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Lollapalooza Day 3: Rain can’t put a damper on Odesza and TxT’s day

Saturday’s Lollapalooza opened with less fanfare — blame the rain pelting down in Grant Park for much of the afternoon. As the first soggy fans made their way to the T-Mobile stage, festival staffers in ponchos were still busy clearing up detritus left by Friday night’s massive crowd for Kendrick Lamar.

Day 3 headliners are Odesza on the T-Mobile stage and the K-pop band Tomorrow X Together on the Bud Light Stage, plus the rapper Pusha T in a day-ending set on the Perry’s stage.

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Some fans came prepared. Anna and Jovana Martinez of DeKalb County and Hope Herrera from Joliet stopped at CVS on their way into the festival for bright yellow $6 rain ponchos. They planned to be at the T-Mobile stage for the Revivalists’ set late afternoon and stay through Odesza. They’d also been there for Billie Eilish on opening day.

“People were literally slipping on top of each other” at Eilish’s set, said Jovana Martinez, who said this year’s festival was “way more intense than last year. She blames the lineup more than the larger crowd sizes — daily capacity at Lollapalooza has been increased for 2023.

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At the start of Lamar’s set last night, the Martinez sisters said they heard repeated calls for a medic during the 15-minute delay before music began. Crew members “were pulling a lot of people out of the crowd.”

Lasers in the rain

If Saturday’s slow start intimidated Australian DJ Benson, his splashy set was no indication. With fewer than a hundred fans in attendance when he dropped his first beat at noon, Benson seemed euphoric, bopping all around the turntable as he ran through some of his favorite music club edits.

“This is my first time in Chicago,” he told fans, giving them props for braving the rain. “This city is so good!”

Trippy glitchcore graphics and a red laser light show, pulsing in time with Benson’s hypnotic rap-infused mixes, pulled many attendees off the sidewalks and toward the Perry’s stage as if magnetized.

Benson played again on a different stage later in the day. The Linda Lindas, Suki Waterhouse and J.I.D. were other notables on the Saturday lineup, as were the Q Brothers on the Kidzapalooza stage.

Nathan and Hailey Fast, both 35, opted to watch the set from a giant inflatable chair. The couple plans to tote the cloudlike rainbow cushion to multiple shows today, Nathan Fast said.

“I don’t want to stand all day,” Hailey Fast said, glancing around the muddy lawn in front of the Perry’s stage. “It was a condition of me coming with him.”

Benson performs during Day 3 of Lollapalooza on Saturday.

Doesn’t matter what language you sing

Argentinian rock band Usted Señalemelo performed to a dripping crowd early at the Bacardi stage. This was their first U.S. tour and they brought a set packed with compelling, synth-heavy beats.

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Vocalist and keyboard player Juan Saieg wore a cape adorned with white spray-painted lines and a shirt with the name of his home country. He jumped up and down on stage, responding to nods from guitarist Gabriel Orozco and drummer Lucca Beguerie Petrich. The three have been playing together since they were 12 years old, they told the Tribune after their set, and on stage, their actions are perfectly in sync.

Petrich said he sometimes gets nervous to play to a majority English-speaking audience.

“But in the end, music connects everything. It doesn’t matter what language you speak or sing, or what the words mean,” said Saieg. “We don’t understand English music, but we connect with the music.”

Da’ mayor in the house

Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson’s opening speech for Eilish Thursday has been the buzz of social media since. “The city of Chicago is bringing the entire world together. We are the soul of Chicago. We are the soul of the world,” he said in part to cheering fans. “This is the moment we were made for.”

Johnson returned to the backstage area Friday. Mayor’s Office spokesperson Ronnie Reese confirmed that he visited to meet with Lollapalooza founder Perry Farrell. Reese said Johnson’s back-to-back appearances were meant to show the importance of the festival to the administration.

“The power of music to create such a joyous, large-scale, multicultural experience is critical to economic vitality, which is not only a boon to local business and infrastructure, but also to local artists who have a platform to showcase their talent to visitors from across the globe,” Reese said in a statement.

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Fans sing as Suki Waterhouse performs during Day 3 of Lollapalooza on Saturday.

Over in Chow Town

“Burgers? Hot dogs?” Epic Burger employees called, enticing customers during a break in the storm. Next door, Tandoor Char House vendors laughed and leaned into each other between dishing out tandoori chicken empanadas and loaded chaat fries.

The Chow Town area on Columbus Drive, with concession booths on one side and shade trees on the other, was a popular shelter from morning showers. Lines formed at Fatso’s Last Stand and Broken English Taco Pub.

Iconic Chicago “Cheezborger” joint Billy Goat Tavern expects to sell 5,000 burgers each day of the festival. Connie’s Pizza, a longtime Lolla staple, sold 5,500 slices Thursday and 5,300 Friday, said general manager Mike Acton. He said he misses the days when the festival was smaller.

“I like the extra people — it felt like a lot more vendors got more business,” he said. “But do we like that? No. Because there’s more vendors.”

‘Rain, rain go away’

Two 26-year-olds from Portage, Indiana — Tim Wozniak and Alyssa Rospierski — stood in the middle of the street as the rain poured down. Rospierski huddled under Wozniak’s poncho to keep her nachos dry.

”We’re weathering the rain because we wanted to see Friday Pilots Club,” Rospierski said. “We’re not staying dry at this point. We’re just hoping to stay warm.”

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They saw 1975 last night, they said, and the energy from that was carrying them through the gloomy weather. Wozniak is an electrician and Rospierski works in a dental office and they both love live music, especially when it’s local. Friday Pilots Club singer Caleb Hiltunen met guitarist Drew Polovick while attending Columbia College.

”Rain rain go away, so we can enjoy the rest of today, and tomorrow,” she said.

Suki Waterhouse performs at Lollapalooza on Aug. 5, 2023 in Chicago’s Grant Park.

Tomorrow X Together fans

There are few music fans like K-pop music fans. When cameras panned the crowd at the Bud Light stage before the electronic pop duo Sylvan Esso’s set late afternoon, Tomorrow X Together followers were lined up for that night’s headliner. They waved waving Korean flags, pictures of TxT members’ faces and printed-out fan art. Up on the video screens: One fan’s poster was dedicated to Odi, band member Soobin’s pet hedgehog.

Kayla Monroe and Joshua Harris, both from Richmond, Virginia, said they’d been TxT fans for two years. They came to the group through the megastar band BTS and attended Lollapalooza last year mostly to see BTS member J-Hope.

“We’re all here to see Tomorrow X Together and it’s a good vibe,” Monroe said of the crowd lined up. “We’re all giving each other breaks.”

Music in his DNA

Frayne Vibez, playing with Kosine, was the opener on the Bacardi stage. It was the 22-year-old musician’s first Lollapalooza but he’s no stranger to the stage — he’s the grandson of the late Chicago jazz great Ramsey Lewis.

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Speaking to the Tribune after his set, he said he grew up with his father taking him along to Lewis’s studio. “The biggest thing he left me with is it’s all about the music,” Vibez said. “Forget about the outside forces, forget about what people say, what’s important is just to be fully in that two minutes and 40 seconds.”

Vibez, who grew up in the western suburbs and attended Fenwick High School in Oak Park, describes his sound as pop mixed with hip hop and alternative rock. He hopes to have an album out next year and continue performing around Chicago. Lollapalooza equals momentum, he said. “We’re not stopping now.”

Trademark soprano

Maggie Rogers took a break from touring the U.S. and Canada this summer to thrill audiences at Lollapalooza with her soulful, ethereal tracks.

The 29-year-old indie singer and songwriter first saw fame as an undergraduate at New York University, where her soon-to-be-hit single “Alaska” caught the attention of rapper snd producer Pharrell Williams.

Known for soaring vocals and thoughtful lyricism, the indie darling brought the house down immediately with opening track “Overdrive.” On bouncier tracks like “Give A Little,” Rogers half-danced, half-flew across a set of ornate red rugs. Guitar-heavy anthems and introspective slow songs alike were marked by Rogers’ trademark soprano, crystal clear and just a little bit earthy.

The Bud Light audience was captivated from the first drop of “Fallingwater,” chanting Rogers’ name unprompted as the first crystalline notes of “Alaska” rang out across Grant Park.

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Later, as the last act on the Coinbase stage, rapper Yung Gravy brought out surprise guest BBNO$ to promote upcoming collaborative album “Baby Gravy 3,” out Aug. 18. The duo played BBNO$’s hit song “Whip A Tesla,” among others, to the delight of a rowdy Saturday night crowd.


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