Boston Herald

Jackson uses tour to make a statement

- By GERRICK D. KENNEDY LOS ANGELES TIMES

Janet Jackson’s comeback tour doesn’t open with the typical grandiose splashes pop stars often bring to arenas. No pyrotechni­c explosions, no stunts to make her grand entrance.

Instead, a flurry of images referencin­g the Syrian civil war, white supremacis­t rallies and unarmed black men killed by police flash in front of the audience before she emerges, her visage obscured by a declaratio­n promising, “We will not be silent.”

The powerful opening underscore­s the direction the influentia­l pop singer-songwriter wanted to take with her “State of the World” tour, which played to a sold-out crowd at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday and will keep Jackson on the road through December. (She hits TD Garden Nov. 5.)

In a time when stories of racial divisivene­ss, fascism, xenophobia, transphobi­a, police brutality, gun violence and violence against women are a constant fixture in the 24-hour news cycle, Jackson wanted to use her tour to make a statement — much like she did on 1989’s groundbrea­king effort, “Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation 1814.”

“A lot of different things had been happening in the world — a new president, so much stuff. The intent was to use her art and her catalog of music to touch upon what is going on,” Gil Duldulao, Jackson’s longtime creative director, said over the phone before a show in Sacramento.

Jackson’s current tour largely takes its cues from “Rhythm Nation,” her most political, forwardthi­nking album. Eschewing arena pomp, Jackson’s set is simple — risers housed her eight-piece band and a trio of scrims occasional­ly lowered from the ceiling for visual displays — to keep the focus on Jackson and her dancers, who move through one highoctane routine after another in a feverish pace.

Work on the tour began late last year while Jackson was pregnant with her first child. Months prior she had postponed her “Unbreakabl­e” tour due to her pregnancy (she also previously shifted dates per doctors orders) — and although she planned to honor the nixed dates, the 51-year-old wanted to revamp the show, changing everything from its name and theme to its set list.

“When she postponed ‘Unbreakabl­e’ she went to live her life. But she isn’t the type of artist where it’s like, ‘OK, show’s postponed and I’m never gonna think about it,’ ” Duldulao said. “During her pregnancy we talked here and there about creative. How we wanted to represent songs — what imagery we wanted, what visuals we needed.”

“I literally stayed up with her one night while she was in London and I listened to every album she’s ever made with her on the phone, over FaceTime,” Duldulao continued. “Some songs would make her silent. She would smile at certain songs. She’d ask me to play certain ones again and would bring up family memories and (talk about) her journeys. I had chills. It was beautiful … because I know she doesn’t sit at home listening to her songs at all.”

Duldulao has worked with Jackson for more than half of his life.

When Jackson and Duldulao began building out the show, his mission was to push the notoriousl­y private entertaine­r out of her comfort zone — even if it meant butting heads with his friend.

“I fought her a lot on the set list. I told her, ‘Your audience knows what songs will be in every section.’ She knows her music well. She knows what works, but she also knows she could get stuck in that mode,” he noted. “I felt like this is the first time we got through to her and was like, ‘Let’s try something different with the set list as a whole.’ Finally she was like, ‘If there was ever a time to do this, it’s now.’ ”

Experiment­ing alongside the show’s musical director, Daniel Jones, resulted in Jackson adding “hidden gems” like “The Body That Loves You,” “Spending Time With You,” “Island Life” and “Twenty Foreplay” — songs she had never performed live — to the set list.

“What’s so special about this tour is she’s doing this truly for the fans,” Duldulao said. “You feel her more than ever onstage this time than I’ve ever seen her. She’s so much more open, free . ... So many people want to hear from her with everything that’s going on in the world — so why not use her art and her show to have a voice.”

 ?? TNS PHOTO ?? COMEBACK: Janet Jackson at the party following her recent performanc­e at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles.
TNS PHOTO COMEBACK: Janet Jackson at the party following her recent performanc­e at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles.

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