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Generation whY?

Column: Exhibitionist  |  Date Published: Tuesday, 12 May 09   |  1 year, 4 months ago



     X + Y

I was reading an article in the paper on the weekend which was discussing how the GFC (Global Financial Crisis- though everyone loves using the acronym these days) was going to affect Generation Y. One of those interviewed seemed to be rubbing his chubby middle aged hands with glee at the prospect that finally those arrogant and lazy youngsters would finally get their comeuppance. For so long they had existed in a world of endless credit and opportunity with all the power in their smooth wrinkle free hands (hands which had never been hardened by the need to dig the foundations of society or be dried out by washing their stained labourers uniforms… ).

Well if you, like this member of Generation Y, would prefer to spend an evening listening to the music that was the soundtrack of the years of our gestation and rise to adulthood instead of the bleatings of a bitter old man then I suggest you put down that weekly and get your still-optimistic and taut young body off to the Street Theatre for a performance of Hayden Tee’s Generation whY?.

Generation whY? features re-jigged versions of some of the most influential music of the Generation Y era (roughly 1980 -1994), performed by cabaret star and generation Yster, 28-year-old Hayden Tee. Hayden performs works from the back catalogues of Michael Jackson (when he was still more genius than freak), Enya, Cyndie Lauper and Crowded House (Tee is from New Zealand, after all). The performance isn’t a set of karaoke numbers but instead sees Hayden use a disc and video jockey to mix the works live.

Hayden explained that the initial idea for the show sprung from a discussion with a musical director in London who suggested that Hayden “start looking at some ’80s material as a possible match for my voice type. He brought a CD in of some of his favourite songs and I realised that these were actually the songs I grew up listening to, the songs that were played on the radio, in the car…. the memories started flooding back.” From this discussion the seed was planted which would eventually grow into not only the stage show but also the accompanying CD (also title Generation whY?). “There were a few things I wanted to do differently for this album; the main thing was recording it live in front of an audience in order to capture the emotion and performance aspect only seen and heard when there are people to react to.”

This is not to say that the show has stayed stagnant since its inception.  “The show has gone through a lot of changes since that recorded performance in Sydney in February; the most drastic being the script and show concept. During my recent time in New Zealand doing My Fair Lady I have had the chance to research and discover some of the deepest, darkest, brightest and funniest information about my heritage and family and this is now where the show has found a life of its own, not just a selection of songs from the era of 1980-1994 but a look back at over 100 years of my family and comparing each generation and therefore examining Generation Y and future generations to come.”

This then begs the question, what is ...

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