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AAA Stand--Up 2011
AAA Stand--Up Late
Aaaaaaaaaaaaarrghhh. It’s The Malcolm Hardee Comedy Awards Show
Aaaaaaaaaaaaarrghhh. It’s The Malcolm Hardee Comedy Punch-Up Debates
Aaaaaaaaaaaaarrghhh. It's The Malcolm Hardee Spaghetti-Juggling Contest. Year One
Aaaaaaaaaargh. It's The Monster Standup Show.
Aaaand Now For Something Completely Improvised 2011
Abacus Danger Present 'The Search For Blank'
Aberdeen vs Glasgow vs The World
Abi Roberts Takes You Up The Aisle
About Comedy: 2 Day Comedy Courses
About Comedy: 4 Week Comedy Courses
Absolute Improv
Acme Stand-Up
The Ad-Libertines
Adam Crow: Ashton Kutcher's Dead Girlfriends
Adam Larter: The Legend of Bob Geldof . . . And Other Short Stories
Adult Pantomime: Jack and the Beanstalk
The Adventurers Club - The Great Arctic Caper
Adventures in Comedy: Murder, Madness And Mayhem
After Hours Comedy 2011
After Lunch Laugh Lounge
Afternoon Comedy Showcase
Age Of Treason
The Agent, Stylist And PA Wanted Show
Agonise, The Comedy Problem Page
Ahir Shah: Astrology
Aidan Bishop: Misspelled
Aidan Goatley: 10 Films With My Dad
Aisle16 R Kool
Al Murray's Compete For The Meat
Al Murray's Compete For The Meat Late Night Special
Alan Anderson: Whisky Fir Dummies
Alan Sharp: Hate It With Me
Alex Horne: Seven Years In The Bathroom
Alex Horne: Taskmaster II
Alex Marion: Applied_Optimism
Alfie Brown: The Love You Take
Alfie Joey: Monopolise
Ali Cook: Principles And Deceptions
Alison Thea-Skot: The Human Tuning Fork
Alistair Greaves Mixed Grill
Alistair Green: Outpatient
All Over Your Face
All The Fun Of The Unfair
Alun Cochrane: Moments Of Alun
Alzheimer's The Musical: A Night To Remember
Amateur Transplants: Adam Kay's Smutty Songs
Amused Moose Comedy Awards Final 2011
Amused Moose Comedy Awards Showcase
Amused Moose Laughter Awards Top Ten Semi-Final 2011
And The Award Goes To...
Andi Osho: All The Single Ladies
Andrew Bird's Village Fete
Andrew Doyle's Crash Course In Depravity
Andrew Lawrence: Best Kept Secret In Comedy Tour
Andrew Maxwell: The Lights Are On
Andrew O'Neill: Alternative
Andy Parsons: Gruntled
Andy Zaltzman: Armchair Revolutionary
Angelos Epithemiou And Friends [Edinburgh 2011]
Anil Desai Is...
The Antics: Premature Ejokeulation
Apocalypse Later?
Armageddapocalypse: The Explosioning
Arthur Smith's Pissed-Up Chat Show
The Artisan
The Artists Currently Known As Magpie & Stump
As Drawn On FaceTube
Asher Treleaven: Matador
Asian Provocateurs Rule Britannia
Aslan - The Lockdown
Asli and Ashley: Audacious and Angry
Assembly Gala Press Launch
Attention Deficit: Let's Go Ride Bikes
Auntie Netta and The Trouble With Asian Men
An Austrian, An Italian And Someone From Slough
Ava Vidal: The Hardest Word
Award Winning Comedian, Nik Coppin
The Axis Of Awesome
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Amateur Transplants: Adam Kay's Smutty Songs
Adam Kay is going to sing you some smutty songs. With 20 million youTube hits (london underground Song) and six sell-out years at the Fringe, these dark re-imaginings of pop classics are not to be missed.
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Amateur Transplants: Adam Kay's Smutty Songs |
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Adam Kay appears from backstage, tops up the wine glass sat on his piano, emptying one bottle and cracking open a another, then plonks himself down at the piano and rattles out a couple of opening song/gags about Edinburgh to the tune of Starship's We Built This City changed to, 'They built this city on a maaasssiiiivve hiiiilll.' Opening with material about the town in which they're playing is a regular opening gambit for a stand-up and there's no reason why Kay, just because he's got a piano in front of him, shouldn't begin his show like that too. But when he continues his shtick, essentially changing the lyrics to songs slickly but simplistically, you begin wonder how he's going to stretch it out for an hour. But he does and, as it turns out, it doesn't feel stretched at all. There's a kind of narrative arc, I say 'kind of' as you're not sure whether it's deliberate or might just be the result of the couple of bottles of wine he's necked by the end of the show. Kay continually bemoans his parents' disappointment in him not sticking with his career in medicine. He moves on to rail at Chortle's previous description of his act as being 'artistically bankrupt' and the outcry results in a broken wine glass, but then just as swiftly he's banging out the next number and consoling himself by flirting with the attractive boy in the front row. Should any of these insecurities be truly based in reality he really has no reason to harbour them, as he's playing in front of a sell out crowd in the Pleasance Forth which has a capacity of a few hundred. Kay built up a following alongside his Amateur Transplants partner Dr. Suman Biswas, whom he met while medical students. Their London Underground song venting frustrations at the Tube strikes in 2005 to the tune of The Jam's Going Underground became an internet hit and they've been playing to audiences at the Fringe for the six years since. This year Kay's gone solo, and the diarrhoea songs and other below-the-belt numbers that prompted the 'artistically bankrupt' reference are relegated to a corner of the set and supplemented by considerably better gags. A stand-out example for its sheer simplistic silliness is Lady Gaga's Poker Face reworked as a warning against drinking a cup of tea with the spoon left in it. Elsewhere there's an enjoyable running gag that involves a small puzzle for the audience who have to guess how he's going to change the chorus of Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah? 'Alloy loofah' anyone? Maybe there's more to Kay than smutty songs after all. |
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| Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Aug, '11 | |
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Review by Marissa Burgess |
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Absolutely fantastic night out! Highly reccomended. Ben Welch, May 2012 |

