The Straits Times - Life Section.
Monday, 12 September 2011.
Youthful antics make Korean boyband Shinee's show here a glowing success.
Review Concert: SHINee World - SHINee @ Singapore Indoor Stadium/Last Saturday (10/09).
akshita nanada
It seems an achievable dream, given the non-stop applause last saturday from 6000 fans at the singapore indoor stadium, even when five young adult performers spat water at one another for 15 minutes.
Forget the $1.7-million budget for shinee world, clearly spent on slick anime background videos, flame throwers, fireworks and harnesses holding the singers in mid-air as they shot green laser beams from X-Men-style claws.
The most memorable part of the group's first solo concert here was the boundless energy and relentless cheer of performers Lee Tae Min, 18, Lee "O New" Jin Ki, 21 Kim "Key" Kibum, 19 and 20 year olds Kim Jong Hyun and Choi Min Ho. They leapt around the stage for almost three hours, singing their hearts out, when they could probably have phoned their performance in with little punishment.
The predominantly female audience was mostly of the age or stage of infatuation to applaud anything the lads did or said. Viewers even loudly cheered the short video films of the five the signalled the end of a set and came with words such as "A boy sends off a heartache"
Lesser bands might have take advantage of this fan fever, at the very least getting cover acts to give them a break. But SHINee owned the stage from start to finish, executing synchronised dance moves worthy of Bollywood while belting out 29 songs such as peppy hits Replay, Ring Ding Dong and Love Like Oxygen, as well as the dark stylish Lucifer.
Occasionally, one singer would give the others a rest by coming forward to show off solo. Key wowed the crowd with a cheeky number, My First Kiss, but i could have done without Jong Hyun's uncomfortably falsetto lament, Lost Love. It was almost as embarrassing as the schmaltzy korean song, lullaby which involved band members in angel wings cuddling seven-year-old baptist lim, a singaporean child actor.
Still, the rest of the audience lapped it up, cheering and waving around $30000 worth of limited-edition SHINee lightsticks. At least two thirds of viewers had queued up before the show for the $9 green wands.
The performers returned the love by prancing up and down the Y-shaped stage extension, throwing colourful balls into the crowd. They also cheerfully donned the gifts thrown at them in return, appearing honestly happy over headgear shaped like cows or reindeer.
Clearly accustomed to much colder weather, they ended the concert upending bottles of mineral water on one another and taking gulps of the beverage, only to spit it out on the nearest band member.
While the Merlion imitations were funny in context, it is hard to imagine how this five might continue in the future without youthful charm to make such antics palatable. Ah well, for now, it is still a bright Shinee world.
akshitan@sph.com.sg
Source: The Straits Times
Source: The Straits Times
Shared by: JjongFacts.
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