Don't call it a comeback. The members of Devo instead see their current reincarnation as a sign that the rest of the music industry -- and maybe even all of mankind -- finally is coming around to their futuristic way of thinking.
"We think now might be Devo's time, or so we're hoping," said Mark Mothersbaugh, primary singer and co-leader of the Ohio art-rock band.
Hardly a boastful statement, Mothersbaugh made this comment while talking about the broken state of the record business and the idea that human evolution has gone in reverse ("de-evolution"), two cornerstone themes of the group's quirky, plastic-topped 1977-82 heyday.
Two weeks ago, the "Whip It" hitmakers issued their first album in 20 years. Saturday's Minnesota Zoo concert will be their first since 1988 in the Twin Cities, which played a pivotal role in the genesis of the band (more on that later).
Talking by phone Monday from his West Hollywood, Calif., studio -- where he has scored Wes Anderson movies and many TV clips in recent years -- Mothersbaugh said he hasn't missed life in a rock band.
"Our last label, Enigma Records, was like a crashing airliner, where the owners of the company were looting it before it hit the ground,"' he said. "After that, I thought, 'Shame on me if I do it again.'"
However, Mothersbaugh said he and his bandmates -- including co-leader Gerald Casale and their respective brothers (both named Bob) -- saw opportunity amid the rubble.
"The implosion of the record industry was a big factor. We grappled with the industry the first time around, but now it gave us this glimmer of hope that we could do something new and interesting instead of being pontificated to by people that controlled the faucet."