McQueen’s pop culture mix of music, comedy and multimedia

FUN WITH FOXES: McQueen's original synthesis of comedy, music and furry critters is difficult to describe. Photo courtesy of the artist

“Is it comedy?” asks McQueen Adams rhetorically. “Is it music? Is it the weird hybrid cousin of both who is 32 and still sits at the kids’ table during holidays?” The answer to all of those questions is most likely yes, but the Asheville audience can decide for itself when McQueen — who’s first name is his stage name — brings his one-man (plus a fox) multimedia show to The Altamont Theatre on Thursday, May 21.

Performances by McQueen draw deeply on today’s pop culture. As a result, his humor resonates best with those who have at least a working knowledge of what’s currently popular. Put another way, he probably wouldn’t play well in front of an Amish crowd in Lancaster, Pa. “When I was in the U.K. workshopping the show, I had some ups and downs the first week,” McQueen admits. “Who doesn’t know who Conan O’Brien is? So you run into things going over someone’s head.” But such incidents are the exception, not the rule. With the constant information we have access to, McQueen says, audiences are well-versed in the pop culture references at the core of his show.

That production incorporates projected visuals, live music and vocal impressions. In both concept and execution, a McQueen performance is consistent with the ethos of sampling. He takes content from a variety of disparate sources and reprocesses it through his own sensibility, creating something new and unique, yet oddly familiar in the process. McQueen describes what he does as combining “parts of movies, songs and moments [into] a soundtrack for scenarios that didn’t exist and giving them life.” He adds, “This show is a culmination of finding a balance of my love of music and my offbeat humor.” And the friends with whom he collaborates in developing the material are musicians, not comics, he points out.

Even though it’s more or less a solo performance (“I have a lot of interaction with the fox,” says McQueen cryptically), the event is interactive, involving the audience. “Trial and error is this show’s best friend,” he admits. “Technology is a testy b**ch; sometimes you are going to have mishaps, and sometimes it’s spotless.” Further, he notes that the audience is transfixed on the screen, “so I can definitely hide out during the show” if needed.

The production’s elements of the unknown are an asset, not a liability. “I think the ability to improvise and move on the fly is what makes this show what it is,” McQueen says.

The limited amount of traditional storyboarding and choreography means that there is plenty of space in a McQueen show for spontaneity. “It’s a constant evolution,” he says. “It’s a lot like songwriting. I work on a piece and I always want to add to it.” He admits that while parts of the show are loosely scripted, it’s also heavy on improvisation — “Like a guitar solo that goes 10 minutes too long,” he jokes.

For those who still wonder what a McQueen show is like — it’s definitely not traditional brick wall and barstool stand-up, and it’s not exactly a concert — he offers this pop culture point of reference: “It’s been compared to watching ‘Adult Swim’ live.’” He says that reviews of his shows in England sometimes likened him to British comedy troupe The Mighty Boosh, “but I think that was out of how different the show is,” he says.

McQueen has an ace in the hole for making sure that his audiences don’t get too lost among the media references: “That’s why I have a cat in my show,” he says. “Everyone knows what a cat is.”

WHO: McQueen
WHERE: The Altamont Theatre, thealtamont.com
WHEN: Thursday, May 21, 9 p.m., $10

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About Bill Kopp
Author, music journalist, historian, collector, and musician. His first book, "Reinventing Pink Floyd: From Syd Barrett to The Dark Side of the Moon," published by Rowman & Littlefield, is available now. Follow me @the_musoscribe

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