Saturday, January 18, 2020

The Marcel Duchamp of Electropop


John Foxx : Underpass


On January 18, 1980 ex-Ultravox singer/lyricist John Foxx released his debut solo album Metamatic. Infused with synthesizers at the height of Gary Numan's popularity, the album reached #18 in the UK album charts and featured two UK singles, the UK#31 "Underpass" and UK #32 "No One Driving".



Anyone who had listened to Ultravox's last album, 1978's synth-laden Systems of Romance, could hear an exciting new direction for music. Produced by Kraftwerk's Conny Plank at his studio near Koln, the album was full of atmosphere and alienation. In his book looking at the postpunk scene from 1978 to 1984, Rip It Up and Start Again, Simon Reynolds suggests Numan was listening and taking notes ( and I see from my own post on Systems that I made the same suggestion).



For Metamatic, Foxx not only abandoned his band, but guitars and drums. The only human sounds came from Foxx's vocals and from Jake Durant on the occasional bass track. Of the sessions, Foxx writes on his website:

I was in retreat from bands, touring, etc. mightily convinced that electronics were the future, and reading too much J.G. Ballard. I lived alone in Finsbury Park, spent my spare time walking the disused train lines, cycled to the studio every day and wobbled back at dawn, imagining I was the Marcel Duchamp of electropop. Metamatic was the result. It was the first British electronic pop album. It was minimal, primitive technopunk. Carcrash music tailored by Burtons.



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