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From Almond Joy to Carmen Sandiego

Rockapella brings variety to a cappella

By John Bailey

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Published: Monday, November 10, 2008

Updated: Monday, January 18, 2010

Rockapella by Pauley.jpg

Pauley Chea

From left to right: Kevin Wright, John Brown, Scott Leonard, George Baldi and Jeff Thacher, the members of Rockapella. Rockapella sings about anything and everything, according to Leonard; this included many popular commercial jingles at their Friday night show.

"We'll sing about anything," said Scott Leonard, Rockapella's high tenor, at the Jorgensen Center for the Performing Arts Friday night. "And I mean anything."

Leonard then led the vocal group in a mock "Preparation H" commercial jingle. The five men also crooned their way through some real commercial tunes of theirs - including the famous "Folgers" coffee jingle.

What's the verdict - is Rockapella a group of corporate sell-outs or talented, enterprising artists?

When the crowd reacts the way they did on Friday night, does it really matter?

"It was amazing - [I loved] all of it, all their voices," said Mercedes Howard, a 5th-semester French major. "I'm in a dream state right now. They dazzled me."

Rockapella took the audience through a tour of their discography, both original compositions and covers, ranging from their very first album - a cover of The Hollies' "Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress " - to 2002's "Smilin'" - to their original "Dance With Me."

And, for the most part, they brought the house down. Drawing from R&B, jazz, soul and funk, their smooth vocal harmonies and energetic charm kept the audience clapping, laughing and singing along. Their sound was complemented by the confident beats of Jeff Thatcher - "The kind of vocal percussion in the globe of Earth," Leonard said.

Aided by projection screens imitating a wobbly sunset, "Rockapella" aimed to provide a shot of summer in the increasingly chilly Storrs weather - sand, sun and soul were the watchwords of the night. At one point, the group invited a member of the audience - "Jennifer" - to come on stage and weather the full force of their crooning.

"I was totally jealous of Jennifer," said Valerie Herstatt, a senior at Central Connecticut State University. "Best part of the night? Slowly getting over my jealousy."

The heat was turned up substantially when bass George Baldi stole the show with a rendition of The Temptations' "Papa Was A Rolling Stone." Judging from the audience reaction, Baldi grabbed the strongest moments of the night - from his rumbling "creamy dark chocolate" in the "Almond Joy" jingle to an adorable story about his voice coach.

Rockapella shone at other times, too, with a strong performance by tenor John Brown in "Stand By Me," a frenetic vocal percussion solo from Thatcher and, of course, a raucously received "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?"

Not every moment was golden, unfortunately. While Rockapella's singing shone, the night dragged noticeably during their between-song banter, with a few misfired jokes.

"I hear the guys around Storrs like to wear Speedos at the beach - what's up with that?" and long-winded stories that outlasted the crowd's energy.

And, though the performance was usually spot-on, there were a few holes. Leonard flubbed a few phrase endings, turning some notes into awkward yelps, and the group's dancing occasionally felt barely controlled: they all looked good individually, but not necessarily together.

Missteps aside, Rockapella's performance was entertaining - and to some, it was even more: "It's because of them that I love a cappella," said Aggrey Ambenge, a 5th-semester economics major. "I like to see them live and performing. It brings tears to your eyes - it's beautiful and majestic."

The group performed a second show on Saturday night.

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