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One of new wave's most innovative and (for a time) successful bands, Devo
was also perhaps one of its most misunderstood. Formed in Akron, OH, in 1972
by Kent State art students Jerry Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh, Devo took its
name from their concept of "de-evolution" -- the idea that instead of
evolving, mankind has actually regressed, as evidenced by the dysfunction
and herd mentality of American society. Their music echoed this view of
society as rigid, repressive, and mechanical, with appropriate touches --
jerky, robotic rhythms; an obsession with technology and electronics (the
group was among the first non-prog rock bands to make the synthesizer a core
element); often atonal melodies and chord progressions -- all of which were
filtered through the perspectives of geeky misfits.
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Devo became a cult sensation, helped in part by their concurrent emphasis on
highly stylized visuals, and briefly broke through to the mainstream with
the smash single "Whip It," whose accompanying video was made a staple by
the fledgling MTV network. Sometimes resembling a less forbidding version of
the Residents, Devo's simple, basic electronic pop sound proved very
influential, but it was also somewhat limited, and as other bands began
expanding on the group's ideas, Devo seemed unable to keep pace. After a
series of largely uninteresting albums, the band called it quits early in
the '90s, and Casale and Mothersbaugh concentrated on other projects. Gerald
Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh both attended art school at Kent State
University at the outset of the 1970s. With friend Bob Lewis, who joined an
early version of Devo and later became their manager, the theory of de-evolution
was developed with the aid of a book entitled -The Beginning Was the End:
Knowledge Can Be Eaten, which held that mankind had evolved from mutant,
brain-eating apes. The trio adapted the theory to fit their view of American
society as a rigid, dichotomized instrument of repression which ensured that
its members behaved like clones, marching through life with mechanical,
assembly-line precision and no tolerance for ambiguity. The whole concept
was treated as an elaborate joke until Casale witnessed the infamous
National Guard killings of student protesters at the university; suddenly
there seemed to be a legitimate point to be made. The first incarnation of
Devo was formed in earnest in 1972, with Casale (bass), Mark Mothersbaugh (vocals),
and Mark's brothers Bob (lead guitar) and Jim, who played homemade
electronic drums. Jerry's brother Bob joined as an additional guitarist, and
Jim left the band to be replaced by Alan Myers. The group honed its sound
and approach for several years (a period chronicled on Rykodisc's Hardcore
compilations of home recordings), releasing a few singles on its own Booji
Boy label and inventing more bizarre concepts: Mothersbaugh dressed in a
baby-faced mask as Booji Boy (pronounced "boogie boy"), a symbol of
infantile regression; there were recurring images of the potato as a lowly
vegetable without individuality; the band's costumes presented them as
identical clones with processed hair; and all sorts of sonic experiments
were performed on records, using real and homemade synthesizers as well as
toys, space heaters, toasters, and other objects. Devo's big break came with
its score for the short film The Truth About De-Evolution, which won a prize
at the 1976 Ann Arbor Film Festival; when the film was seen by David Bowie
and Iggy Pop, they were impressed enough to secure the group a contract with
Warner Bros. Recorded under the auspices of pioneering producer Brian Eno,
Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! was seen as a call to arms by some and
became an underground hit. Others found Devo's sound, imagery, and material
threatening; Rolling Stone, for example, called the group fascists. But such
criticism missed the point: Devo dramatized conformity, emotional repression,
and dehumanization in order to attack them, not to pay tribute to them.
While 1979's Duty Now for the Future was another strong effort, the band
broke through to the mainstream with 1980's Freedom of Choice, which
contained the gold-selling single "Whip It" and represented a peak in their
sometimes erratic songwriting. The video for "Whip It" became an MTV smash,
juxtaposing the band's low-budget futuristic look against a down-home farm
setting and hints of S&M. However, Devo's commercial success proved to be
short-lived. 1981's New Traditionalists was darker and more serious, not
what the public wanted from a band widely perceived as a novelty act, and
Devo somehow seemed to be running out of new ideas. Problems plagued the
band as well: Bob Lewis successfully sued for theft of intellectual property
after a tape of Mothersbaugh was found acknowledging Lewis' role in creating
de-evolution philosophy, and the sessions for 1982's Oh, No! It's Devo were
marred by an ill-considered attempt to use poetry written by would-be Ronald
Reagan assassin John Hinckley Jr. as lyrical material. As the '80s wore on,
Devo found itself relegated to cult status and critical indifference, not at
all helped by the lower quality of albums like 1984's Shout and 1988's Total
Devo. With the band's shift toward electronic drums, Alan Myers had departed
in 1986, to be replaced by ex-Sparks and Gleaming Spires drummer David
Kendrick. Devo recorded another album of new material, Smooth Noodle Maps,
in 1990, after which its members began to concentrate on other projects.
Mark Mothersbaugh moved into composing for commercials and soundtracks,
writing theme music for MTV's Liquid Television, Nickelodeon's Rugrats, Pee-Wee's
Playhouse, and the Jonathan Winters sitcom Davis Rules. He also played
keyboards with the Rolling Stones, programmed synthesizers for Sheena Easton,
and sang backup with Debbie Harry. Buoyed by this success, Mothersbaugh
opened a profitable production company called Mutato Muzika, which employed
his fellow Devo bandmates. Jerry Casale, meanwhile, who directed most of the
band's videos, directed video clips for the Foo Fighters' "I'll Stick Around"
and Soundgarden's "Blow Up the Outside World." No reunions were expected,
but as Devo's legend grew and other bands acknowledged their influence
(Nirvana covered "Turnaround," while "Girl U Want" has been recorded by
Soundgarden, Superchunk, and even Robert Palmer), their minimalistic
electro-pop was finally given new exposure on six dates of the 1996
Lollapalooza tour, to enthusiastic fan response. The following year, Devo
released a CD-ROM game (The Adventures of the Smart Patrol) and accompanying
music soundtrack, in addition to playing selected dates on the Lollapalooza
tour. 2000 saw the release of a pair of double-disc Devo anthologies: the
first was the half-hits/half-rarities Pioneers Who Got Scalped: The
Anthology (on Rhino), while the second was the limited-edition mail-order
release Recombo DNA (on Rhino's Handmade label), the latter of which was
comprised solely of previously unreleased demos. In 2001, the Mothersbaugh
and Casale brothers reunited under the name the Wipeouters for a one-off
surf release, P Twaaang. Expectedly, there was no supporting tour, as the
bandmembers returned back to their full-time jobs at Mutato Muzika. |
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