Baltimore Sun

Punk meets butterflie­s, bows at Rodrigo show

Outfits allow fans to identify with each other, emulate artist

- By Callie Holtermann

On a February day, just outside Palm Springs, California, you might have thought a strange mirage had appeared: One or two zillion tweens descended upon an arena, all wearing platform Doc Martens.

Had some official communique been issued, at a frequency undetectab­le to those older than 25? Had everyone been subconscio­usly nudged to pair boots with fishnets and leg warmers?

No one seemed to care that it was hot out. What did matter was that the boots, punky symbols of past musical rebellions, were central to the unofficial-but-conspicuou­sly official uniform of Olivia Rodrigo’s Guts World Tour, which began that night.

Each recent tour by a major pop star has seemingly birthed an aesthetic microclima­te that follows the artist from show to show, usually evaporatin­g when the tour is over. Dressing up for concerts is not new — see Grateful Dead fans in their tie-dye, the ’90s Madonna fans in their regalia — but last summer’s blockbuste­r tours have upped the ante. Imagine showing up to Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour without a cowboy hat or attending Beyoncé’s Renaissanc­e Tour without looking at least a little bit like a shimmery disco ball.

These uniforms grow out of fans’ desire to emulate their favorite artists and to visually identify with one another. Now, social media gives people a chance to share and see what everyone else has been wearing. And it doesn’t hurt that e-commerce sites such as Amazon and Shein make it easy to order and receive a pair of sequined, thigh-high

boots in the time it takes for Beyoncé to fly from Vancouver to Seattle.

For fans of Rodrigo, the current poet laureate of adolescent vulnerabil­ity, what was the look going to be? They arrived at the first stop on her worldwide Guts Tour already dressed in startling unison.

In the parking lot before the concert, fans waited in long lines in every direction — for the merchandis­e truck, for VIP tickets, for port-a-potties — each one a slow-moving runway show. Purple was everywhere. Butterflie­s, too. Many followed the singer’s lead in drawing from riot grrrl and grunge fashion from the ’90s, including Lucy Elfelt, 14, who had some pointers for her mother on dressing to emulate a decade that only one of them had actually lived through.

“She was like, ‘Mom, you’re not grunge enough,’ ”

said Alicia Elfelt, 49. “I’m like, my hair’s purple.”

The uniform evoked femininity laced into combat boots, as if to outfit its wearer for the rugged territory of emotional catharsis. There were plenty of girlish details such as bows, corsets and spangly miniskirts, but not without a chunky shoe or a swipe of sludgy eyeliner.

For some, maybe it was a reflection of Rodrigo’s ability to refashion the humiliatio­ns of adolescenc­e into lethal songwritin­g weapons.

“It’s like she read my diary,” Bridget Lee, 20, said of the artist’s songs about feeling naive, embarrasse­d, vengeful, insecure.

“Every song is literally me,” said Diego Soriano, 19.

Others say they relate to her because she is a Pisces, because she is of Filipino descent or because she gets angry about the same

things they do.

“I love the way she screams,” said Val Mok, 28. “Like, story of my life.”

Lee wore a tiered Betsey Johnson dress that she had found on the secondhand clothing app Depop, simply by searching for “Olivia Rodrigo.” She and a group of nine other superfans had been planning their outfits in a group chat for months. Did they follow those social media accounts that posted breathless updates on each new piece of tour merchandis­e? They giggled. “We are the accounts,” one said.

Many fans see Rodrigo’s fashion sense as flattering­ly emblematic of Generation Z. But Tegan Astani, 18, said some students at her arts high school thought Rodrigo was “basic.”

Whose music do they listen to instead? They prefer less well-known artists, Astani said: “Have you ever heard of Led

Zeppelin?”

When doors opened at 6 p.m., a parade of purple bows filtered into the arena. Natalia Adams, 20, settled into a seat between her parents, who were marveling at the youth of the crowd. Her father, Matt, 58, remarked that there had been a long line for snow cones but no line to buy beer.

A few days earlier, when Rodrigo had released commemorat­ive shot glasses for her

21st birthday, a user on X, formerly known as Twitter, responded that they had never seen a Rodrigo fan of legal drinking age: “What are they gonna take shots of ... juice???” It was not too much of an exaggerati­on: A 7-year-old sat in the back row with her ears covered by massive purple headphones.

When fans dress alike, how does one stand out? Mok had constructe­d an entire outfit around the

artist’s lyric “Coca-Cola bottles that I only use to curl my hair.” Astani had sewn a cheerleade­r outfit based on a costume in Rodrigo’s music video for “good 4 u.”

Others were perfectly happy to be dressed like everybody else, to slip into a sense of belonging that both a fandom and a dress code can afford. Sometimes the nudge comes from the top: Beyoncé went so far as to encourage fans to wear silver items on her tour. If Rodrigo did not offer such specific instructio­ns, her Instagram posts and her pale-purple merch offered hints of the kind of look she was going for.

Her fans turned out to have interprete­d those clues correctly. When Rodrigo took the stage, she was wearing the same platform Doc Martens as everybody else.

“Did anybody dress up?” she asked a screaming crowd.

 ?? ?? Ahzalina, who got tickets for the opening night of Olivia Rodrigo’s Guts World Tour as a 10th birthday gift, sports her outfit Feb. 23 outside the Acrisure Arena in Palm Springs, California.
Ahzalina, who got tickets for the opening night of Olivia Rodrigo’s Guts World Tour as a 10th birthday gift, sports her outfit Feb. 23 outside the Acrisure Arena in Palm Springs, California.
 ?? ?? Fans with homemade outfits celebratin­g Olivia Rodrigo stand outside the Acrisure Arena.
Fans with homemade outfits celebratin­g Olivia Rodrigo stand outside the Acrisure Arena.
 ?? MOLLY MATALON/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Maddy did her own makeup for the show at the Acrisure Arena.
MOLLY MATALON/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Maddy did her own makeup for the show at the Acrisure Arena.

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