Athens spark meets Akron grit
The B-52s sprang from Athens, GA's art scene, while
DEVO came from Akron's factory shadows, and both turned oddball ideas into sharp, danceable pop. Today they ride a late-career wave:
DEVO toasting 50 years of de-evolution, and
The B-52s shifting from a farewell run to select celebratory dates. Expect anchor moments like
Rock Lobster,
Love Shack, and
Private Idaho, with
DEVO firing off
Whip It and
Girl U Want early enough to keep the floor moving. The crowd skews intergenerational, with hand-cut lightning-bolt tees, red energy domes, vintage neon earrings, and parents hoisting ear-protected kids near the aisles. Look for the Athens-to-Akron cross-talk, as fans trade campy beehive wigs for plastic hard hats, and conversations drift from surf licks to synth squelch. Two bits of lore add color: Ricky Wilson often removed strings to craft those zip-line riffs, and
DEVO's debut
Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! was recorded with Brian Eno at Conny Plank's studio.
Speculative notes, fair warning
For clarity, the set choices and production notes below are educated guesses drawn from recent runs, not certainties.
The B-52s and DEVO culture watch
Costumes, callouts, and community
You will see red energy domes, yellow jumpsuits, and DIY hazard-tape sashes next to bright beehive wigs, polka dots, and sea-creature prints. The loudest communal moments are simple: the 'Tin roof, rusted!' tag in
Love Shack, the 'Are we not men?' volley in
Jocko Homo, and the whip-hand motion during
Whip It. Between songs, fans trade stories about first college shows or old dance nights, and newcomers get welcomed with pointers on when to clap or shout.
Souvenirs that say you were there
Merch skews graphic and tongue-in-cheek, with red domes, caution-stripe tees, pastel shell prints, and poster art nodding to
Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! and
Cosmic Thing. Footwear trends practical, from classic sneakers to chunky platforms, because much of the night is a steady bounce rather than a sprint. The culture prizes humor and openness, so playful outfits read as invitations, not something to grade. By the encore, the room feels like a neighborhood block party tilted a bit sci-fi, with people swapping photos and planning a diner stop after.
The B-52s and DEVO: groove, bite, and clockwork fun
Tight grooves, human edges
The B-52s lean on bright surf guitar, bubbling keys, and the triad of voices: Kate soars, Cindy blends and belts, and Fred talk-sings like a sly emcee.
DEVO answers with clipped guitars, synth bass that feels like a piston, and vocals stacked in deadpan unison for extra punch. Live, both bands trim intros and snap into steady mid-tempos so the floor never loses pace, then open space for chants or a quick jam near the end. A neat detail is how the touring guitarists for
The B-52s use sparse voicings that echo Ricky Wilson's missing-strings tunings, keeping the riffs nimble and bright.
Little tricks that lift the songs
DEVO keeps sequences locked to the kick, so handclaps and synth stabs land with the same grid-tight feel as the looped visuals behind them. Expect small rearrangements, like a stripped first verse of
Whip It before the full band slams in, or a stretched call-and-response in
Jocko Homo. Lighting favors big color blocks and quick strobe punctuation that underline rhythm shifts without stealing focus. The result is music-first momentum where humor cuts through, parts interlock, and the groove leads the room.
If you like The B-52s and DEVO, here is your lane
Art-pop cousins on the road
Fans of this bill often also catch
Blondie, drawn by wiry guitars, Debbie's cool talk-sung edges, and a similar dance-punk swing.
New Order fits if you like synth pulse meeting live drums, plus big communal choruses that reward patient build.
Gary Numan brings a darker, motorik synth-rock that overlaps with
DEVO's machine precision and stage minimalism.
Sparks appeals to the art-pop crowd that loves wit, theatrical keys, and odd angles, much like
The B-52s and
DEVO wink while keeping hooks sharp.
Why these shows click
If you chase tight grooves with eccentric charm, these artists share the same Venn circle and tour with similarly devoted, curious fans. Each act also rewards repeat shows, where small arrangement tweaks and dry humor land differently night to night.