Sting, Brian Wilson Rock a Family Affair at Carnegie Hall for Rainforest Benefit

5/9/08, 2:34 pm EST

Over the last 15 years, Sting and his wife Trudie Styler have hosted a bi-annual charity concert at New York’s Carnegie Hall to celebrate the Rainforest Foundation Fund, which the two founded in 1989 to preserve rainforests and its inhabitants around the world. Last night’s show featured many familiar faces, including James Taylor and Billy Joel, who’ve performed at the concert many times. But this year’s spectacular gala also featured some welcome surprise guests, including Joel’s daughter (Alexa Ray), Taylor’s kids (Ben and Sally), Sting’s daughter (Coco Sumner), Clarence Clemons, singer-songwriter Feist and Brian Wilson.

Photos from the Rainforest Foundation Fund benefit

The first portion of the evening was surprisingly relaxed given the elegant environment of Carnegie Hall. Sting, Taylor, Joel and all their children — including a barefoot Ben Taylor — joined together for a faithful cover of the Byrds’ “Turn! Turn! Turn!” The evening featured many casual family duets: Joel and Alexa turned out a cabaret-influenced version of “Baby Grand” while the Taylors teamed up for the meditative ballad “You Can Close Your Eyes.” Coco Sumner, however, showed off her immense, smoky voice with a sultry performance of her own tune called “Bohemian Love.” Other highlights of the first set included Feist — backed by a 34-piece orchestra — nailing a perfect version of her hit song “1234” as well as a set-closing Mardi Gras-style performance of ‘When the Saints Go Marching In,” which concluded with all the participants parading through the aisles.

Things heated up for the second portion of the concert. While the crew set up the stage for Brian Wilson, Sting and Dustin Hoffman filled in by performing a Hoffman-penned ballad called “Shoot the Breeze.” The show really took off for the Beach Boys mastermind’s excellent performance: Wilson — dressed casually in a cool blue-and-white-striped rugby shirt and jeans — performed serotonin-inducing classics like “God Only Knows,” “Help Me Rhonda” and “Do You Wanna Dance,” which featured some crazy psychedelic light shows. “Good Vibrations,” which featured the entire night’s all-star lineup, capped the set.

So what did the performers think of the event? “It was very emotional,” Sting told Rolling Stone after the show. “Coco was amazing. Alexa and the Taylors were fantastic. It’s evolution at work. And they’re better than we are.”

[Photo: Jason Bergman/RollingStone.com]


Comments

Natashia | 5/12/2008, 2:59 pm EST

Trudie is as ugly on the inside as she is on the outside. THIS “CHARITY” IS A FRAUD FOLKS, listed as THE WORST in New York. They only do it so Sting and his homely wife can hoarde the funds for tax purposes. plus they have one of the WORST CARBON footprints of any artist.
I can now see why Sharron Osbourne hates trudie ‘coat tail gold digger’ Styler

chris | 5/12/2008, 10:02 am EST

As for no effort, the guy sets the thing up and is still in the middle of a world tour. what a bunch of whiney pricks you lot are. piss off in your suv!!!

red-haired goddess | 5/11/2008, 7:39 pm EST

Tell us what you REALLY think!

Mojo Truth | 5/11/2008, 4:45 pm EST

The show was HORRIBLE. I was there. Sting was an arrogant jerk who threw this EXPENSIVE extravaganza into place last minute. The mix was not good and it was difficult to hear the singers. At the end of the first half, Billy Joel stole the show with his performances and then danced most of the people into the audience in the aisles, having a good time. Right at the start, Sting the host walked off the stage. In the second half, the cellist Natalie Clein’s performance was interrupted TWICE with the background practicing of the next act for a full 5-10 seconds. Then the trumpet player (formerly in Sting’s band) came out to perform the safest “let’s not screw up” piece you could find. Sting admitted that French operatic tenor Roberto Alagna canceled so he had another fill-in (amazing!) She was actually excellent. But they took SO long to set up Brian Wilson’s band that Dustin Hoffman was called up from the crowd to have Sting ad-lib a song Dustin wrote, reading the words of a pad. Brian Wilson played at least 5 songs and was clearly the worst act of all. The man cannot sing at all any more, didn’t play a NOTE on the keyboard and guitar that were wheeled out for him, and didn’t say a word to the crowd. All of us thought he was smashing drunk as he teetered on the stage after moving away from the keyboard. The ending was a big messy singfest that sounded like the worst, thinnest rock and roll you’ve ever heard. The show was nothing but a scam, just like what Sting’s rainforest fund apparently is. I wanted a refund for this pathetic, last minute, no effort benefit concert.

red-haired goddess | 5/9/2008, 11:49 pm EST

Is it just me, or does Sting have to be in every fucking song?

“Sting, this is a woman’s song about her getting a period”

“Come on, come on. Let me sing it, let me sing it.”

Fucking Sting.

If there weren’t such a thing as rooms without mirrors, Sting wouldn’t be able to function at all!

Jeanne Mal | 5/9/2008, 4:19 pm EST

Trudie sure knows how 2 throw a party.

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