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Reviewer:
Iluvthe80s
A
British dance-pop group which found fame thanks to the antics
of androgynous frontman Pete Burns, Dead or Alive formed in Liverpool
in 1980. Burns first surfaced three years prior in the Mystery
Girls, later heading the proto-Goth rockers Nightmares in Wax;
he founded Dead or Alive with keyboardist Marty Healey, guitarist
Mitch, bassist Sue James and drummer Joe Musker, debuting in 1980
with the Ian Broudie-produced Doors soundalike "I'm Falling."
"Number Eleven" followed, but just as the group was gaining momentum
they were swept aside by the emergence of the New Romantic movement,
with Burns subsequently charging that fellow androgyne Boy George
of Culture Club had merely stolen his outrageous image.
Undaunted, Burns forged on with a retooled Dead or Alive roster
including future Mission U.K. guitarist Wayne Hussey and bassist
Mike Percy; over the course of records including the 1982 It's
Been Hours Now EP and the follow-up single "The Stranger," the
group evolved into a true dance band, and ultimately landed with
major label Epic. A series of singles appeared over the course
of 1983, including "Misty Circles" and "What I Want; " Hussey
soon exited, and it was a line-up comprising Burns, Percy, keyboardist
Tim Lever and drummer Steve Coy which scored Dead or Alive's first
major hit, a 1984 cover of KC and the Sunshine Band's disco classic
"That's the Way (I Like It)" which fell just shy of reaching the
British Top 20.
Dead or Alive's full-length debut Sophisticated Boom Boom also
fared well with audiences, but they achieved true stardom in early
1985 with the Hi-NRG smash "You Spin Me Round (Like a Record),"
the first Number One hit for the production team of Stock Aitken
and Waterman. The succeeding LP Youthquake was also a smash, yielding
further hits in the form of the singles "Lover Come Back to
Me," "In Too Deep" and "My Heart Goes Bang." 1986's "Brand New
Lover" kept the group in the limelight, but the 1987 LP Mad, Bad
and Dangerous to Know proved disastrous at home and in the U.S.,
although a fervent following emerged in Japan. In the wake of
1989's Nude, both Lever and Percy left the group; the nucleus
of Burns and Coy remained, additionally taking over production
and managerial duties. Subsequent Dead or Alive LPs included Fan
the Flame, Part One and Nukleopatra. — Jason Ankeny
SOURCE:
All Music Guide
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