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October 12, 2011
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Bryan Ferrry at Casino Rama
Photos Maureen Vitelli
Incorporating a few Roxy Music tracks alongside some covers and material from his most recent album Olympia, Bryan Ferry certainly put on a show which was worthy of the surroundings, a career-spanning two-hour marathon, with interval, which rather creditably did away with the
affectation of an encore.

The black-suited singer occasionally played piano as part of a
seven-piece band, with four backing singers in sequinned dresses flanking the stage and two dancers in pink swimsuits suggesting that Ferry might have mourned the day they stopped putting semi-naked ladies on the side of beer cans.

There were excerpts from his recent Dylan covers album Dylanesque and Roxy Music's cover of the most un-Roxy-like Like a Hurricane by Neil Young, as well as stand-out tracks such as Alphaville and You Can Dance from last year's solo album Olympia, all set to a backdrop of arthouse clips and animations blended with a live feed of the band.

Each song, particularly latterday Roxy Music B-sides like to Turn You On and My Only Love, and Ferry's own Avalon, were abetted by his glorious and distinctive baritone, but it wasn't until the closing straight of Love is the  Drug, Editions of You and Let's Stick Together that the set truly kicked into life, warming us up for Ferry's definitive torch song in John Lennon's Jealous Guy.
BY Joe Taylor