First, a brief, breathless review from Laura.

Hi, All:
I just got home from seeing Tom at Pechanga, and I must tell you…it was unreal.
The energy level was through the roof. The fans were from 19 to 90 and all of them were so excited to be there. The Man was smokin’. The Voice was a bit hoarse, but there is nothing better than watching him having fun.
He really is a legend and spending five minutes just chatting with him is precious. That glorious voice is a benchmark…always has been….always will be.
The photo is (from left) Paulette, Stefanie and Laura with Tom.
Now, here’s one from Nancy:
Saturday night May 26 was a great show at the Pechanga Resort north of San Diego. The show was sold out and the venue was great — about 1,200 seats in a nice little theater with great camera work for the screens. Tom was being filmed the entire show and didn’t boogie from side to side of the stage to flash that great smile and give those winks, as he usually does. I missed that, as it’s a real “connection.” He stayed pretty much in the front center by the camera person.
Tom looked great, much better than when I last saw him in January at MGM. He had lots of energy, looked rested, and sounded great. You can, though, really see his attitude change when the ladies in the audience stand up, start dancing, etc. He seemd to “turn on!” I still miss Tom Jones International, but Git me Some and especially Resurrection Shuffle (is that the name of that great number in the encore?) were too fabulous!!! One interesting note is that there were plenty of men in the audience-with female dates — who were whooping and hollering right along with the ladies!
If I were in charge I immediately would get rid of the “standards.” I don’t care if “others are doing them,” as Tom tells us. They don’t add a thing to the show in my opinion. If TJ wants to do some slow stuff, he has plenty of his own great songs that have his personal ’stamp’ on them… (With These Hands for example, and many more.) Just my thoughts.
MODERATOR’S NOTE: The show was not exactly being “filmed.” The cameras were for the two large screens set up in the theater.