For about 12 years, the heavy-touring Brooklyn-based Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings brought
1970s-style funk and soul music to an increasingly larger fan base. The band's fifth
album, Give the People What They Want,
and its supportive concert tour were to spearhead the revivalist movement even
further in the spring of 2013. Suddenly, Jones was diagnosed with pancreatic
cancer and everything stopped. The album's release was placed on hold and Jones
and the band members were silent for nearly a year. Jones had surgery in New
York City, then received treatments and recovered from June 2013 to January
2014 in Sharon Springs, New York. She completed her chemotherapy treatments a
month ago, and two weeks ago, she announced that she was cancer-free. The long-delayed
album was released on January 14 and a victory tour was launched tonight at the
Beacon Theater.
The disease that attempted to silence Jones seemed to have
made her stronger in the end. In the group's first show in nearly a year, Jones
shared with her audience that "this past year was hell." She joyfully
celebrated her return, joking about how she was nervous about coming on stage
again because she worried if people would like her without hair. No longer
sporting braids, she added "Since I don't have hair, I'm gonna shake my
head!" Back to doing what she loved best, Jones sang her trademark soul
songs with seemingly bottomless lungs, kicked off her shoes several times and throughout
the 90 minute show danced energetically to the music in a nonstop soul marathon.
There was little need for seats in the theater, as most of the audience danced
and grooved with her for the entire show. She called on friends, including a
fellow cancer survivor, to dance with her on stage. Several times in the show,
she asked for the house lights to be
turned on so she could introduce her oncologist, relatives, and even residents
of Sharon Springs.
As the Dap-Kings played crisp funk stompers, powered by a blaring
brass combo and a feel-good rhythm section, Jones remained in fine voice,
singing with the kind of sweet passion one finds in a gospel choir. Perhaps the
greatest standouts were not her original songs, but her steaming fuel-immersed cover
of Woody Guthrie's "This Land
Is Your Land," followed by a reinterpretation of a Motown standard,
"I Heard It Through the Grapevine." During the encore, Jones sang
about (and demonstrated!) popular dances from the 1960s -- the jerk, the twist,
the pony, the boogaloo and the camel walk. For Jones and the Dap-Kings, the year
of darkness was defeated. It was all about having a good time now. The audience
was invited to share in this special celebration.
Visit Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings at www.sharonjonesandthedapkings.com.
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