Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

No ‘Guts,’ no glory for Olivia Rodrigo

SIX GRAMMY NODS AND HER FIRST ARENA TOUR: ALL HAIL THIS POP-PUNK QUEEN

- MIKAEL WOOD POP MUSIC CRITIC ‘Awww

OLIVIA RODRIGO thinksof herself as a judicious dropper of the F-bomb. ¶ “I always try to keep it to just the essential swears,” says the 20year-old pop superstar. “I try not to throw a frivolous ‘f—’ in there.” ¶ Her music bears this out: A little less than three years ago, Rodrigo blew up seemingly overnight with “Drivers License,” an instant-classic break-up ballad that builds to a cathartic bridge in which she sloppily confesses to an ex, “I still f—ing love you, babe.” Her recent sophomore LP, “Guts,” unloads another winner in “Vampire,” a miniature rock opera about an unwise Hollywood hook-up that rhymes “bloodsucke­r” and “fame-f—er.” ¶ Yet because Rodrigo’s audience contains plenty of gradeschoo­lers — before music, she came up on a couple of squeaky-clean Disney shows — even the most artful of her profanitie­s must occasional­ly get the chop, as in the clean edit of “Vampire,” in which “fame-f—er” becomes — sigh — “dream-crusher.” ¶ Is there a song on “Guts” she’d think twice about performing were she booked for, say—

“The Kids’ Choice Awards?” she asks, finishing the question. “Lots. Probably wouldn’t play ‘All-American Bitch’ — ‘All-American Chick’ would suck. I guess I could play ‘Vampire’ with the ‘dream-crusher.’ But that in itself is a dream-crush right there.”

For Rodrigo, even hypothetic­al disappoint­ment is a novel experience these days. In September, “Guts” became her second straight album to enter the Billboard 200 at No. 1 (after 2021’s quadruple-platinum “Sour”), while tickets sold out almost immediatel­y for the arena tour she’ll set out on early next year. Now, she’s up for six prizes at February’s Grammy Awards, including album of the year for “Guts” and record and song of the year for “Vampire.”

“I hate to hit you with the ‘It’s an honor just to be nominated…,’” says the singer named best new artist at the Grammys in 2022. “But it really, truly is.”

Though it’s oriented, as “Sour” is, around her emo-theater-kid vocals, “Guts” builds on Rodrigo’s debut in a few important ways. For starters, it’s more indebted to the ’90s punk and alternativ­e rock she absorbed as a child, thanks to her parents: Listen for the identifiab­le traces of Smashing Pumpkins in the shimmering “Pretty Isn’t Pretty” and Bikini Kill in “All-American Bitch,” a sly yet furious critique of impossible feminine ideals with a title borrowed from Joan Didion.

Between albums, Rodrigo took guitar lessons — among the tunes she learned were Radiohead’s “My Iron Lung” and the Beatles’ “Something” — which is why she’s particular­ly gratified by a nod for the fuzzed-out “Ballad of a Homeschool­ed Girl” in the Grammys’ rock song category, where it’s up against cuts by Boygenius (“Incredible song,” she says of the indie supergroup’s “Not Strong Enough”), Foo Fighters, Queens of the Stone Age and none other than the Rolling Stones.

“I love that it’s for the song where I say, ‘Every guy I like is gay,’” Rodrigo says with a laugh over lunch in Los Feliz. The singer, who grew up in Temecula, recently bought an apartment in Greenwich Village and has started splitting her time between New York and Los Angeles; she’s here enjoying a cheeseburg­er and Diet Coke not long after the premiere of the latest “Hunger Games” movie, for which she wrote a spectral chamber-folk song called “Can’t Catch Me Now.” (Come January, perhaps she’ll have an Oscar nomination to go with all the Grammy love.)

Rodrigo credits her producer, Dan Nigro, with pushing her to try out different styles and sonic approaches.

“I sometimes think if it weren’t for him, I would have been writing sad piano ballads forever,” she says, dressed in a collared red dress and dark boots that give her something of a cool babysitter vibe.

Yet it’s Rodrigo’s commitment to the character she’s playing — to the subtle variations in tone and attitude — that brings the music to life in a song like “Bad Idea Right?,” a jumpy new wave jam about reconnecti­ng with a guy she knows she should avoid. And, yes, this former child actor does think of her performanc­es on “Guts” as character work.

“That was an idea I was exploring a lot on this album — that the girl singing ‘Bad Idea Right?’ is totally different than the girl singing ‘Logical,’ ” she says. “This time, I wasn’t 17 years old, going through my first heartbreak, crying at the piano, and a song just flies out. I had to sharpen my songwritin­g skills and my singing skills. It felt like a different creative experience.”

“Guts” is also funnier than “Sour,” nowhere more so than in the rap-rock banger “Get Him Back!,” in which the singer roasts an ex without breaking a sweat: “He had an ego and a temper and a wandering eye / He said he’s six-foot-two and I’m like, ‘Dude, nice try.’ ”

None of this is to say that Rodrigo has forsworn the type of emotional melodrama that made her a star. In the pensive “Making the Bed,” she revisits the scene of “Drivers License,” imagining herself behind the wheel of a car as the brakes go out. And one of the album’s most impressive songs is “Lacy,” a haunting and delicate acoustic number about a poisoned friendship that grew out of an assignment Rodrigo completed as part of a poetry course she took last year at USC.

“The line that blows me away is ‘Dazzling starlet / Bardot reincarnat­e,’ ” says Noah Kahan, the folkrock singer-songwriter (and fellow Grammy nominee) who recently covered “Lacy” in a live set for the BBC’s Radio 1. “It’s so vivid and paints such a specific picture. And her vocal performanc­e is out of this world. It’s one of the hardest songs I’ve ever covered in terms of finding ways to accent the words without overpoweri­ng them with your voice.”

Like “Drivers License,” which came wrapped in internet gossip about Rodrigo’s alleged romance with a Disney castmate, “Lacy” has inspired widespread speculatio­n regarding the identity of the song’s subject. (The most popular theories involve Taylor Swift and Gracie Abrams.) Rodrigo says she tries to ignore the chatter, though she’s enjoyed the “more creative answers to who Lacy is — like it’s a past version of myself or the voice in my head telling me I’m not good enough.”

At any rate, she adds, “I just think it’s not classy to come out and say it’s about this person. I also think that would set a weird precedent where I’d have to clear the air with every song I write.”

Even so, Rodrigo seems pleased to have learned that Billie Eilish wrote her song “Goldwing,” as Eilish recently told The Times, in part about feeling protective of the slightly younger Rodrigo.

“I thought that was so sweet,” she says. “Billie is such a kind, wonderful girl, and I feel very lucky that it’s not about competitio­n — that we’re just looking out for each other. I love that song.”

With a laugh, Rodrigo recalls that the friend who relayed Eilish’s comments to her went on to wonder who’d be the next pop phenom to come up behind Rodrigo. “Obviously, I’m washed up,” she says — a joke with a kernel of truth she explores in “Guts’ ” mournful closer, “Teenage Dream,” in which she cops to the “fear that they already got all the best parts of me.”

“I think for any young person in the entertainm­ent industry, that’s a little bit of a mindf—,” she says.

On the brighter side of aging: the fact that she’ll get to vote for president for the first time next November. Rodrigo cast her ballot in last year’s midterm elections — “You could totally mail it in,” she says, “but I went and put it in the thing anyway because I had to get a sticker” — and she’s been vocal on a variety of hot-button social issues.

Onstage last year at L.A.’s Greek Theatre, she advocated for stricter gun-control laws in the wake of the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas; weeks later, she dedicated a rendition of Lily Allen’s “F— You” at England’s Glastonbur­y festival to the U.S. Supreme Court after the court overturned Roe vs. Wade.

Asked if she weighed the pros and cons of speaking out at a moment of deep political division, she says no. “Especially with something like abortion, it’s so emotional,” she adds. “And I think that’s what artists do: take their emotions and make them into art.”

Says John Janick, chairman and chief executive of Rodrigo’s label, Interscope Geffen A&M: “A few of the many things I love about Olivia are her intelligen­ce, conviction, values and caring nature. She has the courage and confidence to stand up for what she believes in.”

Having visited the White House in 2021 to urge young people to get the COVID vaccine, she has a relationsh­ip with President Biden. Would she play a campaign event if asked?

“First off, what a crazy sentence: ‘You have a relationsh­ip with the president,’ ” she replies. “But I mean, yeah, totally. I think it’s a really noble cause.”

Before that, she’s got a tour to launch on Feb. 23 in Palm Springs — just a couple days after her 21st birthday. “I’m either not gonna do a party or I’m gonna be really hung over for the first show,” she says, laughing. “We’ll see.”

Rodrigo, who joined Sheryl Crow to sing “If It Makes You Happy” at last month’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, says planning the production “is really making me examine my identity as an artist, because I love going to a show that’s big and awesome, but I’m also not the type of girl who’s gonna break into a dance routine. That’s not me. So I’ve got to figure out a way to make it my own.

“I need to work on my deathmetal scream too,” she adds — something she appeared to have done in time for a rowdy, cakesmashi­ng rendition of “All-American Bitch” recently on “Saturday Night Live.”

Among her opening acts will be the Breeders, whose 1993 hit “Cannonball” she ranks as “one of those songs where I look at my life as before I heard it and after I heard it.” She caught the veteran alt-rock band’s gig at the Wiltern in October and hung out backstage afterward. “I hope I get all the stories out of them that they have,” she says of the upcoming dates.

On tour last year behind “Sour,” she says, “I didn’t know anything about performing. I was so green.” At the time, she said she’d elected to play theaters (instead of the arenas she could easily have filled) because she didn’t want to “skip any steps” in her developmen­t as a live performer.

Reminded of her rationale, she smiles. “If they’d put me in an arena back then, I would’ve been terrified,” she says. “I wouldn’t have known what to do.”

So what did the road teach her? “That jumping around and singing — just the physical act of it — is the hardest thing.”

Going back to her old songs now in rehearsals has been another learning experience. “Some of them I don’t really love so much anymore,” she says. For instance? “Oh, I don’t want to tell you that. People get so sad because it’ll be their favorite song. But I just feel like I’ve grown out of some of them.”

She’s happy to report that “Drivers License” isn’t one of those, though she does hear her breakout smash differentl­y today.

“I remember putting the song out, still super-heartbroke­n, and people would come up to me and say, ‘Wow, this takes me back to my first heartbreak,’” she says. “Now, I listen to it and I totally get it. It actually does transport me back to when I thought I was never gonna love anyone else.

“I’m like, — that’s so cute.’ ”

“I HAD to sharpen my songwritin­g skills .... It felt like a different creative experience,” Olivia Rodrigo says of LP “Guts.”

 ?? Sandy Kim For The Times ??
Sandy Kim For The Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States