New Wave

created by xeniot
(idea) by pingouin (4.5 y) (print)   (I like it!) Sat Nov 13 1999 at 10:17:24
Nouvelle vague, new-school early 60s French cinema: Jean-Luc Godard, Francois Truffaut, Alain Resnais, Eric Rohmer, etc.

The "new thing" in jazz in the 60s, both of the free jazz variety and the often-modal proto-free.

70s/80s pop music genre - punk rock sonically neutered and made safe to sell in mass quantities (at its money-grubbing worst); genuinely good pop classicism (at its best). See new-wave.

Authors for a kinder, less autocratic future.

(idea) by kto9 (10.8 hr) (print)   (I like it!) 2 C!s Sat Jul 07 2001 at 16:10:17
The mid to late 70's saw the rise of disco - epitomized by the Bee Gees and Saturday Night Fever. The only alternative seemed to be the treacly sweet musings of singers like Leo Sayer, Debbie Boone, or Barbara Streisand. But in England The Sex Pistols, and The Damned, and The Clash were leading a revolt. It was called punk.

Youthful energy could be spent at either the strobe-glittered disco dance floors filled with Angel Flight slacks or amidst the purple mohawk, black leather and safety-pins of the urine-soaked British punk pubs. Post-punk, new wave, power pop -- all of these refer to a wide range of music that became popular in the late 1970's and early 80's to provide an alternative. Sometimes difficult to categorize, it wasn't disco and it wasn't punk. It grew out of the punk revolt, but kept the infectious dance floor rhythms of disco. New-wave (or new wave), was the most popular catch-all phrase used to refer to this music.

Blondie may have been the first band to cash in - they'd have several big dance hits in the early 80's. They first hit the charts and the dance floors with Heart of Glass in 1979. Devo joined them in 1980 with Whip It. Kim Carnes with Bette Davis Eyes in 1981. The Human League, Men At Work, and former punkers The Clash in 1982. Falco, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, and New Order all had dance floor hits in 1983. Wham and The Pet Shop Boys in 1984 and Tears for Fears in 1985. By 1986 the dance cycle was nearly over.

Though New Wave was especially suited for the dance floor, it spilled over into popular music in general. Gary Numan, The Pretenders, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers all hit the radio charts in 1980. Greg Kihn and The Police in '81;1982 saw Soft Cell, Tommy Tutone, The Cars, The Go-Go's, The Motels, Men At Work, and A Flock Of Seagulls all have significant hits.

1983 was probably New Wave's crest: The Police again, Men At Work again, The Pretenders again, the Human League, the Eurythmics, Culture Club, Dexy's Midnight Runner's, Greg Kihn, Eddie Grant, Thomas Dolby, After The Fire, Men Without Hats, The Stray Cats, Naked Eyes, Kajagoogoo, Adam Ant, The Clash, Madness, Joe Jackson and Spandau Ballet. Several of these groups had more than one hit song that year - so the top 100 chart for the year is filled with New Wave bands.

1984 again saw multiple hits by some of these bands: Culture Club, Cyndi Lauper, The Romantics, Nena, Billy Idol, The Eurythmics, The Cars, Wang Chung, The Police, The Go-Go's, and Peter Schilling

1985 saw a noticeable dropoff, only Wham, Tears for Fears, A-Ha, Simple Minds, Cyndi Lauper, 'Til Tuesday, and the Eurythmics charted top selling hits.

1986 saw Mr. Mister, Pet Shop Boys, Simple Minds, The Human League, Berlin, The Cars, Cyndi Lauper and Arcadia - but few multiple hits by any of these groups.

Other bands often considered New-Wave:

The Talking Heads, Warren Zevon, 20/20, The Adverts, B-52's, Animotion, Aztec Camera, Big Country, Billy Bragg, Boomtown Rats, Bow Wow Wow, Bram Tchaikovsky, The Buggles, The Busboys, The Buzzcocks, Elvis Costello, The Cult, The Cure, Depeche Mode, The Dickies, Ian Dury, Echo and the Bunnymen, The English Beat, Erasure, Everything But the Girl, Fine Young Cannibals, The Fixx, Flash and the Pan, Flying Lizards, Generation X, Godley and Creme, Ian Gomm, Haircut 100, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, The Hooters, The Jam, Level 42, Lene Lovich, Nick Lowe, Madness, Magazine, Martha and the Muffins, Mi-Sex, Missing Persons, Modern English, Musical Youth, Oingo Boingo, The Only Ones, Graham Parker, Pearl Harbor and the Explosions, Pere Ubu, The Plimsouls, The Pogues, The Psychedelic Furs, Public Image Ltd, REM, The Ramones, The Replacements, Romeo Void, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Skafish, Skids, Patti Smith, The Smiths, The Specials, Split Enz, The Sports, Squeeze, Stiff Little Fingers, The Stranglers, Style Council, The Suburbs, Talk Talk, Timbuk 3, Tin Huey, Ultravox, U2, The Vibrators, The Violent Femmes, The Waitresses, Was (not was), Wire, XTC

(thing) by legbagede (15.1 hr) (print)   (I like it!) 9 C!s Fri Mar 08 2002 at 22:46:44
As requested in Sylvar's New Wave Challenge, here follows 108 essential New Wave albums (yeah, it was supposed to be a 100, but people had some really good suggestions). Just a few disclaimers before proceeding:
  1. New-wave, as kt09's mentioned, arose out of several factors:
    • the implosion of punk's first wave in the UK and its incursion, adaption and/or dilution (depending on your particular feelings on the subject) in the North American music scene,
    • the effect of disco's prevalence on other forms of electronic music and its ubiquity in the dance clubs of the time,
    • the declining relative cost and size of synthesizers & drum machines, along with increasing exposure to pioneering 70s European electronic enthusiasts,
    • the rise of a new generation of club go'ers who appreciated moodier, more aggressive, or just less vapid forms of music (this may have been related to changing drug use, as harder narcotics became more fashionable & widely available),
    • the creeping infiltration of the fashion world & art scene on independent music.

  2. As a result, varied and competing streams and styles emerged, making rigid categorization a no go. Ultimately, pop music hair-splitting is historically unhelpful anyway. But let's mention five major genres which are widely identified:

  3. Popular distinctions should be made between a) album buyers, b) club goers and c) radio listeners when noting levels of interest and influence in music. Each individual group had their own preferences, thus moving styles in quite different directions. Not everyone familiar with a very popular group (like Blondie) would be familiar with the work of a more obscure outfit (like Kraftwerk) despite the number of records each sold around the same time. While many UK youth had early exposure to many of these bands, given most came out of a post-punk era, quite a few North Americans weren't exposed to any of this until Gary Numan's "Cars," Soft Cell's "Tainted Love," and Human League's "Don't You Want Me" hit commercial radio (I fell into this category, at age 8) . However, it bears repeating that many bands would try to incorporate elements from various styles, depending largely on the popularity of that strain at a particular time (ex. Squeeze's use of heavy electronics on earlier singles vs. Talk Talk's abandonment of ambient instrumentals).


  4. Incidentally, there is no clear death knell for new wave - though I think certainly by the late 80s most music on the radio was again moving back to very unimaginative Top 40s material - and most of the interesting figures of the period simply accepted this and went underground (where they were still recording). Certainly the first new wave sounds would be identifiable with the unholy marriage of punk and disco one saw in the last years of the 1970s, and by the mid 1980s, fragmentation into sub-genres (esp. Goth) rendered the term unhelpful and antiquated. The decade between 1977 to 1987 seems reasonably accurate.


  5. Finally, the albums presented here have been selected within the context of a 'New Wave' sound. They may not necessarily be a band's best album (frequently, in fact, they are not). Rather, they represent best that particular artist's take on the musical aesthetic and visual fashion. In some cases, to be blunt, they aren't particularly good records, period. In compiling this list the aim was to select one record (preferably a non-compilation) from the period for each band that was formative or representative in some way of the scene.

With luck, what follow comes close to a useful consensus if you're interested in forming a record collection, also marking the absolutely essential, totally non-negotiable items- just plain great albums in their own right- with a big fat *. Select, NME, Q & Spin magazines, along with the All Music database (www.allmusic.com) and innumerable band/fan sites were my primary sources for selecting the core band list & best albums (in cases where there was no agreement, common sense was employed). Lastly, cheers to kto9 & catchpole for catching many of the albums I missed. It's still an open list, so if you think of any important notes or additions, just let me know.

-------A------

A-ha
Hunting High and Low * - 1985 (36m 39s) w/ The Sun Always Shines on TV & Take on Me
ABC
The Lexicon of Love * - 1982 (37m 25s) w/ Poisoned Arrow & The Look of Love
Adam Ant
Friend or Foe - 1982 (39m 34s) w/ Desperate, But Not Serious & Goody Two Shoes
Alphaville
Forever Young - 1984 (43m 12s) w/ Forever Young & Big in Japan
Altered Images
Happy Birthday* -1981 (38m 45s) w/ Happy Birthday & Leave Me Alone
Laurie Anderson
Big Science * - 1982 (38m 19s) w/ O Superman & Let X=X
Animotion
Animotion - 1985 (43m 55s) w/ Obsession & Run to Me
Aztec Camera
High Land, Hard Rain - 1983 (45m 25s) w/ The Boy Wonders & We Could Send Letters

---------B ----------

Bananarama
Bananarama - 1984 (34m 14s) w/ Cruel Summer & Robert DeNiros Waiting
Bangles
All Over the Place - 1984 (31m 33s) w/ Hero Takes A Fall & Going Down to Liverpool
Bauhaus
The Sky's Gone Out * - 1982 (42m 24s) w/ Third Uncle, Silent Hedges & Exquisite Corpse
Tones On Tail (1984) & Love and Rockets (1985) came on not long after, with similar musical leanings, minus the drama
Big Country
The Crossing - 1983 w/ In a Big Country & Fields of Fire
The Birthday Party w/ Nick Cave
Prayers on Fire - 1981 w/ Nick the Stripper & King Ink
Blancmange
Believe You Me - 1985 w/ What's Your Problem? & Why Don't They Leave Things Alone?
Blondie
Parallel Lines * - 1978 (38m 11s) w/