Showing posts with label DEVO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DEVO. Show all posts

20120927

Music: Blondie and Devo at Chicago Theater

Great Blondie and Devo show at the Chicago Theater last night!  

Sobering thought:  The more times I see Devo, the more the more the audience looks like they meant to go the Lyric Opera and came here instead.  Don't know whether that's good or bad.  On the plus side, Kraftwerk's The Robots reverberated throughout the Chicago Theater's elegant spaces as we waited for the show to start. Devo has good taste in music.

Highlights of last night's Blondie set on the "Whip it to Shreds" Tour:  Rapture and Heart of Glass, though props to Debbie Harry and the band for their encore cover of Relax.    How is it that she's 67 years old?  Refreshingly, she looks like an actual woman rather than a plastic freak - that is to say, a very attractive, sassy, talented woman who sings wonderfully, and who has figured out how to pitch down the high notes while carrying the message of each tune.

Devo reliably fantastic as always (hardcore fan here).  They look more and more like senior executives in their underwear, but bring as much energy, angst and humor as ever, and their playing is technically incredible.  First half of the set was a mix of more recent albums including at least 3 songs from Something for Everybody, - such as the very fine Don't Shoot, I'm A Man and What We Do.

Devo then went into an offstage "time machine" and came back in the old yellow suits, carrying guitars, and tore into hits from their first 2-3 albums.  All great, but especially Come Back Jonee (with Debbie coming back onstage as the bereaved widow), Smart Patrol/Mr. DNA (with Bob 1's brain-melting solo which did not stop until he broke ALL the strings, e.g. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVsAUrx10Uc), etc.  [I have decided Bob 1 is my new favorite band member though I love them all.]  Even Booji Boy came out - Mark M. in a creepy baby mask - for It's A Beautiful World and was funny and annoying this time (as opposed to just annoying).  A good time was had by all!  

20120306

music: i'm crazy about devo, but not this crazy.

http://devo-obsesso.com/html/tatts.html

over 200 people apparently are crazy enough to get DEVO tattoos, according to their Tweet today.  So this shows that I could, in fact, be quite a bit crazier than I am, which is a huge relief.

I'm not going there.  But... after I die, if you want to get a tattoo of me wearing an Energy Dome, like this guy did to honor his friend, that would be both very cool and thoroughly nuts, and I would appreciate it greatly.*

My other Devo links can be found here.

*alternatively, you could have my name tattooed on you in binary.  just so you have it handy, it's 0111001101110101011100110110000101101110.


20111115

Music: Hopelessly DEVO-ted

I've gone right round the bend, I have.  

For starters, I just discovered that my driving sunglasses (aka "freak glasses," worn precisely because of how stupid they make me look) are actually being marketed on Amazon as Adult Devo Costume Glasses. Coincidence?  More like a dream come true.  Yeah, that's right, I don't have glaucoma; I'm a new waver in this minivan with Mario stickers on it.

On to the music.  I could have kicked myself for waiting to listen to Devo's Something for Everybody (2010),  their latest album and their first in more than 20 years.  It rekindled that old Devo flame big-time.  Their first three albums came out when I was 15, 16, and 17, so for much of my adolescence, they were there.  I got so excited about their new album that it made me want to hear all their old stuff again.  I had many albums on vinyl, but no other CDs besides the latest one, so I ordered the following 10 albums in one mad Amazon frenzy.  Note the crazy-low prices.  I figured, for about the cost of half of a VIP ticket to one of their concerts, this was a pretty good deal. 

  Q: Are We Not Men? (1978) - $5.66.  Produced by Brian Eno.  This album came used from the New York Public Library in its original library case that I had to semi-destroy to remove the disc.  Sweet! 
  Duty Now For The Future (1979) - $2.48. 
  Freedom of Choice (1980) - $1.69. 
  New Traditionalists (1981) - $1.37. 
  Oh No, It's Devo! (1982) - $3.82.  Not their best but I do like Peek-A-Boo and Speed Racer. 
  DEVO E-Z Listening Disc (1987) - $10.  Unsettling Muzak versions of their hits. 
  Greatest Misses (1990) - $2.98.  A companion to their "Greatest Hits" with retakes and explicit lyrics. 
  Hardcore 1 (1991) - $14.99.  I paid more for this because it is super early (1974-1977) and rare.  They sound really raw and different.  A definite ear-opener for people who think they know Devo.  Also, I had to fold the CD cover photo so the naughty picture on the front wouldn't show. 
  Mashin' Potatoes: Tribute to Devo (1998) - $0.39.  SKA bands cover an album's Devo songs, and the whole thing is mine for thirty-nine cents - imagine my joy! In fact, you might need to stop what you're doing right now and listen to the sprightly ska version of Whip It. It'll only take a second. 
  Wired Magazine Presents Music Futurists (1999) - $0.75.  Holy crap, how could I not adore this? Wired, Laurie Anderson, Eno, Devo, Thomas Dolby, Can (krautrock), Todd Rundgren and a host of others.  Plus, seventy-five cents?!  So I guess I've had futuristic tastes in music all this time..

20111012

Music: DEVO License Plate Frame: Pretty much a must-have.

DEVO freaks need this license plate holder.  I know it's $15, but give me a break.
From the aptly-named site Devo-Obsesso.com.