Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! | 
enlarge | Artist: Devo Label: Warner Bros / Wea Category: Music
List Price: $7.98 Buy New: $4.16 You Save: $3.82 (48%)
New (39) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $3.50
Rating: 66 reviews Sales Rank: 5260
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.7 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 3239 UPC: 075992736428 EAN: 0759927364282 ASIN: B000002KJ1
Release Date: October 25, 1990 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Uncontrollable Urge | | • | (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction - Devo, Jagger, Mick | | • | Praying Hands | | • | Space Junk | | • | Mongoloid - Devo, Casale, Gerald V. | | • | Jocko Homo | | • | Too Much Paranoias | | • | Gut Feeling/Slap Your Mammy | | • | Come Back Jonee | | • | Sloppy (I Saw My Baby Gettin') | | • | Shrivel Up |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com When Devo's debut album came out in 1978, nobody knew what to make of the mutant new-wave quintet from Akron, Ohio. With Brian Eno's skillful production, Mark and Bob Mothersbaugh, Jerry and Bob Casale, and Alan Myers emerged fully formed and outrageous with their razor-sharp social commentary and exhibition of subversive media savvy. Beyond their industrial uniforms and pseudo-devolved demeanor, Devo also happened to be a rocking little band. Classic rave-outs like "Mongoloid," "Jocko Homo," and "Uncontrollable Urge" illustrate the band's perky-jerky intensity. On their inimitable cover of the Rolling Stones' youth anthem, "Satisfaction," Devo's avant-garde robot funk takes the song to a new level of alienation and discontent. While the band went on to greater fame, this was the only album they made that truly mattered. --Mitch Meyers
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| Customer Reviews:
Devolution at its best November 26, 2008 Geoffrey Crayon (USA) Having recently attended a once in a lifetime reunion of Devo, I decided to update my vinyl and cassettes to CDs. Are We Not Men? We Are Devo is the pinnacle of the Devo library, a wonderful celebration of those who don't conform to Madison Avenue's and Hollywood's ideals...but a human ideal in which one can strive to be the truest and purest human...a human that examines, studies, and asks questions. While it seems almost impossible that a mere collection of music can truly represent these issues, especially confronted with the cultural void presented by top 40 corporate radio and music channels that don't play music anymore, Devo smacks the listener in the ear with reality. If you want some good punk-based technocrat rock that flies in the face of today's conventions, do yourself a favor and purchase this CD. You won't regret it.
Truly Sublime August 25, 2008 Octoworm While the Devo phenomenon as a whole may be somewhat time encapsulated, this debut album has absolutely remained as cutting-edge and vibrant as the day it came out some 30 years ago. Though the band already had a great satiric concept going (de-evolution), when they teamed up with Brian Eno for this project, the stuff of demented genius was created. The sound straddles punk, new wave, and the simplistic pop ditties of the sixties. The jumpy, jagged, hypercaffeinated tunes perfectly convey Devo's warped take on pop culture, and also serve to further pop as an art form. This is not a disc that I play in heavy rotation, but it sounds fresh every time I hear it, and only gets better with time.
What a Debute! February 17, 2008 VAT (New Paltz, NY United States) Devo emerged fully formed on this, their first album. And it's still their best album. The stand out songs are "Mongoloid", "Jocko Homo", and "Uncontrollable Urge". They introduce the concept of De-evolotion on this LP. They would futher explore and develope it on future releases. Devo was a band that would not sit still. Each LP brought with it a new look and sound for the band. Here they popularised the yellow suits, the future would bring the energy domes and the smart patrol. Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! Was the start of Devo's comentary/parody of modern life. As vital now as the day it was originaly released.
Only Akron Could Spawn This February 11, 2008 M. Worrell (Chicago USA) Devo came from Akron, Ohio... where I lived until recently. Their appeal and early success was a complete enigma to most locals. But Akron was scraping the bottom of the cultural and economic barrel at that time, so if local talent was attracting national attention it was counted as a blessing regardless. Certain influential artists (David Bowie, in particular) and critics suspected that the band was at the forefront of something revolutionary. I've seen them linked with Kraftwerk back in their embryonic stages, and there's some logic to that. But the thing that I think is sometimes missed by people from other parts of the country is the absolute contempt that this band inspired in local people when they started. Kraftwerk may have been amusing or ridiculous to the Steve Miller Band fans of the world in 1978, but when you put on a Devo record, folks actually got mad. They'd listen for a few minutes in disbelief, and shake their heads, and then they'd get that impatient look that says, "Okay, this isn't funny anymore"... then their faces would get red and they'd demand that you turn that garbage off *right now*. Devo had an unbelievable polarizing effect, and they were extremely controversial. When they played live, they were threatened with physical violence. I can still remember listening to Q. Are We Not Men? for the first time... and not exactly liking it, but being stretched by it. So I listened to it again. When you hear these songs now they sound pretty conventional, but at that time the whole album just sounded demented and disturbing. I may have been too young to catch all of the humor (I had probably just figured out that the sixties Batman television series was a comedy). Eventually, I liked it. And by the time the next album came out, I was a fan. As the band "devolved" they became more of a synthpop unit, which was okay with me since I liked the music they were making. But this Brian Eno-produced debut is more of a straightforward rock and roll record ("Gut Feeling" and "Come Back Jonee", especially), with lots of guitars and Chuck Berry era influences. It holds up better today than most of their successive albums, and certainly better than much of the popular music of the time. Lyrically, Devo is a smart aleck science. There's a loudly subversive philosophy involved that informs everything the band produces. Back when it was still vague, it passed for profound... but eventually the band couldn't poke fun at the system and participate in it at the same time, so they gave up and caved in to everything they claimed to despise. Now they work in L.A. and write toothpaste jingles. Incidentally, Devo's greatest hits packages are totally worthless. If you want to get into this band, you have to survey the albums. This is probably a good place to start.
Still fresh and interesting... September 3, 2007 Grigory's Girl (NYC) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I am surprised that I not only like this album, but that I still play it quite often. I love the songs Mongoloid, (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, and the Devo classic, Jocko Homo. It's actually a very good album, strange, unique, and not really as classifiable as most people think. Devo gets thrown in with the New Wave/Punk bands, but their music was more unique and interesting than the slew of New Wave bands. I was never really a fan of Whip It (especially the video, which is one of the cheesiest things I've ever seen), but Devo released many albums in their lifetime, and their debut here is one of their best.
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