Live Review and Gallery – Lionel Richie at United Center
Lionel Richie
United Center, Chicago
Saturday, August 26
Between a Las Vegas residency to headlining mega-festivals such as Bonnaroo, Outside Lands and Glastonbury as of late, itâs been a minute since Lionel Richie last came through Chicago. Although itâs also been awhile since he recorded an original album (2009âs Just Go), it was the promise of âAll The Hitsâ that finally filled up the United Center after postponing due to an injury earlier this year.
Technically speaking, the solo singer/songwriter and one-time Commodore didnât have time to tackle absolutely everything that cruised up the charts, but for somewhere around 100 minutes, each song he selected was immediately recognizable. Besides boasting so many mighty love ballads and soulful pop standards, Richie at 68 sounds and looks practically identical to the days when he was dancing on the ceiling (well, expect for maybe those outrageous outfits that reeked of the â80s at their most excessive).
The hospitable performer tore right into the showâs purpose at the piano for The Commodoresâ âEasyâ and âMy Love,â but quickly shed his seat, and from there, just kept âRunning With The Nightâ around the triangular stage. As the smashes kept coming (âTruly,â âYou Are,â âThree Times A Lady,â âSail On,â âHello,â âSay You, Say Meâ), so did the sing-a-longs with Richie pouring nothing but romance and positivity on an audience surely sick of politics, finger-pointing and society circa 2017 in general.
While all of Richieâs selections were âoldiesâ by comparison, they managed to escape sounding dated thanks to five younger musicians who freshened up the arrangements and couldâve easily backed guys like Bruno Mars or Justin Timberlake. They even spiced up âBrick House,â his last bandâs defining moment, with a splash of The Ohio Playersâ âFire,â transferring it from a mere guilty pleasure into a boiling funk groove.
One of the most meaningful moments came when Richie paused the party to reflect on so many of the musical greats lost in the last few years (Prince, David Bowie, George Michael, Glenn Frey, Natalie Cole) prior to âWe Are The World,â which he of course co-wrote with late legend Michael Jackson. Though Richie falls somewhere in the middle of those potent peers in terms of influence, thankfully heâs still here and dead serious when it comes
-Review and Gallery by Andy Argyrakis
Category: IE Photo Gallery, Live Reviews
I am seeing him this Sunday in Vancouver and I could not be more excited. I have literally waited my entire life to see Lionel Richie live.
When I was a kid, may parents played The Commodores. From there I have continued to follow him and loved all his music. This is really a bucket list concert for me.