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Reviewer:
Iluvthe80s
Rejecting
the abrasive guitars of their punk-era contemporaries in favor
of lushly romantic synthesizers, Ultravox emerged as one of the
primary influences on the British electro-pop movement of the
early '80s. Formed in London in 1974, the group — originally dubbed
Ultravox! — was led by vocalist and keyboardist John Foxx (born
Dennis Leigh), whose interest in synths and cutting-edge technology
began during his school years; with an initial line-up consisting
of bassist Chris Cross, keyboardist/violinist Billy Currie, guitarist
Steve Shears and drummer Warren Cann, their obvious affection
for the glam rock sound of David Bowie and Roxy Music brought
them little respect from audiences caught up in the growing fervor
of punk, but in 1977 Island Records signed the quintet anyway,
with Brian Eno agreeing to produce their self-titled debut LP.
After scoring a minor UK hit with the single "My Sex," Ultravox
returned later that year with Ha! Ha! Ha!; sales were minimal,
however, and Shears soon exited, replaced by guitarist Robin Simon.
A third LP, 1978's Systems of Romance, was recorded in Germany
with renowned producer Conrad Plank, but it too failed commercially;
Island soon dropped the band, at which time both Foxx and Simon
quit, the former mounting a solo career and the latter joining
Magazine. At that point the remaining members of Ultravox tapped
singer/guitarist Midge Ure, an alumnus of Silk as well as Glen
Matlock's Rich Kids; upon signing to Chrysalis, the new line-up
recorded Vienna, scoring a surprise smash hit with the single
"Sleepwalk," which reached the number two spot on the UK pop charts
in 1981 and pushed the LP into the Top Five.
After 1981's Rage in Eden, Ultravox teamed with legendary producer
George Martin for 1983's Quartet; their most successful LP in
the otherwise impenetrable American market, it launched the minor
hit "Reap the Wild Wind." Upon completing 1984's Lament, Ure —
who had co-written the Band Aid charity single "Do They Know It's
Christmas" — left Ultravox to forge a solo career, topping the
UK charts a year later with the solo smash "If I Was; " the remaining
members, adding Big Country's Mark Brzezicki, resurfaced with
U-Vox in 1986 before going their separate ways. Currie and Simon
reformed the band as U-Vox in 1993, adding vocalist Marcus O'Higgins;
three years later, they released the lackluster Ingenuity. — Jason
Ankeny
SOURCE:
Allmusic.com
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