Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

B-52s bring fun music and a weird factor to PrideFest

- Lainey Seyler Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

You’d be hard-pressed to find a karaoke bar that doesn’t have “Love Shack” in its songbook.

The B-52s’ best-known song is fun, weird and gets the party going, much like the band itself, and that’s one big reason PrideFest Milwaukee is excited the B-52s are a Sunday headliner at the annual festival.

Landing The B-52s came late in the planning process, said Brian Burke, who’s an entertainm­ent department board member for PrideFest. He helped book the band.

“This is a band that the board has been trying to get for a few years,” said Burke.

The B-52s formed in 1976 in Athens, Georgia. The group’s popularity has spanned decades. One of its biggest hits, “Rock Lobster,” was released in 1979; “Love Shack” came out in 1989. Its last album arrived in 2008.

“What we’re looking for overall is an act that’s popular and that people will want to come to see,” Burke said. “We look at what’s popular now and what bands have been around for a while who still have a dedicated and loyal fan base.”

The B-52s do have a strong following in the LGBTQ community, similar to artists like Blondie, who played PrideFest a couple years ago.

“I can’t speak for the whole community,” Burke said of the band’s popularity. “One, you have Fred Schneider, who is the lead singer, who is an openly gay man. Two, when the band first became popular in the ’70s and ’80s, (band member) Ricky Wilson died of AIDS.

“But what it really comes down to is that they’re a fun, high-energy band. You add those other aspects, and the songs are just fun. Who doesn’t love ‘Rock Lobster’? Those songs have just resonated over the years.”

For Mark Sander, who works at Shelter Mortgage in Milwaukee, the band’s music and its weirdness resonate with him.

“It’s this sense of being able to let your freak flag fly,” Sander said. “You could be different, and it was OK to be different. That’s a huge appeal in the gay community. You always feel like you’re an outsider being gay. You can relate to something that’s a little different.”

Milo Miller, who grew up in Shorewood and lives in Riverwest, said, “You get a lot of gender expression­s in one band. The B-52s give you space to explore that. And they’re fun and funny.”

Sander’s and Miller’s love for the B-52s started in the early late 1980s and early ’90s when they were teens and preteens.

“The first time I remember hearing them, I was probably about 10 or 11 years old,” said Sander. “MTV Sunday nights played alternativ­e videos and I saw ‘Channel Z.’ I didn’t think much about it until ‘Love Shack’ came out. I saw the video. And I loved everything about it. The two women singing in this doo-wop style. I was enamored hook line and sinker right there.”

Sander has seen the B-52s every time the band has come to Milwaukee since 1990.

 ?? VECTOR MANAGEMENT ?? The B-52s are playing PrideFest today.
VECTOR MANAGEMENT The B-52s are playing PrideFest today.

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