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Leaving
Las Vegas
Toxic Audio impresses with wide range of vocal abilities
by By Liz Byrum
The Observer Online
On Friday
night, the Leighton Concert hall felt more like it was in Las Vegas, Nev.
than Notre Dame, Ind.
The group Toxic Audio, which is
gaining recognition and recently played its first Las Vegas show at the
Luxor Hotel on Aug. 19, made a one-night appearance on campus and blew the
crowd away with its amazing vocal stretches, harmonies and theatrical
performance.
Toxic Audio, founded in 1998,
has spent the last few years performing in New York City and other areas of
the U.S. for various audiences. After a break this Christmas, the group will
travel to Japan for a six-week tour. The group has also made appearances at
various universities and schools of music, but Friday was its first visit to
Notre Dame.
Toxic Audio can sing in a wide
range of octaves and in a wide range of languages, as well. In one song
Friday, Michelle Mailhot-Valines - the group's bubbly blonde soprano - sang
a song that jumped between Korean, German, Pig Latin and other languages
without missing a beat.
As the members of Toxic Audio
took their spots on stage, people all around the theatre were shocked at the
sounds the singers were making purely with their voices. Toxic Audio founder
Rene Ruiz said the opening number is one of his favorites because it
"introduces the audience to what we're going to do."
"It's great looking out at the
crowd at this time and sensing their discovery," he said.
The show was a successful start
to the DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts' second season. A large
crowd filled Leighton Concert Hall Friday evening, with audience members
from Notre Dame and the South Bend community.
A few of the people in the
audience even got the chance to spend some time on stage with the group.
During the skits that Toxic Audio performed, one of the singers came down
into the audience, grabbed an unsuspecting audience member and helped him
onstage.
Each member of the group was
given the chance to showcase their special talents at some point during the
show. Jeremy James freestyled a rap made up of words audience members chose
out of a book. Cheers erupted when James finished the rap with a rhyme about
Notre Dame. One member of the audience called James' wife, Shalisa's,
performance of "Stand by Me" "the most beautiful version of that song I've
ever heard."
Ruiz showcased his bass voice
with a mock string bass solo. Ruiz also took part in many skits throughout
the show that had the audience roaring with laughter.
The final number of the evening
was an extended version of the song, "Turn the Beat Around." The group's
beat-boxer extraordinaire, Paul Sperrazza, stole the number when he broke
into an amazing beat box routine that made it hard to believe he was only
using his mouth.
The mixture of musical genres
held the audience's attention throughout the show because they never knew
what they were going to hear next. A cover of the Beatles' "Paperback
Writer" had people moving in their seats and was even accompanied by James
juggling a few paperback books.
One of the more theatrical
concepts of the night occurred when a woman was brought on stage to "watch
TV" with the group. A remote control clicked the performers went through
different television theme songs.
The end of this performance
included two of the group members taking off their shirts and dancing behind
the woman from the audience. This was an amusing touch for the older members
of the crowd but may have been a little much for the under-10 audience that
had been seen filing into the theatre with their parents.
No matter what crazy antics
Toxic Audio performed on the stage, they continued to amaze with their
sound-making abilities. The searing guitar solos, animal noises and
incredible harmonies left a feeling of wonder and amazement with the crowd
as the performers exited Leighton Concert Hall.
It's obvious that Toxic Audio
members are doing so well in Las Vegas because they know what they're doing,
and they are doing it well.
Click on the links below to read what other
media outlets
are saying about Toxic Audio!
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