Saturday was likely the first time in pop music history that a performer made a pass at a former president and his secretary of state spouse at a live concert.
"I just love you and your hot wife," Lady Gaga said, writhing like a breathy, smitten Marilyn Monroe on the Hollywood Bowl stage mere feet from Bill Clinton, his Secretary of State wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and their daughter, Chelsea.
Gaga described her life as a screwy embodiment of the American dream in eyebrow-raising language, and she praised the Clintons by promising that "tonight, I thought we'd all get caught up in a little Bill romance".
And with that she bucked into a Clinton-specific take on Bad Romance that left the full house at the Bowl wondering whether this concert celebrating 10 years of the Clinton Foundation's work to fight disease, poverty and violence had just been scandalised.
The concert, "A Decade of Difference", doubled as Bill Clinton's 65th birthday party and brought out a group of activism-inclined singers to fete the initiative and a former president currently on an unexpected tide of nostalgia, based largely on the foundation's work abroad on a variety of issues.
Stevie Wonder, Kenny Chesney, the Somali singer K'Naan, Colombian rocker Juanes, Usher and U2's Bono and the Edge joined Gaga for a four-hour show that felt a bit like a pop music Davos - a reminder that the big players of geopolitics still look to musicians for a certain vitality and influence.
The ever-luminous Wonder started the night with such soul-funk staples as Superstition and Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I'm Yours), the latter of which was embraced as President Barack Obama's ad hoc theme song in the 2008 campaign.
Laura Ling, one of two Current TV reporters that Clinton rescued from a North Korean jail in 2009, gave an introductory speech before Chesney's easygoing acoustic set. Chesney, one the most low-key guys in country, felt like the exotic one on a stage full of Somalis, Colombians, Irish and globe-hopping politicians (though Clinton did thank him later for not making him the only guy onstage with a Southern accent).
K'Naan, a likeable singer-songwriter who pulls from reggae, East African jazz and rock balladry, had a rough time onstage, with sound problems that led to a couple of false starts and a clear discomfort in performing (even when Bono came out to duet on a new tune).
But his story of turning from child soldier in a war-ravaged country to international pop star still carried the night - his redemptive single Wavin' Flag won over a Bowl crowd already inclined to uplift.
Juanes had an easier go of it, with the bluesy, dub-infused rock of La Camisa Negra lending a bit of muscle to a night full of earnest global pop.
Colombia is a success story of post-Clinton-era economic revival, and Juanes - a major star in the Americas - is an excellent ambassador for it. There are few pleasures in concert-going like watching a sitting secretary of state get low to Usher's tag-team crunk smash Yeah. The R&B star's quick set fulfilled one reviewer's private hope that Hillary Clinton listened to Lil Jon before planning sanctions on Iran. (And a goofy short film about the Clinton Foundation's "Celebrity Division" with Ben Stiller, Ted Danson and others planning failed ventures got widespread chuckles).
Bono and the Edge closed out the night with a congenial acoustic set of hits they described as - "you [shelling] out a million quid for a couple Irish buskers". As a member of a group known for multimillion-dollar stage rigs, the Edge got laughs for cuing up a few wrong drum loops on his onstage laptop, but a new song about "the mysterious space between a man and a woman" had an enticing promise for a full-band treatment. U2 is perhaps the most activism-oriented band going today, and it acknowledged the particular Irish affection for the Clintons' help in resolving the north-south Troubles, leading to a more peaceful Ireland.
But the night was Gaga's, even if her kittenish and bawdy set might have made for an interesting ride home from the Bowl in the Clinton caravan.
Playing atop what looked like a Nordic tree fort, she dedicated You & I to Hillary with some eyebrow-cocking overtones. Even Bill had to admit in a later speech, "I thought I was going to have a heart attack from Gaga on my birthday."
Where does that lie in the colour-coded chart of homeland security threats?
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