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Old 09-20-2017, 04:00 PM
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Harry Styles Bridges Past and Present at Stirring Tour Kickoff Show
Singer-songwriter treated an adoring San Francisco crowd to a skillful blend of solo favorites and One Direction classics


Outside San Francisco's Masonic, a modest but modern venue nestled in the city's upscale Nob Hill neighborhood, thousands of Harry Styles fans had spent hours – some, even days – waiting on the steep sidewalks. The mob would feel smaller inside the venue, during a show that was the most intimate many of them had ever seen the boy-band heartthrob play.

It was more than the screams that made Styles' first official tour date as a solo artist feel like he was playing to a football stadium rather than a theater. At 23 years old and with only 10 songs to his name, Styles has the charm, presence and feistiness of a veteran rocker twice his age, strutting and strumming across the stage with a delicate power that makes him seem as accessible as he is otherworldly.

Styles and his carefully curated band took the stage Tuesday night after Muna, a California electro-pop trio that brought the house down with a one-two punch of Stevie Nicks' "Edge of Seventeen" and their own "I Know a Place." Lead singer Katie Gavin set the tone for the night, building upon the joyous mood of the crowd. "Harry has built his career, his essence, on kindness," she earnestly said to deafening screams.

After a brief delay due to a fire alarm that dared to shut the whole night down, Styles finally made his grand entrance to a loop of the "Ever Since New York" harmonies, already intoxicating on his self-titled debut album but nearly hypnotic as the lights dimmed to reveal his guitar-holding silhouette on the pink-and-floral curtain that was hung after Muna left the stage. Here, we were introduced to Harry's first persona of the night: folk troubadour. From "New York" on, he displayed his most tender, rootsy side, performing more album ballad cuts like "Two Ghosts" and "Sweet Creature" – the latter met with a sea of fan-made pink hearts that were held up throughout the song. Much earlier than anticipated, Styles reminded everyone exactly where he came from, offering a tender take on the anthemic One Direction fan favorite "Stockholm Syndrome."

Following "Sweet Creature," Styles disposed of his floral jacket – part of a matching, two-piece floral suit – and launched into Act II: raucous rocker. A Jagger-ian strut propelled his body across the stage during "Only Angel," and he gyrated to the sexy "Woman." During that same track, a fan threw a rainbow flag on stage, and in direct opposition to the song's heteronormative storyline, he subversively twirled around with it before attaching it to his microphone where it remained for the rest of the main set.

By this point, Styles had completely loosened up, shedding the semi-serious (possibly even nervous) mode of his set's first half. He began to perform a few covers, a twist that was as crowd-pleasing as it was brilliant. He first tackled "Just a Little Bit of Your Heart," a piano ballad he co-wrote that Ariana Grande sung on her 2014 album My Everything. He turned Grande's melodrama on its head, remaking the tearjerker as a down-and-dirty country-rock romp. He did the same with One Direction's massive, unmistakable breakout hit "What Makes You Beautiful," a bold choice for an artist setting out to forge his own path.

But Styles has proven time and time again that to be a successful solo artist, you don't necessarily have to let go or even erase your past. As soon as "WMYB" ended, the band launched into the gritty, glammy "Kiwi" which got an even bigger rise from the crowd than the 1D classic did.

Once the song wrapped, Styles marched off the stage with the rainbow flag as the set was re-arranged and his jacket was revived for the "encore." It was here that he unveiled his third act and his final persona: the subtle superstar. The show's final 15 minutes featured a tight trio of tracks, beginning with "From the Dining Table," a gorgeous, simple guitar tune featured only Styles and primary collaborator Mitch Rowland on guitar. Next, he launched into an incredible take on Fleetwood Mac's "The Chain" as he celebrated and highlighted the talented quartet of musicians he culled together for his touring band. He could've ended the show with the classic cover and it would've felt completely natural, charming and on-brand, but of course he had an appropriately epic goodbye up his sleeve with "Sign of the Times," the single that officially launched his solo career. Styles' live version of the anthemic, Queen-inspired, nearly six-minute opus was stirring and triumphant as bright lights bathed him and his fans. The singer looked positively radiant as he shared in this moment, one that rightfully belonged to him, with every person in the room, whether physically present or being FaceTimed, Periscoped or live-texted in.

"You are the best friends any person could ever ask for," he offered sincerely, much earlier in the night. Blurring the lines of fans and friends is not typical rock star behavior, but then again, Harry Styles isn't shaping up to be your typical rock star.

Set List:
"Ever Since New York"
"Two Ghosts"
"Carolina"
"Stockholm Syndrome" (One Direction cover)
"Sweet Creature"
"Only Angel"
"Woman"
"Meet Me in the Hallway"
"Just a Little Bit of Your Heart" (Ariana Grande cover)
"What Makes You Beautiful" (One Direction cover)
"Kiwi"

Encore:
"From the Dining Table"
"The Chain" (Fleetwood Mac cover)
"Sign of the Times"



http://www.rollingstone.com/music/li...ickoff-w504526
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