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La Roux in St. Louis

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La Roux
Hollywood Casino Amphitheater — Maryland Heights, MO

La Roux is Elly Jackson, a British synth-pop artist who emerged in 2009 with a sound that felt both retro and immediate. Her debut album was built on sharp, angular synth lines and Jackson's precise vocals—the kind of production where every element is deliberate and nothing feels wasted. In for the Kill became her calling card, all cold efficiency and 80s-inflected attitude. She followed that success with Trouble in Paradise, which showed her willing to push into different territory, but it was that first album that made her name. What set La Roux apart from the synth-pop revival happening around 2008-2010 was a refusal to be precious about it. Her songs had the melodic smarts to stick but the production clarity to cut through noise. She's kept a lower profile in recent years, but the appeal of her best work remains straightforward: perfectly built pop songs delivered with the kind of restraint that makes them feel more powerful.

La Roux's sets are controlled and precise—the opposite of loose jamming. Crowds are there for the songs, and Jackson delivers them cleanly, often with minimal between-song banter. The energy is focused rather than wild, suited to people who actually want to hear the music clearly.

Known for In for the Kill, Bulletproof, Kiss and Not Tell, Fascination, White Noise

St. Louis has a strong tradition of homegrown soul and hip-hop, but it's never been a synth-pop stronghold. That said, the city's underground electronic and indie crowds have grown sharper over the past decade. La Roux's calculated approach to pop production—all sharp synths and restrained vocals—sits somewhere between art-school experimentalism and radio accessibility, which should land well with St. Louis's more adventurous listeners.

Base yourself in the Central West End, where the tree-lined streets and converted lofts give the neighborhood a genuinely livable vibe. Hit Broadway Oyster Bar for something with actual character, or Park Avenue Coffee if you need to ease in. Spend an afternoon at the City Museum—it's genuinely weird and worth your time, not a tourist trap. The Pulitzer Arts Foundation is also worth an hour if contemporary art is your thing. St. Louis takes itself less seriously than most cities, which makes it easy to move around and find decent food without overthinking it.

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