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DEVO Box - RSD Exclusive 2019 Limited Edition Vinyl Record | Perfect for Collectors & Music Enthusiasts
DEVO Box - RSD Exclusive 2019 Limited Edition Vinyl Record | Perfect for Collectors & Music Enthusiasts

DEVO Box - RSD Exclusive 2019 Limited Edition Vinyl Record | Perfect for Collectors & Music Enthusiasts

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Product Description

Devo's six Warner albums released between 1978 and 1984, each pressed on a different colour of vinyl to complement each sleeve, housed in a deluxe box. Limited to 3000 copies worldwide. - Albums: 1. Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! (1978) 2. Duty Now for the Future (1979) 3. Freedom of Choice (1980) 4. New Traditionalists (1981) 5. Oh, No! It's Devo (1982) 6. Shout (1984)

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

I've been the hardest of hardcore Devo fanatics since their first album was released in 1978, and I never dreamed that it would be possible for their glorious work to sound this fine. Our Japanese friends at Phantom Sound and Vision have done right by the Fab Five and gone further than the most fanatical sense of duty and devotion might demand. I've heard these albums endlessly, but now I'm hearing elements and nuances which I have never caught before (and I'm not an audiophile with a golden ear; the sound of these discs is dramatically improved in ways which even the most casual listeners will notice immediately).And I commend you to the level of insane detail given to the packaging:With the original issue of the first album, the inner sleeve (with photos and lyrics) was printed on a glossy stock. That same grade of paper is used for reproducing the inner sleeve of the corresponding CD. The inner sleeve of the second album, again with images and lyrics, used a rougher stock, so Phantom Sound and Vision went to the trouble to seek out that exact same paper to make their reproduction. This applies to all of the sleeves, jackets and inserts in the box (Devo's first seven albums, comprising their entire career at Warner Brothers). The result is as if mint copies of those seven albums had been miniaturized by the shrinking technology of Fantastic Voyage; it's absolutely breathtaking and unlike anything I've ever seen. I don't think the artists had anything to do with choosing the grade and paper stock of their album sleeves and inserts, but even this trivial detail was enough to warrant the needed attention, effort and expense which Phantom Sound and Vision knew fans would marvel over.The jackets of Duty Now for the Future and Oh, No! It's Devo originally had perforations (around the image of the band on the front of the former and allowing the buyer to fold out a standing leg on the back of the latter), and you'll find the same in miniature here. Freedom of Choice and New Traditionalists originally had wall posters as inserts, and at last they have them again (now 14 1/4" x 10", and bright and clear). New Traditionalists had a sticker in its lower right corner bearing the image of Nutra and promoting the inserted poster and 45 rpm single of Working in the Coalmine, and Shout had one in its upper left listing the song titles. Even those stickers are back, not printed as part of the jacket image, but actually remade as tiny stickers and affixed to the jackets in the same locations as the originals -- absolutely unreal.The two sided card stock insert and the red generic "Warner Bros. Music Show" jacket from Dev-o Live are exactly as you remember them, and the disc contains the entire 22 track show from the Rhino Handmade reissue, not the paltry six we had to live with back in 1980.Remember that 45 rpm of Working in the Coalmine? When you see how it was fed through the Fantastic Voyage miniaturizer you are simply not going to believe it (I'm holding it in the attached photo).And this rave has just been about the paper, but wait until you hear the music! Isao Kikuchi deserves an award for his digital remastering of these astonishing albums (the review here by SpudOz is absolutely correct in every particular). Hear Devo as you have never heard Devo before, as they have always deserved, and marvel.Printed lyrics for all seven albums are included.Thank you, Phantom Sound and Vision, Isao Kikuchi, and Devo.