No Zayn, but there actually was some gain when One Direction touched down at TCF Bank Stadium on Sunday night.
Summer's most heavily anticipated concert of 2013 — when ticket scalpers cleaned up on its instantly sold-out Target Center show — became summer's most heavily Groupon-discounted concert of 2015. Tickets to Sunday's stadium show were doled out at a 50 to 75 percent discount on the popular markdown website in the weeks leading up to the Minneapolis date.
So it goes in the short shelf life of a boy band. But part of the problem was the group itself has also been marked down.
In the nine months since this show was announced, the quintet lost its second or third most-popular member, Zayn Malik, who purportedly was tired of touring and all the other miseries that come with being a 22-year-old millionaire sex symbol a whopping four years into his career.
The party had dwindled to four on stage, but it actually felt more like a party this time around. And even though the show did not sell out, the crowd that did show up in the end was almost 40,000 strong — and certainly wasn't lacking in enthusiasm.
We already learned in 2013 that — unlike all other boy bands since the dawn of man — the lads of 1D don't wear fancy matching suits or work up synchronized dance moves in concert. They dress like they just got off work from a sub shop, and they work the stage like five, er, four individual rock stars. Opening act Icona Pop, a two-woman Swedish dance-pop group, sharply contrasted the boys' approach with both a glitzy wardrobe and hyperactive dancing.
However, there was something more in sync — no pun intended — with the way the 1D fellas worked the stage. Perhaps with an eye to sparking their post-1D solo careers, they appeared a lot more energetic and invested. Or at least leading hunk Harry Styles couldn't be seen on stage checking his phone for texts like he was at Target Center.
"Our job is to entertain you the best we can," Styles told the crowd early on. "Your job is to have the best time you can."