This post was inspired by the fact that none of my friends realised that bands like The Human League and Dead or Alive had recorded anything before they hit the big time. The singles below a a handful of my favourite tracks by bands that would go on to be huge stadium fillers but that, in my case, I prefer their earlier stuff.
Let's start with The Human League who probably entered most people's consciousness in 1981 when they released their third album, Dare, and the various hit singles that came from it. I'm not necessarily saying I don't like this period of The Human League, but I find their earlier, less commercial recordings more appealing. Heralding from the industrial heartland of Sheffield, home to other electronic / experimental bands like Cabaret Voltaire, their first single, Being Boiled, was released on the Fast Product label way back in 1978. A very different sound to what they would go on to produce in the 1980's, but an essential slice of post-punk / synth-pop.
The Human League - Empire State Human, Virgin records, c.1979
Let's swap artists now and now and move on to Dead or Alive. A band I cannot claim to having heard before they were famous, although I was aware of the name, but one whose back catalogue I discovered recently. Their first 2 singles, I'm Falling and Number Eleven, were released on Liverpool's Inevitable records, home to other Liverpool bands like Wah! Heat (more about them later), Modern Eon, and It's Immaterial. The single I'm going to feature here however, is their 1982 12" single, It's Been Hours Now. I could have chosen any of the first three as they are all excellent, but I wanted to shine a little light on the chap at the top right hand of the front cover, Wayne Hussey, who would of course go on to be part of The Sisters of Mercy and The Mission, via Pauline Murray and the Invisible Girls.
Dead of Alive - It's Been Hours Now, Black Eyes Records, c.1982
No, 'I prefer their earlier stuff' post could possibly be complete without mentioning Ultravox, or should I say Ultravox! Many people will be aware of Ultravox following the success of their hit single, Vienna, but if I'm honest it leaves me a bit cold. Each to their own, but I much prefer the period from 1977 to 1979 where their vocalist was John Foxx, when they relased 3 stunning albums, Ultravox!, Ha1 Ha! Ha!, and Systems of Romance, none of which troubled the UK charts but they did secure a John Peel session in 1977, which as far as I'm concerned is more worthy by far than having a hit.
I'm going to choose their first single release for this post, Young Savage, from 1977, mainly because it's about as far away as you could possibly get from their later, post John Foxx, sound. Becoming increasingly hard to track down, this one will set you back a pretty penny on Ebay.
Ultravox! - Young Savage, Island records, c.1977
Next up we have stadium fillers, Simple Minds. However it wasn't always that way, and their early records are quite different from the songs that would make them superstars. Prior to signing to Arista records, and then Virgin records, Simple Minds released two wonderful singles in 1979 on Zoom records, Life in a Day and Chelsea Girl.
I was going to stop there with Simple Minds but didn't feel I couldn't move on without mentioning their classic 1980 singles, I Travel and Changeling, both released on Arista records, and still largely escaping the wider public's attention. I Travel was released in both 7" and 12" formats, with early copies of the 7" coming with a free, two track, flexi disc. All versions of this release are now becoming increasingly hard to find out in the wild, although there are several on Ebay.
Simple Minds - Changeling, Arista records, c.1980
Having mentioned Wah! Heat above and their association with the Inevitable label, they now get their turn here. A band that somewhat confusingly changed their name from Wah! Heat, to Wah!, and then to The Mighty Wah!, and had their mainstream success with hits like The Story of the Blues, Come Back, and later with Sinful as Pete Wylie and the Oedipus Wrecks, but prior to that, as Wah! Heat, they released a couple of great singles on Inevitable records. Better Scream was released in 1979, and Seven Minutes to Midnight was released in 1980. Both brilliant songs which received acclaim in the music press at the time and featured on John Peel, for whom they recorded a session. Their debut album, Nah=Poo - The Art of Bluff, released in 1981 on Eternal records, is also a bit of a lost classic. Both of the singles turn up in the wild from time-to-time at reasonable prices, and are also fairly easy to find on Ebay.
Wah! Heat - Seven Minutes to Midnight, Inevitable records, c.1980
And finally for this short post, we move on to ABC. Yes, ABC, although not perhaps as most will know them. Prior to forming ABC, Mark White and Stephen Singleton were part of a Sheffield, electronic new wave / minimal synth band called Vice Versa. They released a couple of singles as Vice Versa, the first was Music 4 in 1979 on Neutron records, which is pretty much impossible to find unless you have deep pockets, and Stilyagi, in 1980, by which time Martin Fry had joined the band. Music 4 is listed at anything between £30 and £200 on both Ebay and Discogs. Stilyagi seems to go for less but still commands a hefty price tag.
Well, once again this was a post that could have continued for considerably longer, but it's now past my bedtime so I'll end it here. Other worthy contenders might have been Tubeway Army before their massive Are Friends Electric hit; the first single by The Police, Fall Out, from 1977; anything by The Psychedelic Furs prior to them hitting the big-time with Pretty In Pink, in particular their first two singles, We Love You and Sister Europe, and of course not forgetting The Leyton Buzzards (occasionally The Buzzards From Leyton) who released some quite impressive punk and new wave singles before morphing into Modern Romance.
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for more posts in the hopefully not too distant future.
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