Artist: Visage: mp3 download Genre(s): New Age Visage's discography: Fade To Grey, The Best Of Visage Year: 1993 Tracks: 12 The Anvil Year: 1982 Tracks: 11 Visage Year: 1980 Tracks: 10 Pioneers of the New Romantic movement, the synth-pop grouping Visage emerged in 1978 from the London club Billy's, a neo-glam nightclub which stood in blunt railway line to the prevailing toughie mind-set of the moment. Spearheading Billy's ultra-chic business were Steve Strange, a other dude member of the punk band the Moors Murderers, as well as DJ Rusty Egan, onetime drummer with the Rich Kids; seeking to record medicine of their possess to check in with the club's regular play heel (a unconstipated diet of David Bowie, Kraftwerk and Roxy Music), Strange and Egan were offered studio time by another Rich Kids alum, guitar player Midge Ure. In belated 1978, this trine recorded a demo which yielded the commencement Visage single, an aptly-futuristic cover of Zager & Evans' "In the Year 2525." Adding Ultravox keyboardist Billy Currie as well as three members of Magazine -- bassist Barry Adamson, guitar player John McGeoch, and keyboardist Dave Formula -- Visage sign to Radar Records to button "Mariner" in September 1979, followed a year afterward by their self-titled debut LP. The album yielded a major individual in "Melt to Grey," an inst lodge classical which heralded synth-pop's close at hand commercial-grade find. The followup, "Mind of a Toy," was a Top 20 hit, only after releasing 1982's The Anvil, Visage began to disintegrate -- first Ure exited to focus all of his energies on fronting Ultravox, then Currie and Formula bust ranks as well. 1984's Beat Boys was the group's net recording, although a remixed "Fade to Grey" was a UK Top 40 hit during the early '90s. |
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