Feb. 5: Tim Di Pasqua

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Tim Di Pasqua

February 5 @ 7:00 pm

Don’t Tell Mama
343 W. 46th St., NYC
212.757.0788

Tim-Di-Pasqua-Cabaret-Scenes-Magazine_212Here’s the review by Peter Haas of one of Tim’s show’s at Don’t Tell Mama:

Twenty years ago, at Don’t Tell Mama, I discovered Tim Di Pasqua. Singer, pianist and songwriter, his works were poetic and sensitive; they expressed nuances of love in tapestries of everyday, yet imaginative, images, and their lyrics fell, sometimes surprisingly, but always neatly and singably, into his melodies.
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  Moreover, in delivering his songs in his sweet tenor, he accompanied himself with superb piano work.

Good news: Tim Di Pasqua is still at it, writing and singing with added maturity and expertise.

The evidence: his one-evening performance in April in the same club’s intimate back room. Playing to an appreciative full house, and accompanied warmly and expertly by Matt Scharfglass on bass, Di Pasqua—happy in a new marriage, with his husband, seated up front, described by Tim as “the jackhammer to my cement”—offered 15 of his songs, in a variety of moods.

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Among them: the poignant blues, “The Man I Want Doesn’t Want Me Any More”; “Jigsaw Puzzle,”  likening love to a puzzle “on a card table in the living room”; “If I Were to Leave,” from his new musical, The Apartment; and his classic “One Thing”:  “leafing through the pages of my mind,” as Di Pasqua expresses it, “the one thing in this world I’d love to do, is love the rest of the world as I love you.”

Acknowledging the audience’s enthusiastic applause, he said of his songwriting, “This is what I was meant to do, and I’ll do it till I die.”  The cabaret community—and the world at large—can give thanks.
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