US – Tuesday, March 16
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
Quite the bright, Buble personality
For three very successful records, Michael Buble has reinterpreted standards. But when it came to last fall’s hit album, “Crazy Love,” the pop/jazz singer decided it was time to start telling his own stories and included two originals, including the Sinatra-esque “Haven’t Met You Yet.”
 
The return from being a ‘Runaway’
Cherie Currie’s name may not be as immediately recognizable as Joan Jett’s, but with this week’s release of “The Runaways” movie —which stars Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning — a new generation is sure to learn at least one thing: Madonna wasn’t the first blond bombshell to don a corset while rocking the mic. Currie did it first.
 
When history books really do suck: Old Abe meets the vampires
Although it strikes most people as an usual combination, vampires and Abraham Lincoln seemed like a perfectly natural pairing to “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” author Seth Grahame-Smith.
 
Valerie Harper gets ‘Looped,’ dahling
Tallulah Bankhead was as much of a character as she was an actress. Although she set the screen on fire in such films as Alfred Hitchcock’s “Lifeboat” and garnered rave reviews on Broadway, her scandalous personal life — and her witty take on her indiscretions — made her a legend. Valerie Harper takes on Bankhead in her twilight years in the new Broadway production of “Looped.”
 
Published 22:35, February the 8th, 2010
 
Tyley Ross, left, sings while Miguel Quinones dances in “Remember Me.” Tyley Ross, left, sings while Miguel Quinones dances in “Remember Me.”
Photo: BILL HEBERT
 

Dancing while the skinny lady sings

Expect a program change

The singers rest during weekend matinees and on Feb. 17 and 18, while the dancers mount a collection of “greatest hits” from Parsons’ repertory going back to the 1982 “Caught,” in which a strobe light makes a soloist appear to fly.

METRO/EZ
 

You’ve heard of the jukebox musical? David Parsons and singers AnnMarie Milazzo and Tyley Ross of the East Village Opera Co. offer a jukebox opera, playing nightly at the Joyce. Eleven Parsons dancers share the stage with Milazzo and Ross, who clutch microphones cranked to 11 and stroll through the action. On the recorded soundtrack, three drummers create a wall of sound so loud you — well, I — want to hide under the seat. Digital video of abstract patterns, natural landscapes and stunning architecture change for each song.

Both rock concert and dance show, “Remember Me” has movers shaking their booties while the singers, dressed in black, croon timeless ditties from “La Boheme,” “Carmen,” “Dido and Aeneas,” and other opera classics. Howell Binkley lights the stage as if it were Madison Square Garden; the dancers gyrate like performers at a halftime show or the senior prom, acting out a shadowy plot in which two guys want the same woman.

It’s choreography for audiences with attention deficit disorder: Nothing goes on for very long, and the piece makes up in energy and drive what it lacks in sense and sophistication. My favorite section is sort of faux-Egyptian, the linked dancers making rectangular shapes with their arms while video of the same actions plays on the wall.

Parsons Dance
Through Feb. 21
Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Ave.
$10-$59, 212-242-0800
www.joyce.org


ELIZABETH ZIMMER
 
 
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MMMpod
The March MMMpod features conversation and music from Surfer Blood and The Allman Brothers Band (There's a double-bill you're not too likely to see. However, Gregg Allman does mention Hannah Montana!). We also speak with Vampire Weekend and the Dropkick Murphys.
 
 
 
Metro Life Panel