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Freedom of Choice

 
Album Review: Freedom of Choice

  • Artist: Devo
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1980 07
  • Total Time: 32:14
  • Genre: Rock

Review

With Freedom of Choice, Devo completed their transition into a full-fledged synth-pop group, producing arguably their most musically cohesive effort in the process. Synthesizers are now fully integrated into the band's sound, frequently dominating the arrangements and at least sharing equal time with the guitars. Everything is played with a cool, polished precision that mirrors the stylized uniformity of the band's visuals; the dissonance is more subdued than in the past, and the uptight rhythms are no longer jarring, instead locking the band into a rigidly even keel. Oddly, even though the music is the least human-sounding Devo had yet produced, their social observations were growing less insular and more sympathetic. Several tunes -- like the oft-covered "Girl U Want" -- have a geeky (but pragmatic) romantic angst that was new to Devo albums, although the band's view of relationships is occasionally colored by their cultural themes of competition and domination. Those preoccupations also inform their breakthrough hit single, "Whip It," but elsewhere, they're finding enough connection with the rest of the world to moderate their cynicism, at least a little bit. Songs like "Gates of Steel," "Planet Earth," and the title track reveal a frustrated idealism under their irony, one that can't quite understand why Americans don't use more of their freedom to search for happiness. Altogether, there's a little less of the debut's energy, and a little less variety as well. But the songwriting is a match for consistent quality, and moreover, the music on Freedom of Choice is the sound that defines Devo in the minds of many. In the end, that makes it the band's only other truly necessary album. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Girl U Want (Lyrics) Mark Mothersbaugh, Gerald V. Casale Devo (2:55)
It's Not Right (Lyrics) Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (2:20)
Whip It (Lyrics) Gerald V. Casale, Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (2:37)
Snowball (Lyrics) Gerald V. Casale, Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (2:28)
Ton O' Luv (Lyrics) Gerald V. Casale Devo (2:29)
Freedom of Choice (Lyrics) Gerald V. Casale, Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (3:28)
Gates of Steel (Lyrics) Gerald V. Casale, Sue Schmidt, Mark Mothersbaugh, Debbie Smith Devo (3:26)
Cold War (Lyrics) Mark Mothersbaugh, Gerald V. Casale Devo (2:30)
Don't You Know (Lyrics) Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (2:14)
That's Pep! (Lyrics) Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (2:17)
Mr. B's Ballroom (Lyrics) Mark Mothersbaugh Devo (2:45)
Planet Earth (Lyrics) Gerald V. Casale Devo (2:45)

Credits

Karat Faye (Assistant Engineer), Mark Mothersbaugh (Vocals), Bob Casale (Keyboards), Mark Mothersbaugh (Guitar), Mark Mothersbaugh (Keyboards), Bob Casale (Vocals), Bob Casale (Guitar), Bob Mothersbaugh (Guitar), Robert Margouleff (Engineer), Howard Siegel (Engineer), Ken Perry (Mastering), Gerald V. Casale (Vocals), Gerald V. Casale (Keyboards), Artrouble (Cover Design), Robert Margouleff (Producer), Devo (Producer), Alan Myers (Drums), Bob Mothersbaugh (Vocals)
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Wikipedia: Freedom of Choice
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Freedom of Choice
Studio album by Devo
Released July 5, 1980
Recorded 1979-1980
Genre New Wave
Dance-Rock [1]
Length 32:14
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Devo, Robert Margouleff
Professional reviews
Devo chronology
Duty Now for the Future
(1979)
Freedom of Choice
(1980)
DEV-O Live
(1981)

Freedom of Choice is the third album by New Wave musicians Devo, released in 1980. It saw the band moving in more of an overt synthpop direction, even though guitars still played a prominent role.

The album was produced by Robert Margouleff, famous for his synthesizer work in Tonto's Expanding Head Band and with Stevie Wonder.

On the Billboard Music Charts, Freedom of Choice peaked at #22 on the Pop Albums chart. It contains Devo's most well-known song, "Whip It", which hit #8 and #14 on the Club Play Singles and Pop Singles charts, respectively.

The group later performed an alternate version of "Girl U Want" that appeared on the Tank Girl soundtrack.

An entire alternate demo version of the album was released in 2000 on the Rhino Handmade two-disc rarities collection Recombo DNA. The demo version lacks "It's Not Right," "Ton o' Luv", "Don't You Know" and "Freedom of Choice" but includes demos of the "Whip It" b-side "Turnaround" and three unreleased tracks ("Luv & Such," "Time Bomb" and "Make Me Move").

In 2008, the album was digitally remastered and released as part of the box set This is the Devo Box in Japan. On September 16, 2009, Warner Brothers and Devo announced a re-release of Freedom of Choice and Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!, with a tour performing both albums.[2]

Contents

Track Listing

All songs written by Mark Mothersbaugh and Gerald V. Casale except as noted.

  1. "Girl U Want" – 2:55
  2. "It's Not Right" (Mark Mothersbaugh) – 2:20
  3. "Whip It" – 2:37
  4. "Snowball" – 2:28
  5. "Ton o' Luv" (Gerald V. Casale) – 2:29
  6. "Freedom of Choice" – 3:28
  7. "Gates of Steel" (Gerald V. Casale, Mark Mothersbaugh, Sue Schmidt, Debbie Smith[3]) – 3:26
  8. "Cold War" – 2:30 (Robert Mothersbaugh/Gerald V. Casale)
  9. "Don't You Know" (Mark Mothersbaugh) – 2:14
  10. "That's Pep" (Mark Mothersbaugh) – 2:17
  11. "Mr. B's Ballroom" (Mark Mothersbaugh) – 2:45
  12. "Planet Earth" (Gerald V. Casale) – 2:45
  • In 1993 a U.K. CD re-issue paired this album with Oh, No! It's Devo and added two bonus tracks: the "Whip It" b-side "Turn Around" and the "Peek-A-Boo!" b-side "Peek-A-Boo! (Dance Velocity)."
  • On November 3rd, 2009, a "deluxe remastered" CD edition of the album was issued by Warner Brothers and contains the DEV-O Live EP as bonus tracks.

Track Commentary

  • Contrary to popular myth, the lyrical content of "Whip It" has nothing to do with sadomasochism. According to Jerry Casale's commentary on the Complete Truth About De-evolution laserdisc and DVD, the song was inspired by Norman Vincent Peale's 1952 book The Power of Positive Thinking and the "can do philosophy" espoused within.
  • "Freedom of Choice," in line with the band's personal philosophy, comments on democracy. The "Roman poem" mentioned refers to the Aesop's fable: The Dog and the Bone, in which a dog with a stolen soup bone in its mouth sees its reflection in a pool. It loses its prize when it tries to intimidate its reflection into dropping the bone in its mouth. In other words, by being greedy, one risks what one already has.
  • "Gates of Steel" continues this anti-conformity trend by describing how Mankind has become bound by logic but is by nature irrational, impulsive, and illogical.
  • "Mr. B's Ballroom" is a lyric re-written version of an earlier relationship-focused song called "Luv & Such," which can be heard on the aforementioned rarities collection Recombo DNA.
  • "That's Pep"'s lyric is an early 20th century poem by Grace G. Bostwick.

2009 Album Performances

  • November 4 - Henry Fonda Theater, Hollywood, CA
  • November 7 - Grand Ballroom, San Francisco, CA
  • November 9 - Moore Theatre, Seattle, WA
  • November 13 - Vic Theatre, Chicago, IL
  • November 16 - 9:30 Club, Washington, DC
  • November 21 - Irving Plaza, New York, NY
  • November 24 - Phoenix Concert Theatre, Toronto, ON

To commemorate the release of the album's "deluxe remastered edition" on CD, the album was performed in its entirety on each of these nights and featured the band in their original touring costumes. The encore performances were "Be Stiff" and "Beautiful World," the latter of which featured the Devo "mascot" Booji Boy on vocals.

The opening act for this tour was comedian/performance artist Reggie Watts.

Covers

Several songs from Freedom of Choice have been covered by other musicians, most notably "Girl U Want", which has been recorded by Superchunk, Soundgarden, Chancho En Piedra, Robert Palmer, and Zombie Ghost Train.

The album's title track has been covered by 16 Volt, The Aquabats, A Perfect Circle, Lagwagon, Snapcase, Psychotica, Big Drill Car, Fu Manchu, and the Frustrations. Collide and Face to Face recorded versions of "Whip It", which has also been performed in concert by numerous musicians including the String Cheese Incident; "Gates of Steel" was covered by Skankin' Pickle, Supernova, Yo La Tengo, Groovie Ghoulies, Shihad, and Junkyard Dogs.

The "Whip It" b-side "Turnaround" was covered by Nirvana and included on the rarities collection Incesticide in 1992.

Personnel

Charts

Album

Year Chart Peak Position
1980 Billboard Pop Albums (U.S. 22
1980 UK Album Charts 47

Single

Year Single Chart Peak Position
1980 "Whip It"/"Gates of Steel"/"Freedom of Choice" Billboard Club Play Singles 22
1980 "Freedom of Choice" Billboard Pop Singles 14

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Freedom of Choice" Read more