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Robyn plays a very wet show at the Mann Center | Concert review

Pop music's weird older sister weathered the storm.

Robyn performs in concert during her "Honey Tour" at the Mann on Wednesday, July 17, 2019, in Philadelphia.
Robyn performs in concert during her "Honey Tour" at the Mann on Wednesday, July 17, 2019, in Philadelphia.Read moreOwen Sweeney/Invision/AP

In an era dominated by a handful of omnipotent female solo acts who are Too Big to Fail, Robyn is pop music’s eccentric big sister, an independent and uncompromising talent who floats in and out of the zeitgeist at her whim, and her whim only. She reacquainted herself with Philadelphia last night, gifting a storm-delayed but spirited set to a rain-soaked Mann Center crowd that was more than excited to accept.

Fans of a certain age are familiar with the Swedish artist (née Robin Miriam Carlsson) thanks to a string of addictive electro-dance jams off 2010’s Body Talk, but her introduction to America came much earlier, with the 1997 single “Show Me Love.” The crisp Now That’s What I Call Music bop, built by producer (and fellow Swede) Max Martin, fit neatly into a period dominated by acts like the Spice Girls and 'N Sync, but it was an insincere representation of a far different point of view.

Record company drama and creative clashes scuttled Robyn’s stateside career for years, leading her to establish her own imprint, Konichiwa, in 2004. That label released both Body Talk and 2018’s eclectic Honey, her first new music in nearly a decade and the impetus for this tour.

Materializing at the Mann after the lightning cleared in a tres-’90s spaghetti-strap baby-doll dress and white leather boots, the singer opened with Honey’s sensuous “Send to Robyn Immediately,” followed by that album’s title track and the vulnerable, danceable Body Talk hits “Indestructible” and “Hang with Me.”

With the lights pulsing, the smoke machines churning, and the gauzy white curtains draping all corners of the stage flitting in the soggy breeze, she continued to lean heavily on Honey’s track list (“Beach 2k20,” “Ever Again,” “Because It’s in the Music”), sprinkling in older, lesser-known offerings (the 2005 heartbreaker “Be Mine!”) that connected her then and now.

She picked the energy up considerably on the back end, losing the dress in favor of a red lace matador suit that didn’t seem to constrict her earnest discotheque dance moves. She invited the charismatic NYC singer Maluca onstage for an energetic, party-inducing rendition of their collab “Love is Free” before finally launching into “Dancing On My Own” and “Call Your Girlfriend,” anthems so enduring that loads of fans occupying the pavilion seats bum-rushed the aisles, in sudden, desperate need of more freak-out room.

Most pop stars toting tracks these potent in their holsters would save them for a behemoth encore, ending a quick sonic uptick in a euphoric explosion. Robyn isn’t most pop stars. Her fans really seem to recognize, admire, and appreciate how comfortable she is with herself and her music, a quiet but infectious confidence that affords her the latitude to cap an evening with an unconventional pick like “Who Do You Love?” her ‘80s-tinged 2014 track recorded with Kindness, aka the British DJ Adam Bainbridge. Though he’s not a local, Bainbridge boasts serious roots here, thanks to a 2007 residency at the Philadelphia Institute for Advanced Study — a very subtle, and very Robyn, nod to a town that seems to get her.