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Post by Admin on May 11, 2022 22:07:29 GMT
Olivia Rodrigo Live in Boston - Sour Tour Boston Live Full Concert 61,121 views Premiered May 5, 2022 Please do not repost my video!!!
Olivia Rodrigo Setlist
brutal 1:55-5:15 jealousy, jealousy 5:16-8:08 drivers license 9:08-13:42 Complicated (Avril Lavigne) Cover Song 14:01-18:20 hope ur ok 18:48-22:15 enough for you 1 step forward, 3 steps back mashup 22:25-27:00 happier 29:34-33:25 All I Want 34:28-38:06 Seether (Veruca Salt) Cover Song 38:19-41:47 favorite crime 42:25-47:07 traitor 47:13-53:30 deja vu 54:35-58:51 good 4 u 58:58-1:04:08
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Post by Admin on May 22, 2022 19:22:59 GMT
Spotlighting Asian American Artists: Olivia Rodrigo, Conan Gray, Saweetie & More | Billboard News 3,815 views May 16, 2022 Billboard is spotlighting Asian-American artists like Olivia Rodrigo, Conan Gray, Saweetie, and Japanese Breakfast for Asian American Pacific Islander month.
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Post by Admin on May 29, 2022 17:17:12 GMT
The line at Olivia Rodrigo's final U.S. concert of her "Sour" tour in San Francisco stretched the span of Bill Graham Civic Auditorium — twice — and the entire length of City Hall on Friday night. That was, in part, by design. Imagine this: The defining pop star of this young decade booked what is essentially an oversized high school theater to perform her globe-conquering debut album “Sour,” all so that she won’t “skip any steps” in her already-expedited route to pop stardom. (In other cities, she booked even smaller venues, like the 5,900-capacity Greek Theatre in Los Angeles.) She may have made the right call. Her music thrives in small spaces, where the din of the crowd singing in unison feels rapturous given so many of her early singles (recorded in 2020 and released in early 2021) came out in such a solitary time of the pandemic. “I think that’s the most beautiful thing about music,” Rodrigo said just before playing “Driver’s License,” the song that consecrated her career, “is that sometimes it can communicate how we feel better than words ever could.” When she says a line like that with that much conviction, you can’t help but believe it for yourself, too. For her primarily Gen Z audience, Olivia Rodrigo’s best songs feel like they subsume into you, make you feel whole, understood. At the very least, they compel her audiences to lose their voice the next morning or brave the San Francisco chill in their Shein best. Rodrigo’s songwriting crystallizes the depths of heartbreak in all the rage, the paranoia and envy. Like every other teenager, she cares about what other people think — maybe too much. And in a live setting, these earnest, life-affirming songs f–king ripped. Her theater-kid vocal prowess was on full display. Every word she sang had at least a few thousands of others singing alongside her; and for her biggest hits, the 8,500-seat auditorium’s collective voice felt like it hung in the air long after the show ended. “God damn, I really did save the best show for last,” she joked, at one point, after hearing how loud the crowd sang with her. Rodrigo's muse during her tour has been less the singer-songwriters that inspired “Driver’s License” and more the alt-rock station rotation that shaped “Good 4 U” and other, rock-heavy songs on “Sour.” “Brutal," with its intentionally angsty sing-speak cadence, felt utterly alive. When the crowd yelled "Where's my f–king teenage dream?" with her, you felt the collective venom of fleeting youth seeping out.
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Post by Admin on May 29, 2022 18:45:41 GMT
These songs she wrote in her bedroom, given this space to bloom and a crowd who latched onto her every word, turned into cathartic, rocking missives over the span of her hour-long set. Take “Happier,” a meek, pleading ballad to a moved-on ex. She jettisons the folksy piano of the recorded song entirely, transforming it into an arena-rock romp that could fill a stadium triple the size of Bill Graham. “Jealousy, Jealousy” got a full pop-punk retrofit; at the show, it felt almost like hearing a long-lost Paramore B-side for the first time. Even the covers she chose for the tour felt intentionally KROQ-y — Avril Lavigne’s “Complicated” and No Doubt’s “Just A Girl,” both of which she’s done in other cities. (If I had one gripe about the show, I wish she did a ‘90s, female-led song with a deeper Bay Area tie — hearing Rodrigo do her version of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” or 4 Non Blondes’ “What’s Up?” would have been a treat.) The whole time, Rodrigo was vivacious — running back-and-forth across the stage animated entirely by the love of performing and the adulation of the crowd around her. She dazzled, with so much energy and zeal and gratitude for even getting to be in the room with everyone. The confetti at the end of the night had messages scrawled on them thanking fans for coming to the tour. But for as much as Rodrigo has been made out by older audiences to be an avatar of endless, indefatigable youth, you forget how young she really is.
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Post by Admin on Jun 6, 2022 17:09:52 GMT
Olivia Rodrigo + Alanis Morissette - You Oughta Know (5-24-22) at The Greek
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