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From 1990 through 2009, no new albums under the Devo name were released. However, a new single, "Watch Us Work It", was released as a digital download in 2007 and as part of a 12-inch EP in 2008. A new studio album, Something for Everybody, was released on June 15, 2010.
Devo also recorded two albums of their own songs as elevator music for their fan club, Club Devo, released on cassette in 1981 and 1984. These were later re-released on the album E-Z Listening Disc (1987), with all but two of the original Club Devo songs.
Something for Everybody is the ninth studio album by American new wave band Devo.It was originally released in June 2010 (being their first studio album in two decades, since 1990's Smooth Noodle Maps) on their original label Warner Bros., and it was their first issued on that label since their sixth studio album Shout in 1984.
A: We Are Devo! is the debut studio album by the American new wave band Devo. It was originally released in August 1978 on Warner Bros. in the North America and Virgin Records in Europe. Produced by Brian Eno , the album was recorded between October 1977 and February 1978, primarily in Cologne , West Germany .
Shout was the final studio album by the 1976–1985 line-up of Devo, with their third and most prominent drummer, Alan Myers, leaving the band shortly after the album's release. According to the book We Are Devo , Myers cited a lack of creative fulfillment as his reason for leaving the band, something that he had felt since Devo's move to Los ...
New Traditionalists is the fourth studio album by American new wave band Devo, released on September 16, 1981 by Warner Bros. Records.The album was recorded over a period of four months between December 1980 and April 1981 at the Power Station in Manhattan, New York City.
Freedom of Choice (stylized as F R E E D O M O F C H O I C E) is the third studio album by the American new wave band Devo, released in May 1980 on Warner Bros. Records.The album contained their biggest hit, "Whip It", which hit No. 8 and No. 14 on the Billboard Club Play Singles and Pop Singles charts, respectively.
Following the release of Devo's sixth studio album, Shout (1984), the band's label, Warner Bros., still had the band contracted to provide two more albums.After the commercial failure of Shout, Warner Bros. contacted Devo's manager Elliot Roberts and made an offer to terminate the arrangement, which they accepted, but by 1987, the band still had no new contract.