It’s the rare band that could make this gimmick work they have to be skilled and entertaining enough that the 3-D is an added bonus, not the whole show, and Primus has enough talent for four bands. While the 3-D imagery wasn’t as well-defined as, say, Avatar, it was incredible to see faucets flying through the air as the band opened with “Those Damned Blue Collar Tweakers,” or cheese hovering in front of your face during “Jerry Was a Racecar Driver.” Throughout the evening dots or lines of light would dance and swirl in front of the 2-D imagery projected on the screen, most effectively in “Moron TV” as multicolored shimmering lines jumped off of footage of old Clutch Cargo films, and during the first encore, “HOINFODAMAN,” when a five sided 3-D tunnel managed to give the illusion that you were really travelling into it. As fans filed into the auditorium they were given standard issue 3-D glasses. Instead, we’ll attempt to break down a very complex, hugely entertaining show into ten string cheese-sized pieces.ġ) The show was in 3-D. Attempting to describe Primus’ show at the Fillmore Silver Spring is like trying to describe an elephant (or southbound pachyderm, if you will) to a blind man.
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