Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bruno Mars brings sound, fury to NLR

- HELAINE R. WILLIAMS

Bruno Mars didn’t need the souped-up disco and light show.

Didn’t need the frequent pyrotechni­cs accompanie­d by eardrum-splitting booms.

Didn’t need those overhangin­g, ever-shifting boxes of stage lights, the frenetic display of lasers. Didn’t need the upward-shooting fireballs whose heat could be felt halfway back from the stage.

Bruno Mars and his literal band of Hooligans could have done their thing on a bare, simply lighted stage and the screams of adoration would have been just as deafening. But they brought it — “it” being a lot of sound and fury, signifying something — Sunday at Verizon Arena.

The performanc­e before a sold-out crowd of 15,806 fell short of two hours but was action-packed. Wearing a red “Hooligans” baseball jersey (which he exchanged later for a white one), black shorts, baseball cap and sneakers, Mars and the boys hit the ground running with “24K Magic,” a song that also kicked off the booming pyrotechni­cs, then slid into “Treasure,” during which they showed their impressive skills at synchroniz­ed footwork with dancing while instrument-wielding and, at one point, even sit-down-andscoot dancing. Mars, who was a child Elvis impersonat­or, delivered his share of hip swivels and pelvic thrusts.

Standing throughout nearly all the performanc­e, the crowd lost its collective mind on every song presented including “Chunky,” “That’s What I Like,” “Straight Up and Down,” and “Versace on the Floor.” While the band took a break, Mars belted out the forlorn “When I was Your Man” with piano accompanim­ent and with the singalong audience as backup. After a solo by the keyboardis­t, it was back to the special effects with “Gorilla.” Mars topped off his performanc­e with the anthem-like “Just the Way You Are.”

Beforehand, Jorja Smith got the restless crowd warmed up with a fast-paced but laid-back performanc­e, delivering “Something in the Way,” “Where Did I Go?” “Teenage Fantasy” and “Beautiful Little Fools” with her husky, lilting voice reminiscen­t of Erykah Badu.

The audience, as expected, was a people-watcher’s fantasy, many wearing the blackand-gold, Greek-key-trimmed kimonos with “XXIV” on the backs. One couple wore “freako” and “freaka” T-shirts as a nod to lyrics in “That’s What I Like.” A group of women wore black-and-gray Hooligans baseball jerseys.

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