One Love Order at the Border Post-Show Recap
by Matt Bauer
A rough start on Friday notwithstanding, the One Love Order At The Border festival showcased some of the finest acts in reggae, soul, blues and R&B over its three-day run this weekend. The Grove (located behind the Floral Showhouse along the Niagara Parkway) proved an ideal venue and the lovely weather as well as the close proximity of the falls and its attractions ensured a pleasant experience for the attendees.
An accident on the QEW resulted the late arrival of stage equipment and an extended delay for the headlining acts which resulted in some frustration Friday. As a thank you, the promoters allowed the eveningβs ticket holders free entry for the following day. Nevertheless, veteran artist Peter Ranking and Prezident Brown dropped some engaging dancehall sounds. Sister Isis who along with Muchmusic icon Master T co-hosted Fridayβs program dubbed the crowd βreggae-lutionariesβ as Jah Bouks took to the stage like gangbusters. Venerable crooner Johnny Osbourne followed and any ill will on the part of the audience seemed to vaporize when the legendary Freddie McGregor took the stage with a ball pen of back to back showstoppers. It was well worth waiting for.
The stage was set up promptly on Saturday as 4:45 PM. Torontoβs Kulcha Ites served up some fine dancehall but things really got into gear once Britainβs βDemolition Manβ arrived. His rapid-fire delivery energized the sparse crowd and Fiya Lionβs high energy presentation heated things up even further. Polished reggae-soul crooner Show Stevens was a favorite of the young ladies in the crowd before The Dazz Band took the stage to show the youngβuns how itβs done. βThis is how you do it old school,β proclaimed front man Skip Martin and with matching suits, hats, sunglasses and a groove so tight you could bounce a quarter off of it, the Cleveland legends were the epitome of funky cool.
Bay Area funk legends ConFunkShun delivered an equally scorching, but brief set with horn-driven funk classics like βChase Me, β βShake and Dance With Me,β and the self-explanatory βFfun. βThey were the best youβve had all day,β shouted out an audience member.
Sunday was a more musically varied day with a brilliant set by eclectic bluesman Corey Harris and a charming solo acoustic appearance by up and comer Emily Raquel before soul man Lenny Williams appeared. Best known as one of the lead singers of Tower of Power and now 69, the charismatic Williams performed T.O.P. standards like βThis Time Itβs Real,β βSo Very Hard To Goβ and βYouβre Still A Young Manβ with such verve, well, he sounded like a young man.
Resplendent in a multi-colored summer dress and in terrific voice, the force of nature thatβs Faith Evans was the undisputed highlight of the festival proving without a doubt that sheβs one of modern R&Bβs finest artists. Rocking favorites like βYou Gets No Love,β βLove Like This,β βI Love Youβ Β and βAgain,β Evans simply brought the house down.
*Pictured Above: Faith Evans at the One Love Order at the Border festival. Photo Courtesy of G 98.7Β FM.Β
Closing the festival at 11:30 PM, The Whispers were anything but anticlimactic, performing their trademark mix of sultry soul and invigorating boogie that had audience members of all ages grooving to classics like βItβs A Love Thing,β βIn the Raw,β and βRock Steady.β
Check out www.cliftonhill.com for all of the information you need to know about the World Famous Street of Fun by the Falls, and all other upcoming events.
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One Love Order at the Border Post-Show Recap
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