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The Kiki Dee Band

Sample this concert
  1. 1Supercool02:58
  2. 2Step By Step04:30
  3. 3Little Frozen One04:36
  4. 4Sugar On The Floor04:39
  5. 5Two Trains04:23
  6. 6Heart and Soul04:16
  7. 7Six Days On The Road02:56
  8. 8I've Got The Music In Me06:22
  9. 9You Need Help (Incomplete Outtake)02:10
Liner Notes

Kiki Dee - vocals; Jo Partridge - guitar; Toby Bias Boshell - keyboards; B.J. Cole - pedal steel guitar; Mike Wedgwood - bass; Pete Clarke - drums

A versatile singer, songwriter, lyricist, and actress, Kiki Dee has scored 10 hit singles over the course of a career now spanning four decades. Often credited as one of the finest British female vocalists, Kiki Dee has never followed any single path, singing pop, rock, soul, blues, disco and even world music, as well as issuing recordings in six different languages. Throughout her career, Dee has embraced musical diversity, which has freed her from ever becoming pigeonholed. As a result she has remained free to record and perform a wide variety of material. Her most famous song, "Don't Go Breaking My Heart," was a duet with Elton John, which was released in 1976 and went to Number 1 in the UK Singles Chart and the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. Dee's recording career actually began long before that when she released her first album, "I'm Kiki Dee" in 1968. Late the following year, she became the first white woman ever to be signed to Berry Gordy's Tamla-Motown label, for which she recorded the Great Expectations album in 1970. After limited international success, she was signed to Elton John's Rocket Records label. Her first album for Rocket, 1973's Loving & Free was produced by Elton John and featured a diverse range of material, from string laden ballads to a gutsy horn-infused version of Free's "Travelin' In Style." Kiki Dee's breakthrough occurred with the follow-up album, I've Got The Music In Me, where Elton John again helped Dee achieve stylistic diversity while getting to the heart of each song. This 1974 album remains her most popular recording.

It was during the American tour promoting the release of her "I've Got The Music In Me" album that this recording was made. Opening for Steely Dan at the Warner Theatre in Fresno, this set captures the Kiki Dee Band in their prime. Dee had assembled a remarkable band for this tour which featured Toby Bias Boshell, a veteran of the British folk-rock band Trees as her musical director on keyboards. The group also featured ex-Joan Armatrading guitarist Jo Partridge, veteran Liverpool drummer Pete Clarke, bassist Mike Wedgewood and B.J. Cole, one of the greatest and most widely respected British session musicians on pedal steel guitar.

Not surprisingly, Kiki Dee's set primarily focuses on material from the two albums she recorded for Elton John's Rocket Records. The set begins in progress, with Dee belting out the raunchy "Supercool," written by Elton and Bernie Taupin, from the 1973 album Loving & Free. The set continues with the polished and well-crafted Bias Boshell song, "Step By Step," This is a fairly straightforward pop-rock number, but it is on the following song, "Frozen Little One," composed by Kiki Dee herself, that her vocal abilities become much more impressive. This electric piano based ballad features tasteful accompaniment that continues to build throughout the song. Dee's vocal is front and center and is strong and emotive on this introspective ballad. "Sugar On The Floor," another Dee original, continues in a similar vein, again showcasing her vocals in a most positive light.

She continues with two more new album songs written by Boshell, with a classic Lowell George number sandwiched in between. First up is the commercially geared rocker, "You Need Help," which allows Dee to belt out her vocals (This was incomplete and has been added as an outtake at the end of the recording). An adventurous cover of Little Feat's "Two Trains" follows in a similar fashion. However, it is the next song, "Heart And Soul," that is possibly the most compelling song of the set. Here, Dee is at her most soulful, recalling both Bonnie Raitt and Sheryl Crowe at times. Dee closes her set with a high energy rocked out arrangement of the Dave Dudley truck-driving anthem, "Six Days On The Road," followed by an extended romp on the ever popular "I've Got The Music In Me," which allows the entire band to shine.