Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Review: Rihanna turns up sex appeal

Rihanna certainly knows how to excite a crowd.

She does so by belting out big dance-floor hits and she does it by crooning through equally appealing ballads. She accomplishes it with the help of a live band, which does a great job refashioning her radio singles for the stage, as well as with the assistance of a killer dance crew. She wins with big production numbers, full of all the outlandish bells and whistles one now expects from a true pop spectacle, but she also triumphs in the stripped-down settings.

Above all else, however, Rihanna uses pure sex appeal to get the job done. And she certainly succeeded on Thursday night at Oracle Arena.

The Barbadian R&B star's fourth concert trek, the Loud Tour, is one of the sexiest road shows to touch down in the Bay Area in ages. The Oakland outing was bawdy, naughty and erotic -- to an extent that might've made Madonna blush at times -- and perfectly in step with the star's overall sexy makeover, underscored by the recent album titles "Good Girl Gone Bad" (2007) and "Rated R" (2009).
The 23-year-old vocalist got the party rolling in high style as she opened the show with a dizzying take on "Only Girl (In the World)," one of the six singles released (thus far) from her fifth and latest CD, last year's "Loud."

The opening production was such an onslaught on the senses that it was initially hard to focus on the intended theme -- if, indeed, there was one. She made her entrance via gigantic ball, wheeled into view by dancers wearing bizarre neon jumpsuits and something resembling catcher's masks, and she looked great in a metallic blue mini-raincoat, which really wouldn't have provided much protection from the elements.

She'd soon shed that raincoat -- maybe because the forecast didn't call for rain - and boogie about in a heavily jeweled bikini, which looked like something Cleopatra would've worn on a sunny day down at the Nile. Oh, yeah, and she'd do it during "Disturbia" — although, at this point, the music still seemed like an afterthought.

After things settled down a bit, it became easier to understand how the theatrics matched with the music — mostly because Rihanna made it simple for us. The staging for "Shut Up and Drive," for instance, was basically just an old car, which the band's guitarist -- Nuno Bettencourt, of Extreme fame -- would climb upon to solo.

Things got a bit raunchy during the cover of Prince's "Darling Nikki," as Rihanna appeared wearing a fitted tuxedo and used a cane to spank her scantily clad female dancers. She'd lose the tuxedo, and be stripped down to sexy under garments by those same dancers, as Bettencourt wailed through another guitar solo. Yeah, it was in bad taste. The guitar solo, that is.