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Next entry: Because he was a POW, dontchaknow Previous entry: Legislating Is For Stupids

Bamboo Reviews A Concert: The Truth About De-evolution

Concert review under the fold, spuds.

Things that are more fun than a Devo show at a horse racetrack:

* Your mom

Apparently, a lot of bands play the Del Mar racetrack, for reasons that almost certainly financial, but there’s something kind of perfect about seeing Devo there.  It was better than seeing the Ramones at a carnival.  Because the kind of people who like to hang out and gamble on horse races are exactly the sort of people that exemplify the theory of de-evolution.  My friend and I got there about 5 hours before the show (which started about an hour after the last race) to case the joint and drink some microbrews at the Microbrew Festival that was going on that day. (Microbrew festivals, racetrack style: 4 booths with about 20 selections served from ice chests labeled with Post-Its.  You can’t buy that kind of exquisite tacky.  Or you can, I guess---at $3 for an 8 ounce sample of any random microbrew.) We were afraid it would be boring, hanging out for hours waiting for a show.  But the people-watching was top notch.  It put us in the right mood the celebrate the downward spiral.

Racetrack types:

*Middle-aged women with no doubt strict Pilates regimes, dressed in extremely expensive dresses and shoes.  There alone, or sometimes with men wearing designer suits. 
*Groups of young people drinking beer, probably taking advantage of the lax carding that was going on.  For some reason, they were very what we tend to call “Dallas”.  Some women in beautiful full-skirted dresses I’d only wear to a wedding, and some were in clothes no one should wear, but you could call club clothes---practically see-through clingy short black dresses or tight white slacks with those backless handkerchief shirts, perhaps a bit of thong showing.  And all stiletto heels, which was an odd choice considering that we were hanging outside in the grass.  The men with these women mostly wore cargo shorts and T-shirts advertising stuff I don’t understand or possibly crappy metal or “alternative” music. 
*Basic middle-American families with kids, who they let have $5 to bet on the horses.  These people were the least baffling, of course.
*The people that were clearly there to see Devo. Ye shall know them by their tattoos.

No, really, the Devo crowd were just the best.  Once the racetrack people cleared out, and the Devo people were left, the place had the best vibe ever.  There were the huge hipsters, of course, and then the geek chic people wearing science-loving T-shirts.  And a few people that confused us, like the troglodytes standing next to us in ratty T-shirts with bad teeth, who head-banged to every song but also knew the words to all of them.  There were people with energy domes they bought and energy domes they made, and one guy had tied a strap to a piece of pink Tupperware with a molded bottom and made that an energy dome. 

The show was amazing.  We made a list of songs we hoped they’d play, including “Gates of Steel” and “Blockhead”, and they played all of them.  It’s hard to explain how they do it, but Devo rocks the fuck out---everyone was just grinning, it sounded so amazing.  Mark Mothersbaugh shows no sign of aging in his voice, even if his middle is thick and his hair is gray.  The little girls from Devo 2.0 (we assume) came out before the show and took pictures of the audience, but sadly didn’t play a song.  What I just really dug about the show was that Devo didn’t half-ass anything.  If there was a solo to shred, it was shred---to the point where all the strings on the guitar break on “Smart Patrol/Mr. DNA”.  They use gimmicks like motherfuckers, but since they back it up with chops, it just makes the whole thing feel arty instead of gimmicky.  But in a good, laugh-your-ass-off way.  When Mark Mothersbaugh runs around during “Mongoloid” shaking pom-poms at the audience, you kind of wish you had pom-poms to shake back. 

I didn’t expect that they’d end the encore by having Mothersbaugh come out dressed as Booji Boy to sing “Beautiful World”.  What can I say?  Also awesome.  The teenage girls standing behind us clearly showed up because they figured the $6 cover charge was reasonable to hear the two Devo songs they knew, and didn’t quite get the Booji Boy thing, but that’s okay.  Play to your hardcore fans, who cares?  It was really funny, with Booji Boy going off on how much he loved the horses and how, now that everyone is rich from gambling, they should all buy horses.  Perfect cap to the day---playing a racetrack is so devo, and if they didn’t acknowledge that, I would have been disappointed. I hope, for the people in the audience under the mistaken impression that Devo is just a novelty act from the 80s, the sheer awesomeness of the show converted them into the those who get it territory.

If you don’t quite get it, I recommend this interview of Mothersbaugh by the Onion AV Club. And here’s “Blockhead”:

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Posted by Amanda Marcotte on 11:01 AM • Permalink

That picture is priceless.

Comment #1: tomK  on  08/31  at  01:28 PM

I concur....we did not come from apes!

Comment #2: cookie  on  08/31  at  02:17 PM

Methinks that particular lunkhead doth protest too much.

Comment #3: Well, what?  on  08/31  at  02:20 PM

I can see something else too.” he said. “I can see that there’s no way that I came from an ape.”

And you can be sure that apes everywhere are cheering because of his disassociation.  Who are what would want the likes of him in their gene pool.

Comment #4: Renee  on  08/31  at  02:31 PM

“Gates of Steel” is one of the most awesome rock-out songs ever by anybody and i pity the fool who doesn’t know it. i am all Hulked out green with envy now. maybe if i build my own racetrack…

Comment #5: tatere  on  08/31  at  02:37 PM

“I can see something else too.” he said. “I can see that there’s no way that I came from an ape.”

Well, at least he’s got the first step of clueless fundaloonery down: A complete inability to comprehend irony.

Comment #6: Dan, Grand High Emperor of Bananas Foster  on  08/31  at  03:10 PM

Very amusing.  Unfortunately, the arrow points to the teacher, David Campbell who is endeavouring to teach his students about evolution.

The circled comment in the paper, which you correctly mock, is from one of his students.

Please fix.

Comment #7: Babson  on  08/31  at  03:54 PM

Oh dear, please ignore above - must try not to attempt arrow following at 5 am.
In my defence, I invoke disembodied hands.

Apologies.

Comment #8: Babson  on  08/31  at  04:06 PM

And people wonder why teachers need three months away from the little darlings.

Not to worry, I hear China is accepting applicants for stoopid wage slave servants to do dogsbody work.

Comment #9: Mold  on  08/31  at  04:15 PM

That’s so mean.  So hilariously, wonderfully mean.

Comment #10: Notorious P.A.T.  on  08/31  at  06:58 PM

I have a hard time making fun of the magical non-ape-descended person, because he’s just a kid, and he’s probably been surrounded by stupid all his life. Try me again in ten years.

Comment #11: junk science  on  08/31  at  07:18 PM

The arrow is accurate.  The image linked cuts off the full image.  You can see it on-line in the article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/24/education/24evolution.html

Comment #12: James  on  08/31  at  07:29 PM

“A man is real. Not made of steel.”

Comment #13: Bacopa  on  08/31  at  08:52 PM

Reading that quote from dear sweet slope-browed Bryce, reminded me of teaching about early humans to my 6th grade students, and forces me to scream, “WE DID NOT COME FROM APES!!  Apes and humans had a common ancestor!!”

A subtle distinction, sure, but one I feel compelled to reiterate, if only for my own sanity.  Thank you for encouraging my behavior.

Comment #14: Uncle Mike  on  08/31  at  09:40 PM

Uncle Mike - humans and all currently living apes did indeed have a common ancestor.  Which was another kind of ape.

Perhaps you meant “gorilla”?

Comment #15: Go Amie  on  08/31  at  10:16 PM

Sounds like you got as good a show from Devo as we did last year at the Puyallup Fair. They were terrific. I don’t think my partner had seen Devo before; I have seen them several times, but the last time (before the fair) was in about 1988. They did a killer, rock-out show, and they also encored with Boojie Boy.

When I got home, I dug out all my old Devo LPs, including the picture disk.

Comment #16: River  on  08/31  at  10:27 PM

More immediately, I think he came from John C. Reilly.

Comment #17: Wareq  on  08/31  at  10:28 PM

Uncle Mike - humans and all currently living apes did indeed have a common ancestor.  Which was another kind of ape.

Perhaps you meant “gorilla”?

eh this is kind of semantic. “ape” isn’t really a taxonomic term, it generally means “nonhuman primate” as primate is an actual taxonomic term. whether “nonhuman” means “not homo sapiens” or “not primate in the direct line of recent evolution” is similar to “when someone talks about your family, does it mean the people your immediate family, or everyone related to you?”

so, semantic, and not really worth arguing over. All primates have common ancestors, be they ape or human.

Comment #18: karpad  on  08/31  at  11:21 PM

do they still use the E-Z Listening DEVO before the show?

Comment #19: preznit giv me turkee  on  09/01  at  12:10 AM

You are an ape.

Comment #20: Grammar RWA  on  09/01  at  04:27 AM

Don’t feel too bad, Babson.  The whole bit about ‘blond curls’ had me confuzzled as well. 

Ape-boy is neither blond nor curly-haired.

Comment #21: Caren-Sun-blocking Creator of Animorphic Pancakes  on  09/01  at  09:20 AM

Someone has to say it: apes or no apes, the people in the photo could both stand to miss a few meals.

Comment #22: Foucault  on  09/01  at  11:42 AM

Ya.  Apes don’t normally eat themselves to death.

Comment #23: chele  on  09/01  at  01:26 PM

Hey, that guy is gonna go home and rock out to his laserdisc collection. Lay off it.

Comment #24: Indy  on  09/01  at  03:12 PM
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