Jorts! Loads of them. Some Vans, a few Converse, plenty of adidas. Pork pie hats, baseball caps, t-shirts aplenty – that’s the guys, course. At least some of the women dressed up to see slick NYC Rock-Rap-Funk gangsters Fun Lovin’ Criminals at the Powerstation last night.
Sure, it’s summer – she was a warm one, kids – but despite the bands’ own aesthetic, and we’ll get to that, their limelight years being late 90s/early 2000s, meant that was also the crowd vibe. (I searched in vain for a skateboard…)
The gentleman in the exquisite white shirt, rolled up pants and loafers, pork pie hat perfectly plonked, who grooved mesmerizingly while spilling neither of the two drinks he held. Big ups to you sir. You captured the vibe perfectly.
These boys are slick, remember.
MC Slave, he of Fat Freddy’s fame, warmed us up perfectly, with a beautifully balanced DJ set cleverly mixed: to hear The Honeydrippers 1973 Funk hit Impeach the President booming out the bins was a joy to behold, and perhaps, given the state of the world, a not-so-subtle piece of messaging.
With a theatrical roadie removal of the sheets covering Frank Benbini’s drums and most of Brian Leiser’s keyboard/electronics set up, (which he later referred to as my R2D2 thing) and a thunderous 2001: A Space Odyssey, out they came, them Fun Lovin’ Criminals.

The only remaining founding member, Brian Leiser, is the vocal focal point, in his Blues Brothers suit ‘n’ shades and blindingly white adidas trainers. Cortazzi’s feet were similarly clad; visually and aurally there was more than an echo of Run DMC to FLC, a welcome reminder to these ears of Times Long Passed.
Like the original band’s original home, NYC, (and we’ll get to the personnel permutations later) FLC are a potpourri of styles and shapes, influences and outpourings. They Rock, they Rap, they groove out, they funk it up. And, with Leiser and Benbini doing the Belushi and Ackroyd thing, they ham it up too. Often poking fun at themselves, as much as anyone else.
Lovers Rock, nothing remotely to do with the Sade song of the same name, another more recent groover, was also sweetly and smoothly enjoyable, more west coast than east. Those aside, what we get is the, you know, Bag of Hits, as the compilation was called – the ones the faithful came to see: Smoke ‘Em, Run Daddy Run, a raucous King of New York and an eerily weedy Loco.
After a brief staged exit stage left, about an hour in, they sidled back refreshed, no doubt, and delivered the tremendous trio: Scooby Snacks, Love Unlimited, and Big Night Out, the latter replete with the slow bit extended to allow/enable the entire crowd to wave their hands in the air and sing the unlikely chant, Can’t you see? Can’t you see? / I got a supermodel on my D.
And they are a curiosity, this band. Their public spat with original singer and lyricist Huey Morgan about who really owns the songs, and the sound shouldn’t be relevant here. Only, while Leiser was indeed an original Criminal, and with his multi-instrumentalist smarts and fine vocalising, is a wonderful entertainer, some of those early songs do seem a pale imitation without Morgan’s Marlboro-induced husky growl.
Leiser’s black box and dials triggered samples/backing tracks of some of the key elements of the bigger hits, which isn’t cheating but which did add to that slight disconcerting vibe, as if they couldn’t leave out the samples and just wing it, live.
You expect Mid-town but instead get Midlands. Morgan spat that this incarnation was a tribute band which is both vicious and inaccurate, but it does, occasionally, feel imitative, a slight shadow of What Used to Be.
Benbini is one of those drummers who makes it look effortless, yet was pulling patterns, fills and cross-sticked shenanigans like it was nuthin’, often managing all that one-handed while he supped a refreshing beverage.
Lieser was a marvel – keyboard bass, electric piano/synth parts delivered deftly, trumpet, harmonica, bass, and flawless rapping and singing that, like Benbini, clearly is practiced intensely for it to look so casual.
They said all the right things,– how much they loved Auckland, were big fans of Fat Freddy’s, were amped that there was a Black Seed in the front row (cue embarrassing spotlight moment for said Seed), but, while you expect such comments, like the whole show, the humour and slight predictability of some of the material was a tongue in cheek veneer that couldn’t hide the fact that this was a well-grooved, class act, with a very high hit ratio in their grab-bag of songs, delivered with warmth, humour, and high-level Rock’ n’ roll energy.
These not-quite-a-thousand punters at a venue where you don’t need a screen to see the players, and feel instantly connected to them and the material, provide the opportunity for a good band to really win you over.
The Fun Lovin’ Criminals did that in spades. Bloody good night all round!
Michael Larsen
Photography by Leonie Moreland