows that he knows is wise. Follow him."

Ben was born in Philadelphia to the Rev. George D. Aiken Sr. and Lessie Estella Gray Aiken. He attended Murrell Dobbins High School and, while there, worked in the family barber shop, then on 16th Street near Oxford, where he learned hair styling.

He served in the Army after high school, stationed at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri.

The barber shop moved to other locations before its present site on Germantown Avenue near Somerset Street. Customers have included Chubby Checker, Lou Rawls, Doug "Jocko" Henderson and Joe Frazier.

Tragedy struck the shop on April 22, 2006, when two men came in with guns and attempted to rob it. A gunbattle ensued and Ben was hit twice, once in the chest and in the arm.

After hospital treatment, Ben arrived home and asked for, of all things, pig's feet.

He was diagnosed with cancer in July, but he continued to work at the shop, never complaining.

Besides his wife and brothers Gilbert and Joseph, he is survived by three sons, Tyrone, Benjamin and Brian; a sister, Marian, and three grandchildren.

THE LEGACY OF RAY CHARLES

"I just do what I do." * That's what Ray Charles told Billboard in June 2002 when asked to assess his role in music history. * Of course, Charles' self-effacing response belies a groundbreaking career and a legacy that endures today, as fans look toward celebrating what would have been the legendary artist's 80th birthday Sept. 23. * Looking back at Charles storied career, what comes to mind is the phrase "musical genius." In Charles' case, that's no hype.

In 1954, the artist's melding of gospel and blues yielded the pioneering hit "I've Got a Woman" - and forged an indelible imprint on R&B. rock and pop.

His earthy, soulful voice graced a steady stream of classics after "Woman," including "Drown in My Own Tears," "What'd I Say," "Hit the Road Jack," "Unchain My Heart," "I Can't Stop Loving You" and "Georgia on My Mind."

Just as at home on the Hammond B-3 organ as he was on the piano, he also landed at the top of Billboard's R&B, pop, country and jazz charts - and even the dance chart, collaborating with childhood friend Quincy Jones and Chaka Khan on "I'll Be Good to You."

His final recording, 2004's "Genius Loves Company," made history when it won eight Grammy Awards, including album and record of the year for his pairing with Norah Jones on " Here We Go Again."

But what many may not know is that the inimitable Charles was also a genius when it came to the business side of music.

In the early '60s he negotiated a rare feat after leaving Atlantic Records to sign with ABC-Paramount: ownership of his own master recordings. He also established his own labels. Tangerine (his favorite fruit) came first, which later evolved into CrossOver Records.

A songwriter who penned nearly 200 songs, Charles also operated his own publishing companies. Tangerine Music and Racer Music.

For these entities. Charles and longtime manager Joe Adams designed and built the RPM International office and studios on Washington Boulevard in Los Angeles. The Ray Charles Memorial Library will open in the building this fall.

Charles also found time to manage the careers of other acts, including Billy Preston and 70s R&B group the Friends of Distinction. And way before it was de rigueur for artists to do, Charles set up what became a foundation to help needy children with hearing disabilities and later on support education.

"He was an amazing human being," says Jones, 77, who became friends with Charles when both were scrappy teenagers in Seattle. "A true innovator who revolutionized musicano the business of music," he adds. "Growing up. we only had the radio; no Michael Jackson. Diddy or Oprah. So it was hard to imagine today's entrepreneurial world. But that didn't stop us. We spent a lot of time talking and dreaming about things that brothers had never done before."

"He really was a genius," says singer Solomon Burke, a former Atlantic labelmate. "He did things the way he wanted."

Charles was born Ray Charles Robinson Sept. 23. 1930, in Albany, Ga. As many learned through actor Jamie Foxx's Academy Award-winning portrayal in the 2004 film "Ray," Charles became blind by age 7 and orphaned at 15 while growing up in northwest Florida.

In eight years at a state school for the blind, the young Charles learned how to read and write music. Leaving Florida in 1947, he headed for Seattle ("Choosing the farthest place he could find from Florida," Jones says), where he notched his first hit two years later as a member of the Maxin Trio, "Confession Blues."

Even then, Charles was an enterprising individual.

"He had his own apartment, record player, two pairs of pimp shoes, and here I am still living at home," (ones recalls with a laugh. "His mother trained him not to be blind: no cane, no dogs, no cup. His scuffed-up shoes . . . that was his guide and driving force. He was the most independent dude I ever saw in my life. Ray would get blind only when pretty girls came around."

Signing with Atlantic Records in 1952. Charles as a West Coast jazz and blues man recorded such songs as "It Should've Been Me" and label cofounder Ahmet Ertegun's composition, "Mess Around."

Then he connected in 1954 with "I've Got a Woman," which set off a chain reaction of more hits capitalizing on his bold gospel/blues fusion. But Charles was just getting started.

In 1958, he performed at the Newport Jazz Festival, accompanied by a band that featured such jazz cats as saxophonists David "Fathead" Newman and Hank Crawford. Further bucking convention, he recorded "The Genius of Ray Charles," a 1959 release offering standards on one side (including "Come Rain or Come Shine") and big band numbers on the other, featuring members of Count Basic's orchestra and several arrangements by Jones.

Leaving Atlantic for ABC-Paramount, a fearless Charles recorded the seminal "Genius + Soul = Jazz" album in 1961.

A year later, his earlier dabbling in country music grew serious with the release of the million-selling "Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music." Complemented by lush strings and a harmony-rich choir, he scored with covers of Don Gibson's "I Can't Stop Loving You" and Ted Daffan's "Born to Lose" - and spent 14 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

"For a black man to do this in 1962 was unheard of," says Tony Gumina, president of the Ray Charles Marketing Group, which handles the late artist's licensing affairs. " He was trying to sell records to people who didn't want to drink from the same water fountain as him. But this was one of his greatest creative and business moves: to not be categorized musically and cross over. Though he never worried about it, he was resigned to the fact that he might lose some core fans. But he thought he'd gain far more in the process."

Gumina was operating his own promotion company working with state lotteries when he met Charles in 1999. The two teamed up on a series of commercials for various state lotteries and also introduced a line of Ray Charles slot machines also accessible to the blind.

"Everything he did had a business acumen to it," says Gumina. who cites Charles' liaison with manager Adams as a pivotal turning point. Originally hired to be Charles' stage announcer, former radio DJ Adams segued into overseeing production of the singer's shows, lighting and wardrobe.

Together the pair designed and built Charles' L.A. business base. RPM International (Recording. Publishing and Management) studio. When he began recording there in 1965, the label rented the studio from him, so he made money on his recordings before they were even released.

To save money on travel expenses, Charles purchased an airplane to ferry his band around to gigs. A smaller plane was also acquired so that Charles could wing in to, say. New York to record a couple of songs before flying back out in time for a show.

"He understood the entertainment business enough to know that you may not be popular forever," Gumina says, "and you need to maximize your product. At the same time, he had as much fun as any rock star but without the sad money stories. There was a time to work and a time to play, and heknew the difference. He didn't have a bunch of homes or a large entourage. That's why he was able to save $50 million before he died."

Calling Charles an "incredibly smart man." Concord president John Burk says he learned a lot from the ailing singer while he was recording his final studio album, "Genius Loves Company."

Going through "some sticky deal points, he was amazing," Burk recalls. "He had the whole agreement in his head. Without referencing any material, he knew all the terms we proposed and had the deal done for the album in two discussions."

Creatively, Burk says Charles was an artist dedicated to delivering "a true performance from the heart. Part of his creative legacy was his approach to singing. He opened the door to vocal improvisations, changing how people perceived you could sing a song. Many singers today are influenced by him and they don't even know it."

Blue Streak: The Blue Man Group comes to town

Training to become one of the Blue Man Group army is a long, arduous process. "It takes months -- maybe, honestly, six months till you can get your legs," said Mark Frankel, who recently celebrated his third anniversary covered in blue makeup. "They watch you do shows, and then they throw you in with the lions and see how you fare."

Frankel, a 33-year-old New York native, is one of the members of Blue Man Group, which combines performance art, clowning, music and comedy to create elaborate, energetic stage shows. Each show features three men in blue makeup. Some shows are small, intimate affairs; others fill stadiums. Frankel is one of four performers who take turns being the three Blue Men during the tour, which will make a stop tonight at Joel Coliseum.

Being a Blue Man, Frankel says, draws on various performing traditions. "First and foremost there's Vaudeville," he said. "And there's clowning -- the Blue Man is a version of a clown, but an extreme take on the art form. I don't want to get too much into the arty-farty side of what we study in training. But without sounding too ridiculous, we say, 'Let's peel back the mask, get inside this character, figure out what the idea behind him is.'

"It's all about your interpretation of this enigmatic character who's hard to describe," Frankel said. "He can't talk, there's a ground rule. But I can't give any other hard-and-fast ground rules. It's kind of trial and error."

And it requires three actors who are carefully in synch with one another on stage.

"The Blue Man is the character I portray, but the Blue Man is never alone, he's always with two other Blue Men. In the show, the idea is that those three Blue Men have always been together, they've never been apart."

And why are there three of him ... er, them?

"The basic idea is, a group of three is the smallest number you can have with a disagreement that's not an impasse," he said. "If you have three people, you can have a majority. It's the only way you can have one guy that's an outsider."

And that outsider role changes constantly during the show.

"The Blue Man, though he's smart and he has a sharp learning curve, has this childlike curiosity, and sometimes he will gleefully misstep. And the other two guys can go, 'I'm not sure that's the way that was meant to go.'"

And, of course, they have to do all that without saying a word, while coated in blue greasepaint that never dries. "It's like having a big ink stamp for a head," he said. "You have to be careful."

But he doesn't like to complain about the makeup.

"It's a grandiose comparison, but it would be like becoming elected president of the United States and complaining you had to wear a tie every day," he said.

"You adapt to it. It's nothing worth complaining about, that's for sure. It's a catalyst for getting truly inside the character. I'm no longer ashamed to admit that I'm a huge Kiss fan. And doing this character has led me to understand more the transformation those guys underwent to become Kiss."

Though the uniformity of the character is part of the show, the performers themselves come from various backgrounds.

"Some of the people I work with come more from the world of acting," Frankel said. "And some more from music. And some have just wandered into this character from the darkness."

Frankel grew up in a theater-oriented family, with a mother who had a long career on Broadway and a sister who was in the original Broadway cast of Spamalot. "I grew up in that world," he said. But he didn't plan on a stage career. He had been a drummer growing up, but became a recording engineer until the fateful day that he was invited to a party where members of Blue Man Group were. "I started talking to them," he said. "It was the longest of long shots, and suddenly it happened. I didn't expect to be doing this for a living."

Blue Man Group started as a trio of street performers in Manhattan in the late 1980s. They gradually began doing stage shows, and recruited more members to put on shows in other cities. There are currently standing productions in such cities as New York, Boston, Chicago, Las Vegas, Berlin, Orlando and Tokyo plus the touring production that is coming here, "How to Be a MegaStar Tour 2.0."

The "How to Be a MegaStar" tour, Frankel said, "is not for new Blue Men." He has previously performed in shows in New York, Chicago and Amsterdam.

"This show in particular is music-driven, and we have an eight-piece rock band behind us.

"Essentially, what we're doing is a satire of a rock concert. But without being boastful, it's also a great rock concert on its own.... It demands a certain level of musical ability you have to draw upon."

In the show, The Blue Men have ordered a manual on how to become a rock star and set out to learn how to rock out on stage -- when to strut, when to pump their fists, and so on.

"There's still the Vaudeville aspect that Blue Man is famous for, like throwing things and catching them in our mouths. There's high art, low art, comedy on society and how it relates to collective experiences, and without being too heady, the shamanistic experience of going to a rock concert and getting carried away by the music, forgetting about your life and what the traffic was like on the way in and your family.

"That's what we're after. We go to see live entertainment to find a blissful feeling, and when you find it, when you feel it, there's nothing like it."

Blue Men involve audience

Members of the Blue Man Group are part percussionist, part clown, part performance artist -- and they're blue, and they never talk. And they put on a heck of a show.

The troupe started in New York and has gone on to create shows in venues large and small in Chicago, Boston, Las Vegas and elsewhere. Each show has three performers.

Their "How to Be a Megastar Tour 2.0" came to Joel Coliseum last night with all the spectacle, offbeat humor and audience interaction they have become known for over the years.

The opening act, Mike Relm, got the audience into the interactive spirit with audio-visual mashups of everything from Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin to Pee-Wee Herman and Peanuts cartoons. Ponchos were handed out to the people in the front row before Blue Man Group took the stage. Performances can involve splatter from water, paint and marshmallows flying through the air.

In the show, the Blue Men decide to become rock stars and go through basic training, learning all the tricks of the trade. In keeping with Blue Man Group tradition, the trio never speak, but they receive their instructions from a Ron Popeil-like infomercial host broadcast on giant screens to the right, left and back center of the stage. The Blue Men are accompanied by an eight-member band, including three percussionists (each with a huge, sprawling drum kit), a keyboardist, a singer, two guitarists and a bass player.

The Blue Men add to the percussion, playing music on standing drums, PVC pipes, flexible poles, and even a grand piano, on its side with its strings exposed.

The show was fun and frenetic, managing to be at once a parody of rock concerts and a fun concert in itself. As a parody, it was smart, sly and subversive, with homages to everything from smoke machines to glam-rock codpieces to obligatory encores. The backup band was terrific, and the lyrics of the songs were quirky and clever.

The Blue Men got the audience involved, leading the crowd in fist pumping, hand gesturing and waving cell phones as if they were cigarette lighters. At various points, they even descended into the crowd and dragged people on stage to become part of the act.