Detroit Free Press

Olivia Rodrigo brings cultural moment to LCA

- Brian McCollum Pop music critic Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

Pop music needed Olivia Rodrigo.

Three years after the gifted artist’s global breakout, her music captures its own slice of the youthful zeitgeist — a post-pandemic sound that is wounded but ultimately hopeful, biting but rarely cynical.

Rodrigo and her creative charms were on full display Saturday night at a very sold-out Little Caesars Arena, where the 21-year-old star waged a galvanizin­g 105-minute show as she hit Detroit a month into her lengthy Guts World Tour.

Rodrigo’s music is brimming with ’80s pop winks and ’90s alt-rock nods, but her LCA show was a thoroughly 2024 affair — a superhot ticket and cultural moment that even prompted a “Welcome to Detroit” social-media post Saturday afternoon from Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

For all the young angst coursing through the lyrics — heartache, insecurity, revenge urges, the weight of social expectatio­ns — Rodrigo in concert is a joyous, vivacious affair. Saturday’s production was crisp but not overthough­t, largely eschewing the high-tech bells and whistles that adorn most modern pop extravagan­zas. Her mid-show journey across the arena, which had her nestled in a glowing crescent moon overhead, was the show’s fanciest frill.

Backed by a five-piece band and pair of backing singers, Rodrigo was also occasional­ly joined by an eight-member dance troupe, and while the choreograp­hy was tight, it was an embellishm­ent rather than the driving energy of a show whose real impact came from its smartly crafted songs and emotional oomph.

“I want you to scream! I want you to jump!” Rodrigo exhorted the crowd at one point.

She needn’t have asked: Fans had already been doing their part from the show’s opening stretch, pogo-ing to the energetic bounce of “Bad Idea Right?” and “Ballad of a Homeschool­ed Girl,” singing along in full voice to “Vampire” and “Traitor.”

In spring 2022, just around the corner from

LCA, Rodrigo made her Detroit debut with an impressive Masonic Temple Theatre show during her initial burst of success. Having now jumped to arenas on the heels of “Guts,” her recent sophomore album, Rodrigo’s performanc­e on the big stage Saturday was comfortabl­e and confident but never distant.

Twice she ventured down to interact with fans, some of them breaking into in tears as she briskly snapped selfies, slapped hands and gathered armfuls of flower bouquets. That intimate bond also went big, as when the arena gleamed with cellphone lights for the musically tender “Making the Bed” and “Happier,” softer moments amid the swells of rock-tinged pop euphoria.

Since Rodrigo’s Grammy-winning 2021 debut record, “Sour,” her conversati­onal, sharply detailed coming-of-age sketches have won over legions of fans tween, teen and up — a cause aided by the delectable melodies that were front and center Saturday in songs like “Happier,” “Drivers License” and “Deja Vu.” The subject matter might get filed under Young Adult, but in the hands of Rodrigo, artistical­ly mature beyond her years, the results can be powerful.

Vocally, Rodrigo has a breathy, vowel-bending delivery that can swoop into a full-tilt belt; as a performer, her acting background serves her well, including quick and subtle mannerisms — a pout here, an arched eyebrow there — that accentuate the musical mood. Risqué touches popped up Saturday (“Obsessed,” “Love is Embarrassi­ng”), although they were spare and fleeting, much like the profanitie­s that occasional­ly precision-bombed the proceeding­s.

Rodrigo’s favorite retro decade, the 1990s, got saluted with a selection of preshow PA music that included riot grrrl bands such as Bikini Kill and Bratmobile. Those punky undergroun­d influences made their way into her own music onstage, even if her approach was less snarling girl-power than buoyant girl uplift.

Rodrigo’s Hollywood experience aside, there’s an authentici­ty and natural relatabili­ty to her presence. Pop music’s allure is its immediacy, and inside an arena, it’s designed to feel larger than life.

But at LCA on Saturday, amid the glitter and the confetti and the magnetic choruses, it was clear there’s a genuine depth to go with the polished theater.

Gaggles of young female friends and momdaughte­r combos packed the arena. Out on the buzzing concourse ahead of showtime, the long merch-booth lines were a medley of tiaras and crop tops, sequined skirts and a whole bunch of purple — Rodrigo’s signature color.

Rodrigo has embraced a growing activist role, and a portion of this tour’s proceeds is going to her nonprofit group, Fund 4 You, recently launched in the name of women’s rights. In one corner of the LCA concourse were booths offering voter registrati­on and materials from the National Network of Abortion Funds, though there were no indication­s of the condom giveaways that generated controvers­y at one earlier tour stop.

Whitmer’s Saturday post — which followed the governor’s welcome video last summer for Taylor Swift — applauded Rodrigo’s efforts while punning off several of her hit song titles.

“Olivia, your voice resonates with so many, not just through your music but through your advocacy,” Whitmer said.

Saturday’s 23-song set included nearly every track from “Sour” and “Guts,” and it’s a testament to the strength of those two albums that Saturday’s show rarely sagged.

The LCA show sizzled to a finale with a rockheavy vibe, as “Brutal,” “Obsessed” and “AllAmerica­n Bitch” punctuated the close of the regular set.

Rodrigo launched her encore with “Good 4 U,” the 2021 song that perhaps best foreshadow­ed the sound of her next album, before capping it with the rollicking, hollering new tune “Get Him Back.” Where Rodrigo’s evolution takes her next remains to be seen, but undoubtedl­y it’ll be fun and rewarding to watch.

 ?? SCOTT LEGATO/SPECIAL TO THE FREE PRESS ?? Olivia Rodrigo performs at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena on Saturday, on her Guts World Tour.
SCOTT LEGATO/SPECIAL TO THE FREE PRESS Olivia Rodrigo performs at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena on Saturday, on her Guts World Tour.
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