Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Crowds rock out to A-list playlist at iHeartRadi­o festival

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @ JohnnyKats­1 on Instagram.

THE Kats! Bureau at this writing is the bowels of T-Mobile Arena. That sounds far more harrowing than it actually is. It’s just a padded folding chair in the media center for the second and final night of the iHeartRadi­o Music Festival.

Earlier in the afternoon, I waded into the festival’s Daytime Stage crowd at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds on a hunt for music, newsmakers and water. I found it all.

Daytime Stage was the first large-scale music festival on the Strip since Oct. 1 and the first such event at the Festival Grounds since the Academy of Country Music Awards Party for a Cause in April 2016.

The parcel on the corner of Sahara Avenue and the Strip is only going to get busier. Owner MGM Resorts Internatio­nal is redoubling its efforts on that site, which is still closely identified as the Rock in Rio site, and away from Las Vegas Village. The Route 91 Harvest is likely to be the last festival ever held on that 15acre site, which MGM Resorts also still owns.

MGM Resorts Vice President of Entertainm­ent Chris

Baldizan has been piecing together a long-term plan to make the Festival Grounds the predominan­t outdoor event venue on the Strip. The next events are the Martha

Stewart Food and Wine Experience on Oct. 13 and the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour the following week.

“We are looking to diversify and have a lot of bigger festivals and more of them,” Baldizan said Saturday. “The versatilit­y of the space makes it possible to have many events. I say it all the time, but we are always looking for new programmin­g.”

The scene

About half of the Festival Grounds’ 40 acres was used Saturday. About 10,000 fans

turned out to see Logic, Dua Lipa, 5 Seconds of Summer, Lil Uzi Vert, Dustin Lynch, Bazzi, Belly, Bobby Bones and the Raging Idiots, Greta Van Fleet, Bad Bunny, Grandson, Leon Bridges, MAX, Badflower, Evvie, The

Vamps and Drax Project. Temperatur­es easily surpassed 100 degrees. Fighting the burn were folks in blue Progressiv­e insurance shirts handing out tubes of SPF 30 sunscreen. Elsewhere, T-Mobile sponsored a Ferris wheel, an amusement bungee ride was set up, and the lines snaked to an observatio­n lounge and food vendors (including the suddenly inhigh-demand pineapple whip smoothies). The environmen­t was open, pedestrian and similar to Rock in Rio and Party for a Cause.

Unsolicite­d, yet educated, advice: Organizers need to sharpen their parking directives (the on-site staff remains confused about where festivalgo­ers are actually permitted to park their vehicles). Also, specify how fans (especially those from out of town) are supposed to take advantage of the Las Vegas Monorail stops on the eastern side of the Strip and walk across from SLS Las Vegas or even Westgate. That’s a hike. Let people know that.

Also, the fake grass has worn down and hardened over the past three years since Rock in Rio opened the venue. In 100-degree temperatur­es, hard equals hot. It needs to be replaced.

Trend setters

The Park Theater has benefited from some unplanned film activity with its resident headliners. Cher’s series coincided with the reboot of “Mamma Mia!” (even bad movies are still movies). Lady

Gaga has generated ample hype in the upcoming remake of “A Star is Born,” and

Queen is the focus of of the hotly anticipate­d “Bohemian Rhapsody.” Also, after Lady Gaga and

Aerosmith announced their residencie­s at the theater, the former opening in December and the latter in April, interest perked among superstars around the world. Tagging this thought, the next announced headliner at Zappos Theater is expected to be in Gaga’s strata as a trailblazi­ng live artist.

Greta’s strong turn

The Daytime Stage crowd had its mind blown by Frankenmut­h, Michigan, rock band Greta Van Fleet.

A musician friend had told me Friday night to be sure to make this band’s set. These guys just bring it. Vocalist

Jake Kiszka is a modern-day synthesis of Bon Scott and

Robert Plant but cuts loose with an even higher voice than either of those legends.

This guy sings as hard between songs as he does during the numbers. Maybe he’s easily bored.

But Greta Van Fleet (loosely named for a woman the band had known in their hometown, similar to how Lynyrd Skynyrd was named for one Leonard Skinner) made every moment count in its Vegas debut. The raging sound bounced off Allure tower across Sahara Avenue, as the band’s loyal legions were easy to spot in the crowd of about 10,000.

Many sang along; one couple told me they had traveled all the way from Mexico City to see these guys perform for less than 30 minutes.

A guy next to me who had not seen the band before commented on Kiszka’s snug, glimmering-gold ensemble and said, “When you can sing like him, you can dress like that.”

 ?? John Katsilomet­es Las Vegas Review-Journal @JohnnyKats ?? About 10,000 fans rocked out Saturday at the iHeartRadi­o Music Festival’s Daytime Stage at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds.
John Katsilomet­es Las Vegas Review-Journal @JohnnyKats About 10,000 fans rocked out Saturday at the iHeartRadi­o Music Festival’s Daytime Stage at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States