Review: Keith Urban thrills in St. Paul with rock-star moves, guitar and courage
Review: Keith Urban thrills in St. Paul with rock-star moves, guitar and courage
Homepage   /    other   /    Review: Keith Urban thrills in St. Paul with rock-star moves, guitar and courage

Review: Keith Urban thrills in St. Paul with rock-star moves, guitar and courage

Jon Bream 🕒︎ 2025-10-21

Copyright startribune

Review: Keith Urban thrills in St. Paul with rock-star moves, guitar and courage

He didn’t wear a cowboy hat or ball cap. No cowboy boots or blue jeans, for that matter. Country superstar Keith Urban hit the stage Friday night at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul in his T-shirt, athletic shoes, shredded black bell bottoms, and the prettiest male hairdo in country music. He didn’t sing about dirt roads, pickup trucks or beer. For more than two hours, the Australia-reared, Nashville-based Urban offered his brand of country about love and life’s challenges. It was one of the more inspired, inspiring and musically satisfying country arena concerts in recent memory. It reminded 12,000 fans — many over age 40, unusual for a country concert these days — why Urban is the closest thing to a rock ‘n’ roll star in country music. Here are eight reasons why: 1. Urban is the only country star who truly dares to be a guitar hero. His vocabulary is vast, his instincts right, his solos abundant and generous without being indulgent. Similar good things can be said about Vince Gill in concert, except he doesn’t play with the rock-star swagger of Urban, and he lets the other musicians in his large band regularly step into the spotlight. Guitarwise, Brad Paisley used to be in the conversation, but he has down-shifted and hasn’t released an album in eight years. On Friday at the former Xcel Energy Center, on “Long Hot Summer” alone, Urban showed his vast guitar range, bending blues notes, doing wah-wah without a wah-wah pedal, popping a bass line, tapping percussively and going all Jimi Hendrix to wrap things up. 2. Urban, who turns 58 next month, has the energy and oomph of AC/DC, those veteran Aussie rockers. After a tour of Australia and New Zealand, Urban, on the first U.S. night of this leg of his High and Alive Tour, carried on for 25 songs and 125 minutes. He was so amped he started the show seven minutes early. 3. The country superstar from Down Under reached out and touched his fans — literally. There was no barrier between him and the fans at the Grand (or should we call it the ex-X?). He ventured into the crowd with his guitar (slapping hands with fans) and performed on a tiny stage in the bowl end (after which, he autographed an acoustic guitar and gave it to a fan). At the end of the night, after singing “You Look Good in My Shirt” in a Minnesota Wild jersey, Urban removed the athletic wear and give it to a thrilled front-row fan.

Guess You Like