10 JUL 2026 - Back up to full speed! Let's be honest: for the last few months, TorrentFunk was painfully slow. Pages crawled, searches dragged, and just loading the site tested everyone's patience. We hunted the problem down to our network and rebuilt it from the ground up — smarter caching, a much bigger and faster connection, and a lot of fine-tuning under the hood. The difference is night and day: the site now loads in a fraction of a second. No more waiting around. Thanks for sticking with us through the slow spell. Now go discover your funk!
Genre: Pop/Rock
Style: New Wave
Source: CD
Codec: FLAC
Bitrate: ~ 1,000 kbps
Bit Depth: 16
Sampling Rate: 44.1 KHz
2008 Remasters
1978 Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!
1979 Duty Now for the Future
1980 Freedom of Choice
1981 New Traditionalists
1982 oh, no! it's DEVO
1984 Shout
1999 DEV-O Live
Other
2000 Pioneers Who Got Scalped - The Anthology
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.
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.
Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh both attended art school at Kent State University at the outset of the '70s. 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.
VISITOR COMMENTS (0 )
FILE LIST
Filename
Size
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/01. Girl U Want.flac
19.6 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/02. It's Not Right.flac
15.8 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/03. Whip It.flac
21 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/04. Snowball.flac
18.2 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/05. Ton O' Luv.flac
16.6 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/06. Freedom of Choice.flac
23.2 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/07. Gates of Steel.flac
24.7 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/08. Cold War.flac
15.7 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/09. Don't You Know.flac
15.4 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/10. That's Pep!.flac
14.8 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/11. Mr. B's Ballroom.flac
17.8 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/12. Planet Earth.flac
19.9 MB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/cover.jpg
31.1 KB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/EAC extraction logfile.log
5.5 KB
1980 - Freedom of Choice [2008 Remaster]/Freedom of Choice 2008 Remaster.cue
1.7 KB
1982 - oh, no! it's DEVO [2008 Remaster]/01. time out for fun.flac