INDEPENDENT NEWS

Fringe Review: L Is For Love, Love Is For Losers

Published: Fri 26 Feb 2010 01:41 PM
Fringe Review: L Is For Love, Love Is For LosersReviewed by Patti Huxley


Click
to enlarge
L is for Love, Love is for Losers
Gabriel Page
24-27 Feb
Bodega - The Burgundy Room, 101 Ghuznee Street
$15/$10/$8
L is for Love, Love is for Losers is a delightful, hour-long addition to the Fringe Festival’s comedy programme. The music is great. The jokes are funny. Plus Gabriel Page is a pleasure to watch and has a great voice to boot!
In this show, Gabriel demonstrates that he’s a skilful lyricist, guitarist and singer. His talent shines in his ability to deliver cheeky rhymes that twist the story of his song's character in surprising and hilarious ways.
I don’t often laugh out loud at comedians, but I had a good giggle throughout L is for Love. And I wasn’t the only one.
Each song presented a different take on the theme of love, from satirising modern relationships in the song “Facebook Girl”, to helping us understand one-sided relationships in “Baby, you’re a dead girl” and empathising with unrequited love in “It’s not easy (being your stalker)”. The set was very well-structured, effectively mixing different styles and tempos. Each song has its own personality and its own sound. My personal favourite was the 'Break-up song', where Gabriel's sweet melody plays off against the (rather one-sided) story of a scorned lover.
Aside from the performance, it would’ve been nice to have some love songs playing pre-show to set the mood for the audience. The heavy metal music that did play felt a bit jarring and didn’t seem to complement the show’s theme.
That said, I still had a great time at this show. If you’re a fan of musical comedy or even if you’re just cynical about love songs – L is for Love, Love is for Losers is well worth your precious Festival dollars.
********
L is for Love... press release
Scoop Coverage: Fringe 2010
Scoop Review
Scoop Independent News
Scoop is NZ's largest independent news source; respected widely in media, political, business and academic circles for being the place on the internet for publishing "what was really said", and for the quality of its analysis of issues.

Next in Comment

On bird flu, AUKUS entry fees and Cindy Lee
By: Gordon Campbell
Israel’s Anti-UNRWA Campaign Falls Flat
By: Binoy Kampmark
Dunne's Weekly: Luxon Gets Out His Butcher's Knife - Briefly
By: Peter Dunne
Warring Against Encryption: Australia Is Coming For Your Communications
By: Binoy Kampmark
On Fast Track Powers, Media Woes And The Tiktok Ban
By: Gordon Campbell
Censorship Wars: Elon Musk, Safety Commissioners And Violent Content
By: Binoy Kampmark
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media