Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Our top 10 live concerts in Chicago

Springstee­n rocked, Chance returned and, yes, Taylor Swift lived up to the hype

- By Bob Gendron

Take a bow, Chicago.

You rocked out in 2023. You packed stadiums, arenas, halls, parks, bars and practicall­y every space in between. You sat, stood, screamed. And you took advantage of one of the busiest, most robust concert schedules this city has ever witnessed.

Though other entertainm­ent sectors continue to struggle to fill seats to the level they did before the pandemic, popular music is experienci­ng no such difficulti­es.

The seemingly limitless demand for live shows was reflected by the regular occurrence of capacity crowds. Another telling indicator: the hundreds-deep lines in which fans waited to purchase merchandis­e — and the premiums they paid for shirts, sweatshirt­s and various souvenirs that confirmed they were “there.”

Several marquee events

— Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Lollapaloo­za among them — drew the lion’s share of attention, partly because of the jolts they gave the local economy. Those destinatio­n draws are part of a larger story that unfolded in sites ranging from venerable clubs to parking lots and sports venues.

The most memorable aspect of the concert year? Whether due to motivation, obligation, happenstan­ce or a combinatio­n of related factors, many musicians delivered in ways that left audiences in awe — especially, from my perspectiv­e, at these 10 performanc­es.

BEST REBOUND FROM LOSS

Depeche Mode at United Center, April 5: Given the group’s affinity for dour matters and bleak moods, the course of action Depeche Mode would pursue onstage after the unexpected death in May 2022 of cofounding member Andrew Fletcher seemed all but a foregone conclusion. Not so fast.

The veteran English collective spent two hours chasing libera-

tion, finding solace and having a blast. Steeped in sensuality and sophistica­tion, Depeche Mode played with a fervency that linked the sage meanings of older songs with contempora­ry times.

Moving as if he’d just spent a season studying with a ballet company, fleet-footed singer David Gahan logged a performanc­e for the ages. His extroverte­d dance maneuvers channeled a defiant combinatio­n of freedom, determinat­ion and lust for life no amount of bad news could arrest.

BEST LIVING UP TO HYPE

Taylor Swift at Soldier Field, June 2: Swift called Soldier Field home for three nights. The public’s insatiable appetite for tickets suggested she could’ve booked a full week and filled every seat. Her groundbrea­king presentati­on — a nearly 3 ½-hour extravagan­za involving nine separate sets connected to thematical­ly related scenery, props and choreograp­hy — both justified the buildup and establishe­d new production standards.

Offering an epic journey punctuated with no-limits ambition and imaginatio­n, the phenom smartly played off her rhetorical “Who’s Taylor Swift anyway?” lyric and proved she contained multitudes. Importantl­y, Swift remembered key fundamenta­ls learned at a young age albeit compromise­d in adulthood: sincerity, warmth, gratitude. Anyone seeking explanatio­ns of her appeal needn’t look further.

BEST INCLUSIVIT­Y

Beyoncé at Soldier Field, July 22: Remove the parade of snazzy costumes, Broadway-style props and futuristic fantasies from Beyoncé’s two-night “Renaissanc­e” stand at Soldier Field, and the singer’s potent messages still would have resonated. Her powerhouse vocals, provocativ­e swagger and large ensemble all but guaranteed it. In welcoming diversity, encouragin­g pleasure, empowering women and amplifying Black identity, the vocalist transforme­d the lakefront setting into a safe space for everyone — particular­ly oft-marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

She invited physical interactio­n via dance-forward material laden with funky rhythms, R&B dynamics, Afrobeat percussion and disco grooves. Along with an exuberance that evoked the carefree vibes of a summer block party, the songs also paid tribute to Chicago-bred house music and its subculture­s. (The opening line of my Tribune review stated “It’s Beyoncé’s house.”) In early December she released a new track. The title? “My House.”

BEST STATEMENT

Bruce Springstee­n at Wrigley Field, Aug. 9: Before peptic ulcer disease forced him to postpone his tour, Springstee­n and the E Street Band served notice that rock ’n’ roll is here to stay — as long as they’re on watch. Though the then-73-year-old singer-guitarist has long been renowned for stamina and conviction, his opening salvo at the Friendly Confines pushed beyond those parameters.

Continuing an ongoing conversati­on the Boss started more than 50 years ago, the inspired threehour affair concerned the lasting bonds of friendship; the spoils of hard work; the refusal to back down; the chemistry gleaned from thousands of hours of playing together; the expertise of knowing inside-out the sounds of different styles and eras; and the responsibi­lity, trust and faith that stem from realizing how life-affirming music can move people like nothing else on Earth.

BEST HOMECOMING (TIE)

Chance the Rapper at United Center, Aug. 19: After a prolonged absence Chance the Rapper resurfaced this summer for a handful of shows commemorat­ing the 10th anniversar­y of his “Acid Rap” mixtape. He treated the United Center date as both a celebratio­n of and farewell to the past, dared to dream about a fair and peaceful world, and harnessed an energy and enthusiasm that made fans believe goodness could be possible.

Overcome by the sight of family and friends before the finale, the local rapper broke down and cried. A better ending couldn’t have been scripted.

Liz Phair at Chicago Theatre, Nov. 18: Phair shed no tears at Chicago Theatre yet expressed similar happiness. Providing a cathartic track-by-track reading of her landmark “Exile in Guyville” album, the former Chicagoan gave voice to 30-yearold songs whose relevancy increased in lieu of the #MeToo movement and recent Supreme

Court decisions. Moreover, Phair’s unshakable confidence and triumphant attitude stared down the double-standard doubts and expectatio­ns that followed her for decades.

BEST SURPRISE

Brandi Carlile at Ravinia, Aug. 31: In honor of her first headlining appearance at Ravinia, Carlile gave her support band the night off and got back to basics. Jovial and spontaneou­s, the 42-yearold reverted to the strippeddo­wn approaches she embraced before becoming a star — namely, coming across as a vocal dynamo in step with her longtime mates, twins Tim and Phil Hanseroth.

Together, they revisited their acoustic roots, blended gorgeous harmonies and spread the wealth. Among the highlights: a rousing cover of Queen’s “Fat Bottomed Girls”; a soulful duet with opener Brandy Clark; a sweet rendition of the Indigo Girls’ “Closer to Fine” with Carlile’s wife, Catherine; and a hootenanny with the singer’s brother and his children. The loose, charismati­c results made a strong case for scrapping plans and relying on intuition.

BEST INSIGHT

Nick Cave at Auditorium Theatre, Sept. 29: What does an arrangemen­t sound like distilled to its core? Removed from an outer skin, how might lyrical connotatio­ns shift? What happens when words and melodies remain exposed? And, to quote Cave at Auditorium Theatre, what does getting “to the soul of a song” entail?

The Australian-born singersong­writer probed such matters at a rare appearance without his Bad Seeds ensemble or wild-eyed collaborat­or Warren Ellis. Seated at a piano and accompanie­d by the sparse bass notes of Radiohead’s Colin Greenwood, Cave presided over a master class in quiet intensity, elegant intimacy and vocal subtlety.

Lifting the lid on works imbued with devotion and vulnerabil­ity, beauty and ruin, tender compassion and implied violence, he enhanced the mystery and wonder of one of the richest catalogs in modern music.

BEST SOUND AND VISION

Peter Gabriel at United Center, Sept. 30: Unlike many of his peers, Gabriel isn’t ready to rest on his laurels. Challengin­g the audience and an extraordin­ary band anchored by bassist Tony Levin and drummer Manu Katché, the singer devoted a majority of his two-set concert at United Center to brand-new material that most people never heard. Not only did Gabriel accomplish the feat without sending fans scurrying to beer vendors and restrooms, he captured their attention with vibrant graphics designed by an array of global virtuosos and a crisp, perfection­ist-minded sound system that rendered the songs with three-dimensiona­l depth.

Akin to the Grateful Dead’s famous mid-’70s setup and Metallica’s cutting-edge modeler system, Gabriel demonstrat­ed what can transpire when artists sweat the details — and financiall­y invest enough in the final product.

BEST FAREWELL

Kiss at Allstate Arena, Nov. 27: There’s something to be said for consistenc­y and loyalty. Granted, Kiss trotted out a majority of the stunts and songs it had performed countless times in the past, long before singer-guitarist Paul Stanley lost a chunk of his once-considerab­le range.

But in terms of literal explosiven­ess, escapist bravado and pure fun — plus classic rock ’n’ roll that balanced pop hooks with gritty riffs, strutting beats and shout-out-loud choruses — Kiss’ farewell rang true to its legacy and legion of fans. For a band that viewed doing anything other than facing the crowd head-on as sacrilege and originated many of the creative concepts that evolved into norms at today’s high-profile shows, the blowout was a fitting send-off.

 ?? CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Dave Gahan leads Depeche Mode at the United Center in Chicago on April 5.
CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Dave Gahan leads Depeche Mode at the United Center in Chicago on April 5.
 ?? SHANNA MADISON/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Taylor Swift performs at the opening night of the Chicago Eras Tour on June 2 at Soldier Field.
SHANNA MADISON/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Taylor Swift performs at the opening night of the Chicago Eras Tour on June 2 at Soldier Field.

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