Links:

PICA : The official PICA website.

TBA:07 : The Time-Based Art Festival HQ.

Recent Posts:

September 8, 2007:
Lifesavas -- Gutterfly

September 8, 2007:
Reggie Watts -- Disinformation

September 8, 2007:
The Age of Sampling - Reggie Watts

September 8, 2007:
Real Work

September 8, 2007:
Peripheral Vision: Melia Donovan, Reading Out Loud and an absent Cristian Silva

September 8, 2007:
Las Chicas Del 3.5 Floppies

September 8, 2007:
The Suicide Kings -- In spite of everything

September 8, 2007:
Las Chicas Del 3.5 Floppies: Got Coke?

September 8, 2007:
Lines – Sight or Otherwise

September 8, 2007:
Map as Destination

Archives:

September 2007

August 2007

May 2007

April 2007

February 2007

January 2007

October 2006

September 2006

August 2006

July 2006

April 2006

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

July 2005

June 2005

Reggie Watts -- Disinformation

From September 8, 2007

Posted by Cody Hoesly

Situationism is...Reggie Watts.

Or at least it was last night, and will be again tonight, and the next night again. At least that's what Reggie's T-shirt implies and the TBA catalog confirms. If a situationist is one who creates situations, then the advertising was right. One minute Reggie was telling us about coming out gay (you register online and are sent a Gay Integration Counselor); the next minute he was descending into a cavern beneath a dance club like Indiana Jones; the next minute that story had ended and Reggie was making music. Soon there was dancing, then we were back to videos, another story, more sounds, and soon we couldn't hear what Reggie was saying because he wasn't saying anything. He was, but he was muting his voice on purpose to mimic a broken mic.

In other words, the show was absurdist -- full of pop culture references, advertising and sales tropes, and an apparent focus on creating situations and moods more than advancing an overall tale or plot. True, Reggie did keep coming back to the year 2012 (when the world will end), and much of the show seemed to want to prepare us for that eventuality, such as by reducing our consumption of energy. But that was interspersed with Bill Cosby imitations among other seemingly random bursts of vocal creativity. Is there no sound Reggie can't make with his mouth? A modern Michael Winslow, but altogether something different.

Perhaps that is why the catalog description of this show is so vague. It certainly can't be called misleading. Go see this show for these reasons: It is funny. You will get most of the referential jokes and satire. The beatboxing and other vocalizations will amaze you. Reggie's partners, which include a singer and a dancer, are both amazing. Amy O'Neal seems about as in control of her body as Reggie is of his mouth. And that's saying a lot. This show is a joy.

<< | Posted on September 8, 2007 at 7:38 PM | >>

DAILY ARCHIVE >>

Comments (0):

Post a comment:




Remember Me?