

Musicians Gerald Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh were both art school students at Kent State University at the outset of the 1970s. 2010's Something for Everybody marked their return to new music, and they continued touring into the next decade. Through various reunions and re-formations, they continued to develop creatively into the 21st century, composing music for soundtracks and commercials, publishing a video game, and even collaborating with Disney to create a child-led version of the band called DEV2.0. Although their success waned throughout the rest of the '80s, Devo's legacy over the coming decades grew into that of a highly influential cult band with legions of followers. Their jerky, robotic rhythms, bizarre uniforms, and focus on technology were like nothing else on the pop landscape, though some of their campier elements caused some critics to unfairly dismiss them as a novelty group. Taking their name from their own philosophy of "de-evolution," the Akron, Ohio-based group merged dark social satire and offbeat humor with highly stylized visuals, briefly breaking through to the mainstream with 1980's Freedom of Choice and its smash single "Whip It," whose accompanying video was made a staple by the fledgling MTV network. History | Bootlegs | Booji Boy | Devolution | Influence | The Wipeouters | Jihad Jerry & The Evildoers | Devo 2.One of new wave's most innovative bands, Devo bubbled up from the Midwestern underground of the 1970s with a marvelously obtuse, self-designed vision that they were able to successfully convey to a large audience. The Teddybears | Greg Kurstin | Santi White | John King | John Hill | Mark Nishita MVD Audio | The Orchard | Superior Viaduct | Futurismoīrian Eno | Ken Scott | Robert Margouleff | Roy Thomas Baker | DEVO Stiff | Virgin | Rykodisk | Infinite Zero | Restless | Discovery | Rhino Mark Mothersbaugh | Gerry Casale | Bob Mothersbaughīob Lewis | Bob Casale | Jim Mothersbaugh | Alan Myersīooji Boy Records | Warner Brothers | Enigma | Devo, Inc.
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"The Wipeouters" are Mutato Muzika employees.Įxternal Links The Wipeouters – P' Twaaang!!! (master release) - Discogs P'Twaaang!!! (release group) - MusicBrainz P'Twaaang! (album overview) - AllMusic "The Wipeouters" - Spotify Official "Rocket Power" TV show website.The Wipeouters album, recorded at Mutato Muzika, grew from Mutato completing the "Rocket Power Theme Song" for the Nickelodeon TV show " Rocket Power".Mark's music production company did music for many Gabor Csupo and Arlene Klasky productions for Nickelodeon Animation Studio.Mark did not approve the cover of the Cleopatra records reissue, he said the Wipeouters band stands on its own and is not a Devo release.Chuck Statler directed the one Wipeouters video.Casale (track: 10), Josh Mancell (track: 5) Trivia Haskett and Raymond Huffman (uncredited archival audio recording) Technical Personnel Engineer – Robert Casale Executive-Producer – Gabor Csupo Artwork – Gabor Csupo Photography By – Bela Kerek, Gabor Csupo, Timothy Georgarakis Written-By – Mark Mothersbaugh (tracks: 2 to 4, 7 to 12), Bob Mothersbaugh (tracks: 1, 6, 13), Gerald V. Casale, Jim Mothersbaugh, Stacey Justis, Ursula Mothersbaugh, Van Coppock With - Robert Casale, Sr.

