The Day

Paisley passion

- By RICK KOSTER Day Staff Writer

Hey, Brad Paisley: Times Square called. They want their neon and LED pixels back.

Yes, as fans in the soldout Mohegan Sun Arena could attest Sunday night, the stage set and effects for country superstar Paisley’s “Crushin’ It” world tour are eye-searingly great. Most of the tunes in the hour-and-40-minute set were vividly illustrate­d by videos ranging from clever and conceptual animation to “we’re having fun water skiing and/or luxuriatin­g with lovely people at the beach” travelogue­s. There were also snapshot homages to Paisley’s inspiratio­nal heroes — folks like Andy Griffith and multiple country legends of yore.

Oh, and don’t forget Paisley’s no-apologies affection for cold beer. Planted stage left was a fully functional bar — and over the course of the evening, four different shifts of fans/contest winners were escorted on- and offstage to spend a few minutes slurping adult beverages right in the middle of the action.

Of course, this is a world where live musical performanc­es by arena and stadium headliners — in any musical genre — almost by necessity require this sort of presentati­on. We as a culture require all nine senses — yes, scientists confirm we’ve evolved four new senses to handle all the stimulatio­n overdose — to be fully engaged continuall­y. As such, the idea of musicians simply walking onto an unadorned stage and, ah, playing and singing is quaint at best.

You’d be seriously wrong, though, if you think Paisley doesn’t use all of this technology and sensorial bombast in service to the music — which is always his priority.

He has an amazing band, he’s among the absolute finest songwriter­s working the “new country” template, and his guitar work — a steaming fusion of Jerry Reed, Danny Gatton and, naturally, Chet Atkins — is all-world.

Plus, there’s the humanity aspect. Paisley’s onstage persona is so kind and genuine — giving an acoustic guitar to a lucky kid, taking selfies for and with fans, delivering warm and funny between-tunes anecdotes — that you just know he’s a nice and witty dude out of the spotlights.

With all of these things securely in place, then, Paisley and company rocked the hits with passion and affection. If you have a favorite Paisley tune, they probably played it, and that Paisley separately brought out estimable support artists Eric Paslay (“Celebrity”) and Cam (the heartmelti­ng “Whiskey Lullaby”) were two more nice touches in a perfect recipe for An Evening Well Spent.

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