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Kirk Mills – A Rising Star
Plush Room Continues to Present New LGBT Talent
by Dear Diva for the San
Francisco Spectrum
The room darkens, orders for the two drink minimum are taken,
an unassuming guy with a guitar takes a seat and plucks simple strings.
It is an unusual start for an evening at the world-renowned Empire
Plush Room at the York Hotel on Sutter Street. But this is not going
to be a usual evening.
Entering the stage is a thin, handsome guy with the wiry kind of
energy we’ve grown to expect in the Starbuck’s era.
He is Kirk Mills. He does a turn, more military pivot than ballet
pirouette, and extends his arms in a common-guy-nothing-special
gesture of humility. He’s a bachelor, you can tell, and the
little curl of his lip tickles you under the one-eyebrow-raised
cynicism of his knife sharp gaze. His clothes are too square to
be truly hip, but then most hipsters in this stand-up comedy phase
of American pop culture are remarkably square. Then he sings.
His voice is easy, loose, a combination of nanny-goat and velvet
fog. This guy’s an original, and even though his songs mostly
aren’t original, his presentation of many of them makes them
so become. He’s nervous. Young talent in a new venue wants
approval, and knows he shouldn’t want it so badly. But he
is honest, or at least his banter between songs is inspired by those
honest, hopelessly bachelor, guys who share the feelings they were
surprised to find among the pizza boxes and tennis shoes strewn
on their apartment floor. He’s like a gay straight guy, with
all the haplessness and charm of the geek who doesn’t realize
he is a hunk. His is a show of discovering what lies within—all
of it.
He is a child of the 1980s, struggling to find his own voice through
a somewhat contradictory song set. But that was what the 1980s was
– somewhat contradictory. You have the chick songs with way
too many lyrics explaining mundane things—a gay guy Tory Amos,
a confrontational Tracy Chapman. Then there are moments of simplicity—an
embarrassed apology for the profundity of first hearing a particular
Elton John song, and a rendition of a 1960s anti-war song that becomes
an animee tour-de-force with slapstick Gilbert and Sullivan choreography
on the chorus. There are a few of those ‘80s groove fests
that mean nothing but feel really great, the kind of music that
has complex jazz chord structures that underlie a sea of sensation,
never admitting that deep down they are shallow. Just like the 1980s,
there is too much to deal with, so you just kind of ride the evening.
Kirk Mills is a funny, talented, hungry performer. Several times
he expresses chagrin over not being a rock star yet. He works hard
to get you to like him, unaware that he had accomplished that when
he first walked on stage. He sings well, brilliantly even, and can
create a powerful mood. But the mood can also be undone by that
‘80s cynicism, when no good feeling was trusted because greed
and cocaine made us all think we probably were feeling much more
in the moment than was justified under the circumstances. Too many
words; too many moods.
Mills speaks of an unfinished recording project. He talks about
being lazy. He talks about his own indecision. He must realize that
we all have unfinished projects, a lack of follow through, or a
dream we couldn’t get our act together to achieve. And yet,
when he sang his own material, just two songs, they were amazing.
He got it right in those. He used all of his self-awareness to write
a song about being self-aware that didn’t shrug it off with
a nervous joke but just said it.
He’s got what it takes. We sincerely hope he finishes that
recording project. We hope he turns his able pen to subjects other
than himself so he can take us on the more universal journey he
is capable of leading. One foot in front of the other, Kirk, and
you’ll get there. We’ll be waiting…
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