Concert Review: Remi Wolf Is Better Than Ever At Webster

 

I truly believe Remi Wolf is a star and, in some ways,has become bigger because of the pandemic. Let me explain. The music sphere is changing. People do not want someone who calls out how life sucks. They want someone whom is either going to say how you can heal it or feel so good you forget that fact. Before 2020, personally, I felt that the artists who most thrived were the ones that swam in their feelings; promulgating how stuck they were. Yet, NOW, people are REALLY STUCK, and the last thing they want to hear is to not moving on.

Remi Wolf, energetically, is the coolness of joy. Sometimes, happiness, in its truest form, feels silly. You can become self-conscious with how exuberant you feel because it is as if we are, socially, conditioned not to feel that. If you feel too good, you start trying rather than just dreaming, dancing over just walking, and being open rather than staying closed off. In essence, Remi Wolf motivates you to act upon your life, and she does it with an Amy Winehouse voice over funkadelic rhythms that make you want to groove over pining.

In some ways, Remi’s voice reminded me of 90s music; when a power vocalist, like Mariah, could sing fun tracks like “Fantasy.” Her ability to be danceable but diva in vocality was massively impressive, and live, Remi Wolf can compete with some of the best singers of our time. NO JOKE! She leaves all her vocal chords on that stage, and it seems so effortless, in part, because she comes off like an MC. She appears laser-focused into cheering the crowd up to “party-mode” that you might take for granted the times when she can hit a Mariah note. Thus, her ability to make people casually leave everything that keeps them feeling “stuck” is why, in some ways, I think the pandemic has helped thrive more. Before, we took for granted “fun;” now, we wish we could have it more. Click Here For More info on Remi Wolf.