Crimes Against Taste

Robert is one third of Crimes Against Taste. You can see their website HEREwindow

Crimes Against Taste are, without question, Sheffield’s finest classical-comedy-cabaret-crossover-act! This tremendous trio returned to the stage in 2015 with their fabulous new show, ‘Tenor and Baritone’

Graham Neal (tenor) and Jon Openshaw (baritone) are budding young opera singers dreaming of superstardom, but when their grumpy accompanist (Robert Webb) brings them down to earth with a few home truths, they are forced into a rethink… perhaps more diversity could hold the key to success…?

The show features two professional opera singers performing music as diverse as opera (mainly with the mick taken out of it) Flanders and Swann, Tom Lehrer, Dolly Parton, Rap and Pop wrapped up in a hilarious story line. You will laugh until you cry – and there really is something for everyone!

For FORTHCOMING GIGS click here

Crimes Against Taste are one of the UK’s finest (and only) classical-comedy-cabaret-crossover-acts! Here’s what the audience and reviewers have had to say about them:

“Absolutely brilliant”

“Witty and fun evening”

“…exemplary renditions of many of my comedy favourites… I’m already looking forward to your next performance”

“.. a lewd sense of humour can lurk beneath the proper exterior… The performance was slick and well-paced … murmurs of approval heard from the outset and some extremely positive audience feedback at the end”

www.facebook.com/CrimesAgainstTaste

twitter.com/TasteCrimesBuxton Busking Mobile

Forthcoming Gigs:

Trailer of our previous show, ‘Tales of Lust, Love and Heartbreak’ :www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTRLTY-QQdk

Here’s what the audience and reviewers have said about Crimes Against Taste’s shows:

“Absolutely brilliant”

“As funny as anything I have heard on Radio Four”

“Witty and fun evening”

“…exemplary renditions of many of my comedy favourites…I’m already looking forward to your next performance”

“This was a very clever show. Three guys – all with exemplary credentials as classical musicians – showed us that a lewd sense of humour can lurk beneath the proper exterior… The performance was slick and well paced and of a quality that immediately puts the audience at their ease – murmurs of approval heard from the outset and some extremely positive audience feedback at the end” – Carol Bowns, Buxton Fringe Review from 2013.

Check out the full review from the Buxton Fringe festival…(scroll down)

Snippets from the previous CAT shows on Youtube: one and two 

Buxton Tram 2013

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