![]() The quartet is trimmed to a trio, with original members Cindy Herron-Braggs and Terry Ellis plus relative newcomer Rhona Bennett, who could win a Whitney Houston look-alike contest. Treach dissed Donald Trump a few times, broke out a bottle of Hennessy (which he shared with one fan) and let the crowd sing along to Montell Jordan’s “This Is How We Do It.” And, like Tone Loc before him, Treach invited a bunch of woman onstage to dance for Naughty’s closing number, “Hip Hop Hooray.”Īt least En Vogue had enough hits to fill 50 minutes. Treach saluted 2Pac and Biggie by saying it was cool to play their songs back to back even though there would be some haters on social media. Naughty’s DJ Kay Gee introduced their set with snippets of Journey, Queen and the Jackson 5 hits before rappers Treach and Vin Rock got down with “O.P.P.” Between his smashes “Funky Cold Medina” and “Wild Thing,” Tone Loc delivered the most raspy-voiced rendition of the Sugarhill Gang’s “Rapper’s Delight.” It seems odd to see name hip-hop acts – even passe ones – turn into cover bands, so to speak. And Naughty By Nature devoted at least half its set to hits by others including 2Pac and Notorious BIG. ![]() ![]() Their “’90s Explosion” show at the ¾ full Mystic Lake Showroom on Friday night was fun but remarkably short on production values: No band for En Vogue and no DJ for Tone Loc. So hungry that we’ll eat up a low-budget revue of R&B group En Vogue and rappers Naughty By Nature and Tone Loc. Apparently, we’re nostalgic for the ‘90s. ![]()
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