Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!

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Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: Devo (See All Albums by Devo)
  • Date Released: Oct 19, 2009

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Commercial Alternative, Alternative

  • Label: Warner Bros.

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 34:44

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Out the Basement

bobsal

Recorded origionaly on an eight track in a house I was living in Akron, it stands up well. There was several years I couldn't listen to it because the band is very concerned about getting it righ and I might have been the only non musical person who knew the words to Jocko Homo by heart. Relistening has made it clear to me that this album still stands and is still strong. Its as fresh as when I heard the band at the Crypt in Akron in the '70s. And I wish General Baby would make guest appearence.

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one of rock's great albums

schmo

There have been several albums that pretty much destroy a tired genre of music - like what Nirvana's Nevermind did to the '80's hair bands that made to the '90's. This album did that to disco. Somehthing so new and different and great comes along when there is sooo much crap out there and "flushes the toilet," so to speak. The world needs another "Q:Are we not men" right now.

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Jerky Pop.

drdan

One joke. One theme sold down the river. This is the big joke played on the American public in the early 70's. The music is ok, the lyrics are not. Take all of their output and you have one really good cd.

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Life changing, amazing stuff

happyreaper

Really - I was never the same after hearing this great, great album. An all-time classic, only marred here if the track Gut Feeling/Slap Your Mammy only has Gut Feeling. Same problem at Amazon... so it's not eMusic's fault, but Warner Brothers.

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WARNING: TRACK MISSING

DeadFace

Gut Feeling/Slap Your Mammy only has Gut Feeling. Thanks, Warner Brothers! Same problem at Amazon... so it's not eMusic's fault, but big ol' Warner Brothers. Jackasses.

user avatar

OH MY GOD

NoelZevon

What a life-changing album. And not just for me; go see the Thrill Jockey documentary "Looking For A Thrill" to see how many musicians were influenced by this album. Holy crap!

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They Say All Music Guide

Produced by Brian Eno, Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! was a seminal touchstone in the development of American new wave. It was one of the first pop albums to use synthesizers as an important textural element, and although they mostly play a supporting role in this guitar-driven set, the innovation began to lay the groundwork for the synth-pop explosion that would follow very shortly. Q: Are We Not Men also revived the absurdist social satire of the Mothers of Invention, claiming punk rock’s outsider alienation as a home for freaks and geeks. While Devo’s appeal was certainly broader, their sound was tailored well enough to that sensibility that it still resonates with a rabid cult following. It isn’t just the dadaist pseudo-intellectual theories, or the critique of the American mindset as unthinkingly, submissively conformist. It was the way their music reflected that view, crafted to be as mechanical and robotic as their targets. Yet Devo hardly sounded like a machine that ran smoothly. There was an almost unbearable tension in the speed of their jerky, jumpy rhythms, outstripping Talking Heads, XTC, and other similarly nervy new wavers. And thanks to all the dissonant, angular melodies, odd-numbered time signatures, and yelping, sing-song vocals, the tension never finds release, which is key to the album’s impact. It also doesn’t hurt that this is arguably Devo’s strongest set of material, though several brilliant peaks can overshadow the remainder. Of those peaks, the most definitive are the de-evolution manifesto “Jocko Homo” (one of the extremely few rock anthems written in 7/8 time) and a wicked deconstruction of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” which reworks the original’s alienation into a spastic freak-out that’s nearly unrecognizable. But Q: Are We Not Men? also had a conceptual unity that bolstered the consistent songwriting, making it an essential document of one of new wave’s most influential bands. – Steve Huey

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