Nobody cruises around in Chevettes or feathers their hair anymore, but Friday night's concert at Target Field proved many Minnesotans still haven't given up the rock anthems that accompanied those bygone activities of early-'80s American youth.
Journey and Def Leppard came to town on a co-headlining tour crammed with the most Top 40 rock hits ever played in one night at the Minneapolis ballpark. If you owned a radio between 1980 and 1990 and didn't damage your brain with too much aerosol hair spray, you would have recognized three-fourths of the songs performed.
That familiarity bred a nearly sold-out crowd of about 40,000 fans, mostly 40 and up in age. They arrived under cool summer weather that perfectly complemented the concert's breezy, windows-down, lighters-up tone.
Sadly, only about half the audience showed up in time for opening act Cheap Trick. Unlike the headliners, the Illinois rockers spiked their 45-minute set with a killer new song, "Summer Looks Good on You." Also unlike the headliners, they showed up with a singer, Robin Zander, with nearly as much power and range in his voice as he had 30-plus years ago, proven in the fiery classics "Dream Police" and "Surrender."
Taking the middle slot Friday — they alternate headlining duties from city to city, maybe based on local groupie status — Def Leppard's members still very much looked the part of '80s rock stars.
Beefcakey guitarist Phil Collen came out shirtless with wraparound sunglasses. Bassist Rick Savage wore a pink "Miami Vice"-like blazer. And frontman Joe Elliott coolly strutted out onto the thrust stage in opening tune "Rocket" and whipped around his healthy mane of blonde hair.
Alas, Elliott's vocals didn't sound as natural as his hair looked. He hoarsely worked through other hits early in the band's 90-minute set such as "Animal" and "Foolin'," but whenever the songs' big, ultra-polished choruses came around, the vocals somehow sounded bigger than ever.
Of course, Elliott and the band got ample singing help from the crowd. After a boring middle segment that included the 2015 dud "Man Enough" and a cover of David Essex's "Rock On," the British vets finished with a stream of hits, including an encore of "Rock of Ages" and "Photograph."