



With no central personality for fans to feel truly vested in, the band can seem as anonymous as the black-shirted techies that strike the Wynn Encore Theater each night. But monetizing music isn’t the same as making people care about it. That embrace of brute-force spectacle has made Imagine Dragons one of modern rock’s few true blockbuster attractions, one of the most streamed bands of the Spotify era. If you’d never seen a picture of frontman Dan Reynolds before-and, despite this band’s monumental success, a lot of people haven’t-you might guess he looks like Criss Angel. Packed with all the pyrotechnics and budget-busting pageantry of the Strip, each of the band’s albums has played like an imagined Cirque Du Soleil production, as if they were designed not for stereos but for stages. There have been other rock bands from Las Vegas, but none have embodied the city’s essence like Imagine Dragons.
