Damn the hipsters.
Those cooler-than-thou cognoscenti — and critics, too, for that matter — embrace hip musical acts and then abandon them if and when the stars gain mainstream success.
Case in point No. 1 — Hall & Oates. They were groovy blue-eyed soul men in the early '70s on KQRS in its pre-classic rock days before Daryl Hall & John Oates became 1980s synth-pop MTV mainstays.
Case in point No. 2 — Train. They were alluring alt-popsters in the '90s on then-cool Cities 97 before becoming Top 40 fodder in the '10s.
Even though they are a generation apart in age, these similarly fated bands have teamed up for a co-headlining tour that landed Wednesday at Xcel Energy Center.
Hall & Oates, the bestselling duo that was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2014, proved once again to be a guilty pleasure. Except they were more pleasurable last year at the X when collaborated with Tears for Fears, another oldies act.
The difference this time was Hall was guilty of no longer being in top vocal form. Although he was impassioned and enthusiastic, his voice sounded worse for wear. Singing deeper than ever, he was sometimes hoarse and just didn't display the vocal range of the past.
If it wasn't noticeable on all the Hall & Oates numbers when six backup singers (including Oates) helped him out, it was apparent when Train's Pat Monahan joined Hall & Oates for three selections during their closing set. Monahan, 49, unleashed his pure high tenor while Hall, 71, once a high-voiced soul singer, offered raspy weariness on "Philly Forget Me Not," their new joint single that they co-wrote as "a paean to Pennsylvania" because they were both born there.