A Kool night for Newport Beach
Young Chang
Of course the first question Robert âKoolâ Bell had to field was,
whyâs he âKool?â
Itâs a nickname from his childhood days in New Jersey, he said.
When he first formed his band decades ago, they were a jazz quartet
called the Jazziacs. As their sound grew more into funk and R&B;, they
tried the name Kool and the Flames. They settled into Kool and the
Gang.
The veteran â70s and â80s band, best known for tracks including
âCelebrationâ and âSummer Madness,â will settle into the Taste of
Newport for its second time as members take the stage tonight.
Kimberlee, a rock, folk and R&B; artist who goes by just the one
name, will open for Kool the same night.
âTwo years ago we had Kool and the Gang on the weekend and we set
a new record at the Taste,â said Jeff Parker, vice president and
director of operations for Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, which
presents the annual food and wine festival. âI think from start to
finish itâs just going to be hit after hit. Iâm sure itâs going to be
another record breaker.â
Parker is most looking forward to âCelebrationâ because itâll set
a party mood.
The 51-year-old Bell agrees that his festive â80s track never
fails.
âItâs an all-time hit whenever thereâs something to celebrate,â he
said. âWhether itâs winning the Super Bowl or winning the World
Series or people getting married and having a good time, itâs a type
of record we cannot take out of the set. That has to be our closing
number.â
This weekend the cause for celebration is simply good eats and
good drinks.
Bell said the band agreed to the encore performance because the
Newport Beach crowd was so receptive the first time.
âAnd itâs a nice area, right on the water there,â the New Jersey
resident said.
After 10 Top Ten hits, two Grammy Awards and about two decades in
the spotlight with major tours everywhere, Kool and the Gang does a
lot of collaborating today and in August put out the hip-hop album
âGangland.â
The group is looking forward to a new album coming out next year
and is also working on a movie about how they came to be, the âweirdâ
things theyâve done and their success.
âPeople were talking about our career and the fact that weâve been
around for over 35 years and weâre one of the bands that have stood
the test of time,â said the bassist and keyboardist. âBut we donât
want just a regular story... more of a human story.â
Bell cited âRemember the Titansâ as being about football, but more
about humanity.
âItâs about people living together and working together,â he said.
âWeâre trying to get with a story that is more than just music.â
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