Devo - 8 Albums -1978-1999- -flac- Here
The reason was stupid, as most family fractures are. Julian, a drummer in a series of failing post-punk bands, had called Marcel’s burgeoning career as a sound engineer “sanitizing music for toothless algorithms.” Marcel had called Julian’s last demo “a beige rug.” The silence hardened into concrete.
Whether you are a lifelong Spud or a newcomer, revisiting these eight albums provides a masterclass in how to use pop music as a Trojan horse for radical ideas. Devo - 8 Albums -1978-1999- -FLAC-
Devo leaned harder into synthesizers here. This album is often overlooked but contains some of their most experimental work, like "The Wiggly World." The FLAC format helps separate the dense electronic textures from the aggressive guitar work of the Mothersbaugh and Casale brothers. 3. Freedom of Choice (1980) The reason was stupid, as most family fractures are
While Devo did not release a new studio album between 1991 and 1999, this era saw the release of critical archival material like , which unearthed their disturbing, raw experimental demos from 1974–1977 [5, 34]. This period also marked Mark Mothersbaugh's rise as a prolific composer for television and film [14]. Devo leaned harder into synthesizers here