Thank You and You're Welcome
When I say you’ve seen nothing like Kanye West’s fan-freaking-tastic “Glow in the Dark” tour, believe it. I'm still recovering from the second of two sold out shows at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live. I even ran into the guys from Vampire Weekend in the lobby.
Lupe Fiasco opened, sounding like a hip-hop version of Coldplay—and that’s not a dis. Anthems like the hit “Superstar” are more Chris Martin than Ludacris, and his increasing sales numbers prove it to be a shrewd move.
Pharrell Williams
and N.E.R.D. turned it into a rock show with mosh-ready new tunes from their forthcoming “Seeing Sounds” album, Skateboard P calling out Lindsday Lohan and Samantha Ronson from the stage. Lohan had already received a hero’s welcome walking through the audience, stopping to hug an obviously enamored little boy that ran up on her.
Rihanna proved to be the potentially perfect pop star, only the right collaborator(s) away from dethroning Gwen Stefani. She’s still relatively new to the game, but like Fiasco, she’s a fast learner.
West (here backstage in his GITD gear) played Stanley Kubrick, presenting an elaborate and ambitious 2008 rap odyssey somewhere between R. Kelly’s “Trapped in the Closet” and Earth, Wind and Fire’s legendary stage show. The only person onstage, West still managed to own the audience with his non-stop barrage of hits (and a crashed spaceship computer named “Jane.” Don’t ask). His show was rather amazing, and "Glow in the Dark" is nothing less than the best tour to come through L.A. this year, right up there with Ye's "big brother" Jay-Z and Mary J. Blige's outstanding "Heart of the City" tour.
See for yourself when the tour returns to town on June 7 at the Staples Center. It'll totally be worth whatever scalpers are charging for tickets, since this one's been sold out cold for weeks.
PS: And don’t leave the show without your complimentary copy of Kanye’s new self-actualization book, “Thank You and You’re Welcome.” Again, just trust me.
—Scott T. Sterling


