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Saturday afternoon at Record & Tape Traders in Towson, my girlfriend picked up a CD entitled Fade To Grey: The Best of Visage. "Who or what are Visage?", I asked. The name sounded familiar, like one of those flash-in-the-pan New Romantic bands with pretentious names that seemed to disappear almost as soon as they arrived on the scene in '80s London. Sure enough, she told me Visage was a New Romantic band from the early 1980s who used lots of synths and included some once-and-future members of Ultravox, namely Billy Currie (from the late '70s-era Ultravox) and Midge Ure (who would go on to replace singer John Foxx in the '80s edition of Ultravox, starting with 1980's Vienna album). The band also included three members of Howard Devoto's Magazine: bassist Barry Adamson, keyboardist Dave Formula, and guitarist John McGeoch (also of Siouxsie and the Banshees). Whatever.
The minute I heard the first, titular track "Fade To Grey," I recognized it. How could I forget? After all, it reached #1 in nine countries, charted as high as #2 in Britain, and the accompanying music video won "Video of the Year" honors.
"FADE TO GREY"
The "Fade To Grey" clip shown above was directed by former 10cc musicians-turned-auteurs Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who also directed Visage's "Mind of a Toy" (one of the first music videos shot on film) and Duran's Duran's "Girls On Film" (the first film to be rejected by MTV for containing partial nudity). Click here to see Visage perform "Fade To Grey" on telly, with Perri Lister - a "Hot Gossip" dancer and original "Blitz Kid" who later fronted the all-girl Boomerang, appeared in Duran Duran and Def Leppard music videos, and had Billy Idol's baby - singing the French lyrics.
As Wikipedia describes it, "The single quickly became a huge club hit...and marked an imminent commercial breakthrough for electronic music and the whole New Romantic movement, for which the first Visage album [1980] became a kind of soundtrack."
Music critic Simon Reynolds found it to be a particularly dark soundtrack. In Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984, he observed that "for all its brisk electrodisco rhythms, Visage's music was sepia toned and at times almost funereal...The effect was compounded by the band's videos, which evoked a between-the-wars desolation derived from Cabaret." Critic Mark Fisher called this mood "the Euro-aesthete's 'exhaustion from life'."
The Strange Story of Steve Strange: The Dandy Who Fell to Earth
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He was also busted for shoplifting cosmetics and a ladies' jacket from Marks and Spencer (being a New Romantic it's hard to say whether these five-fingered discounts were for himself or future resale). Strange's lawyer told court magistrates that his client suffered from "a myriad of problems" and that "he has found it difficult to cope with falling from grace after being a man of considerable wealth in the Eighties."
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Related Links:
Visage (Wikipedia)
Visage Mark II (MySpace)
Mama, We're All Haysi Now!
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OK, here are the facts you didn't request:
Haysi Fantayzee have a pretty decent official web site called Haysi Recollections ("Your source for all things Haysi" - of which, admittedly, there just isn't all that much). It's web address is an offshoot of www.deadoralive.net, which is interesting because HF may have pioneered the dreadlocked White Rasta variation on androgyny that bands like Dead or Alive - and Boy George's Culture Club - would later embrace.
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Haysi Fantayzee's big UK chart hits were 1982's #11 "John Wayne Is Big Leggy" (which was either about racism or unusual sexual practices or both - allegedly referring to John Wayne refusing to take his holster off to have sex with a Squaw)...
"JOHN WAYNE IS BIG LEGGY"
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In his wonderfully irreverent The Encyclopaedia of Classic 80s Pop, Daniel Blythe described the latter as sounding "like two children's TV presenters on helium singing an apocalyptic 'Love Cats' with apointless twiddly guitar solo in the middle."
See for yourself:
"SHINY SHINY"
By the way, the "Shiny Shiny" and "John Wayne Is Big Leggy" videos were directed by rock video veteran Steve Barron, best known as the auteur behind A-Ha's rotoscope masterpiece "Take On Me." But HF should have released a song entitled "Kate Garner is Big Leggy" because the long-limbed lass from Wigan is the stuff of a leg fetishist's wet dreams.
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A third member of the group was Paul Caplin (ex-Animal Magnet), Kate Garner's boyfriend, but he was a behind-the-scenes musician/songwriter/producer who never appeared in the videos. He now runs Caplin Systems, an internet software company.
Boy George famously described them as "Dickensian Rastas, with the emphasis on dick." And George's pal Marilyn ("Calling Your Name" #4, 1983) expressed an interest in having Kate Garner locked in the Tower of London "because she's evil." Ironically, Garner's beau Caplin briefly managed Marilyn after Haysi Fantayzee broke up. Whatever, redux redux.
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Related Links:
Hayzi Recollections
Haysi Fantayzee (Wikipedia)
Kate Garner MySpace Page
Jeremy Healy MySpace Page
Jeremy Healy (Wikipedia)
"Shiny Shiny" 12-inch megamix video
Paul Caplin (Wikipedia)
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