Tag: Giorgio Moroder (Page 8 of 8)

Lost Albums: BERLIN Love Life

In their prime, BERLIN only actually recorded one mini-LP and two albums with the nucleus of Terri Nunn and John Crawford. Although not the original vocalist, Nunn joined multi-instrumentalist Crawford to become partners in life and music with BERLIN.

Although DEVO and OUR DAUGHTER’S WEDDING had featured electronics in a more artful fashion, BERLIN’s 1982 independent mini-LP ‘Pleasure Victim’ was one of the first occasions of an American pop act embracing the synthesizer which had changed the face of music in Europe. It led to a deal with Geffen Records and notoriety with the deviantly fuelled breakthrough single ‘Sex (I’m A…)’. At this point, mainstream USA was still getting excited about macho rock posturing like JOURNEY, TOTO or John Cougar (as the man born Mellencamp was then known)!

BERLIN’s brilliant songs such as ‘The Metro’ and ‘Masquerade’ with their motorik drum machines and Teutonic pulses were a far cry from the way instruments made by Sequential Circuits, Moog and their sisters were being used Stateside. “We were first inspired to create our sound from a couple of European bands ULTRAVOX and KRAFTWERK that were using these new kinds of keyboards that created very different sounds than those of a standard keyboard or piano.” said Nunn, “It created a whole new dynamic that we fell in love with”. Meanwhile, the title track with its pretty synth melody showed how emotive such instrumentation could be, even in songs that were perceived to be AOR ballads.

Featuring an expanded line-up including David Diamond (keyboards and guitar), Ric Olsen (guitar), Matt Reid (keyboards) and Rob Brill (drums) plus an array of devices such as the ARP Quadra, Memory Moog, Prophet 5, Pro-One, TR808, OBX-a, DX7 and Fairlight, Nunn and Crawford delivered their first full-length album together in 1984 called ‘Love Life’.

With this, BERLIN enhanced their reputation and planted the seeds that led to them becoming household names for a short while. Produced mostly by Mike Howlett who had worked with OMD, A FLOCK OF SEAGULLS, BLANCMANGE and MARTHA & THE MUFFINS, he brought his interest in German experimental music and experience as a seasoned musician with GONG to combine Eurocentric electronics with a Trans-Atlantic flavour that was perfect for the MTV generation. The revenge themed ‘Now It’s My Turn’ was the ultimate culmination of that, a mysterious monochrome verse counterpointed by a belting chorus that sounded like HEART’s Ann Wilson fronting ULTRAVOX.

Opening number ‘When We Make Love’ soared vocally and accompanied by some rousing modern backing, provided the cinematic mood for the rest of the album which was dressed in a sleeve picturing Nunn as a vintage film starlet. ‘Touch’ had a similar feel but was slightly more frenetic with synths and guitars blending to produce a unique sound for the time. However, despite starting side two, ‘Pictures Of You’ was really just a pedestrian rock retread of ‘The Metro’.

Taking the pace down, ‘Beg Steal or Borrow’ was BERLIN having fun in the vein of ALTERED IMAGES gone electro while ‘In My Dreams’ was melancholic but dreamy pop. With its atmospheric sweeps and chiming guitar lines, ‘For All Tomorrow’s Lies’ recalled A FLOCK OF SEAGULLS’ ‘Transfer Affection’ before the album closed with the lovely John Hughes’ movie romance of ‘Fall’. The end product resulted in BERLIN sounding neither entirely European or American, walking an enjoyable fine line between FM rawk and New Romantic. Despite the US Top 30 success of ‘Love Life’, the band fragmented, leaving only Nunn and Crawford plus Brill to continue…

By way of a musical prophecy, the album’s Top 30 US hit single ‘No More Words’ was to be the undoing of the close if tempestuous bond between Nunn and Crawford. That song and another album highlight ‘Dancing In Berlin’ were produced by Giorgio Moroder and the blueprint of the Linn driven synth / rock fusion later developed further on his album with THE HUMAN LEAGUE’s Philip Oakey.

Moroder and Nunn got on very well during the sessions so he asked her to sing on a song he had written with his Ferrari mechanic Tom Whitlock entitled ‘Take My Breath Away’. It had already been demoed by Martha Davis of cult new wavers THE MOTELS who had a couple of US Top 10 hits including ‘Only The Lonely’. The Oscar winning ’Take My Breath Away’ became a No1 around the world in 1986 having been featured in the film ‘Top Gun’ but the success was bittersweet. While it was the ultimate guilty pleasure, the song was unrepresentative of BERLIN’s previous work, especially as it only featured Nunn with no input from Crawford who had been the band’s main songwriter.

Despite an extensive tour supporting FRANKIE GOES TO HOLLYWOOD, the accompanying rock oriented album ‘County Three & Pray’ (produced largely by Bob Ezrin) did not sell well despite the inclusion of ‘Take My Breath Away’ and another great single ‘You Don’t Know’. With confusion over their musical direction and deteriorating personal relationships, BERLIN fell apart, ironically three years before the actual city’s wall did!

The majority of the ‘Love Life’ line-up including John Crawford were persuaded to reform for VH1’s ‘Bands Reunited’ programme in 2004 but today, only Terri Nunn remains, touring regularly under the BERLIN name having bought the name from Crawford and occasionally recording. Sadly, their original Geffen back catalogue is difficult to obtain outside of North America and inferior re-recordings appear on various ‘Greatest Hits’ and ‘Live’ CDs.

It’s a shame because although they were plagued by the legacy of a massive hit song they didn’t write, BERLIN are worthy of recognition as American electronic pop pioneers for a sound that had been alien to most of their countrymen pre-MTV. For this reason alone, their work from this imperial period deserves to be heard.


‘Love Life’ is available as a CD via Rubellan Remasters at https://www.rubellanremasters.com/online-store/Berlin-Love-Life-Expanded-Edition-p179552492

http://www.berlinpage.com/

https://www.facebook.com/berlinofficialband/

https://twitter.com/realterrinunn


Text by Chi Ming Lai
7th July 2012, updated 21st March 2020

QUEEN OF HEARTS The Arrival

Following her bouncy recorded debut with the Johan Agebjörn collaboration ‘The Last Day Of Summer’, the lovely QUEEN OF HEARTS releases some catchy electropop of her own, courtesy of ‘The Arrival’ EP.

On it are her majesty’s two viral hits from earlier this year, ‘Freestyle’ and ‘Where Are You Now?’ The Guardian were one of the first of the mainstream inkies to champion her. Amongst all the journalistic excitement, The Times described ‘Where Are You Now?’ as “a luscious escapist electropop floorfiller of the future from the mysterious London based newcomer”. Meanwhile the hardly electro or pop friendly rag Q said “The upper reaches of the pop stratosphere beckon”.

‘Freestyle’ mesmerises with a hypnotic chill and attaches it to some propulsive backing in the manner of Giorgio Moroder. Thrusting itself to a galaxy far, far away, the young royal is steadily gravitating towards being pop’s answer to Queen Amidala in the ultimate revenge of the synth! The Force is strong on this one!

‘Where Are You Now?’ contains some great production in the vein of XENOMANIA, its lustre reminiscent of the hit machine’s work on the underrated RACHEL STEVENS album ‘Come & Get It’ and the more electronic antics of GIRLS ALOUD. The chimes here are a lovely touch alongside the pulsing synths and QUEEN OF HEARTS’ seductive cooing; this if nothing else will have every red blooded male shouting “I’m here!”

Starting ‘The Arrival’ however is a sizzling new collaboration with THE SOUND OF ARROWS called ‘Shoot the Bullet’. For those who are not aware, THE SOUND OF ARROWS are Stefan Storm and Oskar Gullstrand, a hot new pop duo from Sweden said by Popjustice to be “the HURTS you can dance to”. Their CGI assisted visual presentation has been described by one blog as resembling “Disney meets Brokeback Mountain”!

‘Shoot the Bullet’ is a wonderfully buzzy pop cocktail, laden with crystalline melodies in the most wonderful of civil partnerships… think GOLDFRAPP’s lovely ‘Dreaming’ from ‘Head First’. Another a crown jewel is QUEEN OF HEARTS’ cover of THE FOALS’ ‘Spanish Sahara’; the gently throbbing sub-ERASURE bassline and sedate arpeggios melt marvellously into the consciousness, thanks to some subtle studio work by DREAMTRAK. Queenie’s voice is a spoonful of gorgeous, honey coated splendour.

And as a final treat for all of her loyal subjects, there’s the previously unheard ‘Black Star’ which is a co-write with Beatrice Hatherley who has worked with KYLIE MINOGUE and ZOOT WOMAN. It’s quite experimentally grimy although blog Like 1999 amusingly says: “she sounds like Russian faux-lesbian duo TATU raving inside a dubstep warehouse!”

Not featuring on this EP but a surefire glam stomper for the future is the lovely ‘Neon’ which magnificently manages to out Goldfrapp GOLDFRAPP. Then there’s also her MONARCHY collaboration ‘Perfect Mistake’ which has pots of dynamic glitterball sparkle.

With this pair and the excellent Stuart Price produced ‘Feel’ also in the can, ‘The Arrival’ should only be seen as the beginning. There is still MUCH more to come from QUEEN OF HEARTS.

She writes songs about the important things in life – love, loss, heartbreak, betrayal – and thinks that the best pop songs should make you dance and shed a tear or two. All you ever wanted, all you ever needed is here…


‘The Arrival’ takes place at a digital outlet near you now.

http://iamqueenofhearts.com/

https://www.facebook.com/QOHofficial/


Text by Chi Ming Lai
20th October 2011

DURAN DURAN Live at Shepherd’s Bush Empire

Now The Channel Is Open

“Stay with the music, let it play a little longer” goes Simon Le Bon on the title track of their new album ‘All You Need Is Now’. Nick Rhodes’ claims that this album is “undoubtedly one of the strongest of our career” is not far from the truth. ‘All You Need Is Now’ sees DURAN DURAN return to the definitive funk-led electronic based pop of the ‘Duran Duran’ and ‘Rio’ albums when they successfully merged CHIC with GIORGIO MORODER.

Produced by Mark Ronson, the New York based brasshead wanted the band to reclaim their quintessential sound and keen to experiment with vintage synthesizers, he pushed DURAN DURAN back to their best.

Tonight’s intimate gig at Shepherd’s Bush Empire is being recorded for broadcast on BBC Radio 2 so is the reinvigorated band’s opportunity to showcase some of their new material in front of a British audience. With so many of the Duranie hardcore present, Simon Le Bon, Nick Rhodes, John Taylor and Roger Taylor take the opportunity to do something different rather than just trudge through a predictable greatest hits set. And thanks to the quality of the songs from ‘All You Need Is Now’, it all works rather marvellously.

Augmented by a string quartet consisting, in true DURAN DURAN style, of blonde, brunette, red and raven haired beauties, the overture is an instrumental tribute to the late composer John Barry with new guitarist Dom Brown soloing his way through various Bond themes before segueing into ‘A View To A Kill’. With the focus being on the new album tonight, the first of the new numbers, ‘Being Followed’ and its electronic spy drama edge appropriately comes next. This is a superb sequencer assisted number with the tingling metallic edge of THE CURE’s ‘A Forest’ that captures the paranoia today’s surveillance society.

A discordant electronic intro launches the excellent album title track rather like a glitterball ‘Are ‘Friends’ Electric?’… it’s full of fight and optimism because really, ‘All You Need Is Now’. Nick Rhodes does his round of posing like a distinguished cross between Andy Warhol and David Sylvian, armed with his Alesis Andromeda A6 / Roland V-Synth / Roland Jupiter8 / Kurzweil K2000 / Micro-Korg set-up.

Sculpting and stabbing away in his own inimitable fashion, he ably recreates the ‘swimmy’ string sound of his faithful old Crumar Performer on the new and classic tracks, linking the present with the past.

But the reason this new material is so reminiscent of the classic DURAN DURAN era is simply because they are good songs with catchy hooks and rhythms that are easy to dance to. That’s the most important thing rather than any particular instrumentation that might be being used.

Meanwhile Simon Le Bon looks like a German Schlager star sporting his ill-advised beard but he fulfils his role as front man tremendously. He may not bounce around as much as he used to but acts as a perfect energetic foil to John Taylor’s cool poise. At the back in the engine room, Roger Taylor has to be one of the most glamourous drummers ever; only in a band like DURAN DURAN would someone with his dark good looks be relegated to being a sticksman!

So keeping strictly in rhythm, the funk hybrid of KC & The SUNSHINE BAND and CHIC entitled ‘Notorious’ and the UK No1 ‘Is There Something I Should Know?’ keep the party flowing among the faithful before more new material. This comes in the shape of the bouncy ‘Safe’ with backing singer Anna Ross taking over SCISSOR SISTERS Ana Matronic’s role and recalling the infamous ‘singing dealer’ Cindy Ecstacy’s contribution to SOFT CELL B-side ‘Insecure Me’.

As well as the classic dance pop Duran, the new album also shows how Messrs Le Bon, Rhodes, Taylor and Taylor have rediscovered their mojo for rich melodic ballads. ‘The Man Who Stole a Leopard’ follows the template of ‘Tel Aviv’ tinged with ‘The Chauffeur’, but it’s ‘Leave a Light On’ that gets the live premiere tonight, acting as a remembrance for those in the know of DURAN DURAN’s haunting lost song ‘My Antarctica’ from the unloved ‘Liberty’ album.

Also performed is ‘Mediterranea’, one of the bonus additions to the forthcoming physical release and it allows a breather to proceedings. A narrative on the British attitude to sunnier climes, it reveals the dreamy essence of ‘Big Thing’ era B-side ‘I Believe / All I Need To Know’. In a well paced set that inter-disperses big hits among all the new material, the female string quartet return to add an Arabic tinge to ‘The Reflex’ and some heart warming textures to ‘Ordinary World’, the song that re-established DURAN DURAN back as a force in 1993 after years in the relative wilderness. Dom Brown takes centre stage here to reprise the FM rock guitar soloing that no doubt originally helped with the crossover re-evaluation back then.

However, it’s the Bowie / Roxy / Kling Klang influenced dynamic of the New Romantic era that most people love and remember. So when fan favourite ‘Friends Of Mine’ is launched by Nick Rhodes’ synth drones and pulsing arpeggiator, the audience erupt. The chant of “Georgie Davies is coming out… no more heroes, we twist and shout” is a reminder that it was 1975 when the ‘George Davis is innocent’ campaign was in full swing. Friends of his dug up Headingley Cricket ground in protest at his conviction for armed robbery. He was later released, but it turned out he wasn’t actually so innocent after all!!!

And speaking of cult classics, the fantastic lost single ‘Careless Memories’ makes a welcome appearance, its chunky synthesized heavy rock accompanied by a 2011 edit of the wonderful Anime screen projection that first appeared on the classic line-up’s live return in 2004.

The latin-tinged synth funk of ‘Girl Panic!’ has a big chorus and it’s in brilliant tracks like these that indicate how the classic DURAN DURAN sound has returned. It’s not just the synths, it’s also the funky bass, the syncopated backbone and the mix of rock and rhythm guitar together with the distinctive ‘will or won’t he make it’ vocals of Simon Le Bon that encompasses a product that is greater than its sum of parts. And to keep the momentum, an anthemic pop crescendo closes the main set with audience singalongs to ‘Sunrise’ and ‘Rio’ almost drowning out Le Bon.

Easing into the encore first with the touching ‘Come Undone’, the final new track of the evening is delivered in the form of ‘Runway Runaway’, a close cousin of ‘Rio’, before ending with the now traditional band jam of ‘Girls On Film’. Complete with band introductions and audience chant of “play the f***ing bass John”, John Taylor pouts profusely and enjoys the adulation in his position as the New Romantic era’s David Beckham. But what is often forgotten about him is what a highly accomplished bass player he is, with an impressive style that fuses two of its most sadly missed exponents; Bernard Edwards and Mick Karn.

With the performance basing itself on the strongest and most immediate songs from the new album, DURAN DURAN were back on form with the splendid vigour and enthusiasm of men half their age… it’s taken a while but following the lukewarm reactions to comeback albums ‘Astronaut’ and ‘Red Carpet Massacre’, ‘All You Need Is Now’ may well be as Mark Ronson suggests, the “real follow-up to ‘Rio'”.

In its original nine track iTunes version, it worked as a wonderful cohesive body of work… with the addition of five bonus tracks on the physical variant (six on the deluxe edition), it will be fascinating to find out whether this expanded edition will flow quite as well.


‘All You Need Is Now’ is released worldwide as a 14 track CD and 15 track CD/DVD by Tape Modern on 21st March 2011

http://www.duranduran.com

https://www.facebook.com/duranduran

https://twitter.com/duranduran


Text by Chi Ming Lai
23rd March 2011

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