DEVO put the future on tape long before they were signed and made records with Brian Eno. Before and after Eno, they were a research laboratory for the 1970s’ break with the past and the leap into the 1980s. They were also one of the best live bands of the punk/post-punk era.
This mix offers a curation of early, unreleased material that supports the case for DEVO’s eminence. It divides into a double LP - studio and live.
LP 1: Studio (1974-1978)
The first LP is a studio concept album that sequences primordial, weird, intense, and astounding early items into a devolved Sgt. Pepper with no commercial potential - same length, most tracks segued. It’s heavily overproduced and sonically-overdriven by the randomness of primitive recording technology and the ravages of time. Bob Dobbs/White Heat.
- Because (from The Truth About De-Volution)
- The Death of Booji Boy
- The Smart Patrol (version 1)
- Fraulein (live 1974, Akron, OH)
- Shrivel Up (demo)
- Hey Hey My My (long version)
- How Many Ropes
- Secret Agent Man (Mark M. vocals)
- Lost At Home (Tater Tot)
- U Got Me Bugged (instrumental version)
LP 2: Live (1977)
Booji and the Stooges. The selections come from February 1977 in Akron, augmented with some of the tracks the band excluded from their release of a May 1977 Cleveland show (“Miracle Witness Hour”). The tapes sit well together, and I only included really good stuff.
- Nutty Buddy
- Secret Agent Man
- Shrivel Up
- Too Much Paranoias
- Space Junk
- Blockhead
- Gut Feeling/Slap Your Mammy
- Sloppy
- The Words Get Stuck in My Throat
- Social Fools
Early DEVO:
The band had at least three or four albums of material by the time they were signed, some of which would be re-recorded for early singles and their first two albums (Q/A, Duty Now). The songs and the band’s attack changed a lot between 1974 and 1978, so the early versions are always fascinating.
The band has released much of the best and necessary early studio material as “Hardcore DEVO 74-77,” with a few other tracks here and there. They’ve also released two excellent live albums from the early years (“DEVO LIVE The Mongoloid Years” (10/75, 12/76, 5/77), and “Miracle Witness Hour” (5/77).
The rest of the early recordings are out there, if you look for them. The band maintained a fan-driven, mail order, tape/CD-R vault for years. That’s where I obtained the music on this mix.
The essential early, official, studio releases are:
- Be Stiff/Social Fools (single)
- Q: Are We Not Men? A: We are DEVO!” (LP)
- Duty Now for the Future (LP)
Cover art: John Hilgart from a circa 2000 cassette case design.