Robin Ince – Pragmatic Insanity
Note: This review is from 2018
Reviewing a Robin Ince gig is an exercise in futility, given that his peripatetic mind will never allow two shows to be the same. He says he’s got two-and-a-half hours of material that he’s trying to cram into 60 minutes, but there’s probably more even than that.
And not only does he deliver what he’s prepared at breathless speed, routines pop into his head at random, abandoning his proposed train go thought on a whim.
After several years association with science, not least through Radio 4’s Infinite Monkey Cage, Pragmatic Insanity is nominally about art, with the same intent of awakening a passion for the subject in those who might think it beyond them.
He’s prepared a PowerPoint about all the works he wanted to speak about which suggests there was a structure to the show, at least once. But in the event the main theme of the hour (well, 70 minutes) is his lack of discipline. ‘That wasn’t what I expected to say next, either,’ he says at one point, with the random aside spinning off into a whole new routine.
Ince proclaims himself a ‘professional idiot’, the clown leavening Professor Brian Cox’s highbrow explanations of the workings of the universe. But for an idiot, he has a lot of knowledge, his insatiable inquisitiveness about the world making him polymath who can talk about everything from 24 Hours In A&E to artist Robert Rauschenberg; mental health to John Peel.
Pragmatic Insanity is like listening to Radio 4 on 8x speed, a hodgepodge of fascinating, sometimes obscure subjects tumbling forth, with some comic relief every so often. Not only is Ince’s mad-professor persona inherently amusing, he has an ear for a witty phrase and a fine talent for mimicry. His Stewart Lee is particularly accurate, while the mini-Alan Bennett monologue in an art gallery coffee shop an absolute delight.
More importantly, Ince is a magnet for those of a similar disposition, the nerds, essentially, who delight in knowledge, however obscure. As the high priest of the curious - probably a poor analogy given his atheist credentials – he reassures his like-minded audience it’s not just OK to be eccentric, but a boon.
That positivity pervades the show, in a similar way to what his friend Josie Long does with her work. He’s keen not to mention Trump or Brexit, knowing that his passion will so easily slide into anger should he let it. This is a celebration, not a diatribe, though it has all the unfocussed urgency of the latter. You’ll emerge informed, educated – and probably validated too. Lord Reith would be happy.
Review date: 28 Jun 2018
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett
Reviewed at:
Soho Theatre