For Honeyman Street | Sean Sennett & Band

Love themes, a sextet of singers, great writing and a solid band.  A Sunday sesh with heart.

Walking into the Southbank Piazza for a 4pm show made me realise quite how much I’m missing the spiegeltents that have been a regular feature of recent Brisbane festivals. This isn’t a complaint; more a wish list for the post-covid return to events we have known and loved. For now, I’m just so pleased that Brisbane is able to host a festival in 2021—and have enjoyed seeing how the Southbank Piazza works for different live performances. The space worked well for this showensuring that For Honeyman Street felt suitably intimate in a covid-safe way. The bigger space also enabled Sennett and band to be joined by a sextet of singers, for a one-hour set of numbers old and new.

The band walked on stage, the lights dimmed, and a glamourous vision in gold took to the stage and opened a book. With lines such as, ’I wrote you a song because I was high on love,’ the scene was set. Our reader left the stage, and the band opened with All Tied Up, sung by ‘Coorparoo Country Queen’ (to quote Sennett) Megan Cooper, and included an excellent guitar solo by Jason Millhouse. Sadly, this was one of the early numbers where the sound balance wasn’t doing anyone any favours, and I wasn’t alone in struggling to hear the words. Which is a great pity for a show where the words—all carefully crafted by Sennett (and co-writers)—are so very important.

Fortunately by the time Charlotte Emily was welcomed to the stage, for My Restless Heart, the worst of the initial sound problems seemed to have been addressed. At least for where I was sitting.

Having six female vocalists to call upon meant that Sennett was able to craft a set that touched on a different aspects of love, and embraced a variety of musical styles. From country to rock, from Bowie influences through to a Beatles vibe, and from funkier pieces through to soft rock. Not at all bad for just one hour.

Each of the female singers had the opportunity to shine. My favourite of Rachael Dixon’s numbers was Meet you at the Lost and Found (with crisp work on the keys by the excellent Peta Leigh Wilson) Roz Pappalardo brought great heart, and powerhouse vocals, to what was introduced as ‘the saddest Christmas song ever.’ And fortunately, Cooper had the opportunity to return to centre stage the up-tempo Oscar & Lucinda, where the improved sound balance ensured we could enjoy the rocking country voice and hear the words.

For Honeyman Street had a great range of vocalists who were equally at home in harmonising and providing backing vocals as well as taking centre stage. Of course, it is unfair to pick favourites, but I really enjoyed Charlotte Emily’s lead vocals and harmonies. The poignant Where is she now? Was particularly special thanks to the harmonies of sisters Charlotte Emily and Gabriella Grace—and was, of course, greatly enhanced by Sennett’s introductory fortune-teller anecdote…

Dana Gehrman (‘the girl from number three’) absolutely rocked the house. I loved each of the songs Gehrman performed, with a definite highlight being My Love is a Kite. Having the live music accompanying Michael Gracey’s quirky and amusing My Love is a Kite video was really special. A gorgeous, funky piece, enhanced with Gehrman’s lead vocals (and enthusiastic work on the maraca) and with Emily’s soaring high notes. 

Sennett is a successful songwriter, and also proved to be an entertaining live performer with a really solid band. Right time, right place, wrong girl was an enjoyable rock-n-roll number (led by Sennett with backing vocals by Cooper and Gehrman), which was greatly enhanced with hearing the tale of the epic best burger drive, and of Dave’s failed romance. As with all good performers, Sennett also knows what his audience wants to hear. We were rewarded with a set that included the fabulous 1973 Monument City Lights, where the band was joined by Dixon with backing vocals from Emily, Cooper and Pappalardo.

As a relative newcomer to Brisbane, I really enjoy those ‘a-ha’ moments when I discover a little more of the history of my home city. Such as realising that the very expert radio commentator, who is happy to chat with ABC Radio’s Kelly Higgins-Devine, not only knows a lot about Australian music, but is also a talented songwriter who is more than happy to pick up a guitar and don his pale blue DJ (dinner jacket on this occasion, not person who runs the nightclub turntables).

For Honeyman Street was a an enjoyable ‘Sunday Sesh.’ I found myself musing as to whether bar takings have been up at the 2021 ‘Brisfest’, as patrons valiantly strive to keep a filled glass in front of them in order to remove masks. The audience left swaying to the tunes, and buying the ‘merch.’

For Honeyman Street had one performance during the 2021 Brisbane Festival (Southbank Piazza, 4pm, 12 September). Picture Credit: Creative Futures Photography.

Catherine Lawrence

Originally from the UK, Brisbane is now home—which means that Catherine admits to missing family, friends, European travel, and UK theatre (in particular the quality and quantity of productions, and of performance spaces). A serial volunteer, she is a long-standing Anywhere Festival reviewer and can also be found on Geoff’s Creative Futures website (perspectives reviews, often written when carrying Geoff’s photography bag to events). Always interested in established theatre, seeks out opportunities to see new local and international work. A supporter of new performers and productions, she seeks out most theatre, circus, cabaret, contemporary dance, Indigenous performances, and… well... just about anything (usually except for opera).

https://creativefutures.online/review-index/
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