Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Dance (Gary Numan album)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Released
  
4 September 1981

Length
  
57:01

Artist
  
Gary Numan

Label
  
Atco Records

Recorded
  
June–July 1981

Dance (1981
  
I, Assassin (1982)

Release date
  
4 September 1981

Producer
  
Gary Numan

Dance (Gary Numan album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumba

Studio
  
Rock City Studios, Shepperton

Genres
  
New wave, Synthpop, Jazz, Ambient music, Experimental music, Jazz fusion

Similar
  
Gary Numan albums, New wave albums

Gary numan slow car to china 1981


Dance is the fifth studio album, and third under his own name, by the British musician Gary Numan, released in 1981. Featuring the Top 10 single "She's Got Claws", the album reached #3 on the UK charts.

Contents

Gary numan cry the clock said demo


Overview

With synth pop music in the mainstream by 1981, Numan made a conscious effort to craft a more sombre, personal and musically experimental album, in a jazzier vein than its predecessors.

The album's sound constitutes a significant change in style from the heavy analogue synth arrangements of Numan's earlier hit releases. Side One of the album consists of four long, sparse, slow-tempo minimalist songs, with the rhythm tracks based largely around muted drum machine patterns. The style is not dissimilar to some of the more ambient work by Brian Eno, particularly his solo album Another Green World and collaborations with David Bowie on Low and "Heroes", and tracks by the band Japan such as '"The Tenant" and "Despair". Side Two of the album contains shorter, more conventional songs. One of these, "Moral", is a contrafactum, adapting the tune from Numan's 1979 song "Metal", changing its lyrics into an attack on the New Romantic movement.

Numan's commercial success by this period enabled him to enlist several guest musicians to perform on the album, including guitarist Rob Dean and (fretless) bassist/saxophonist Mick Karn of Japan, drummer Roger Taylor of Queen, keyboardist Roger Mason of Australian band Models, and Canadian alternative musician Nash the Slash (who had performed live with Numan in 1980 and 1981).

Lyrically, the songs deal largely with tragic sexual relationships, examined in a manner similar to the often bleak and alienating relationships between people and technology that informed earlier songs such as "Down in the Park" and "Are 'Friends' Electric?". The opening track "Slowcar to China" is a nine-minute opus about a prostitute. "Night Talk" is about a man dealing with a lover who is a drug addict (co-written with close friend and former bass-player, Paul Gardiner, himself a heroin addict). "Cry the Clock Said" is a nearly ten-minute ballad about a breakup. The salsa-flavoured "She's Got Claws" is about a predatory woman, written as an embittered response to an ex-girlfriend who sold the story of their relationship to the tabloids. The melancholic "Stories" describes an accidental café reunion between a woman and her son by a failed relationship.

Numan also wrote and recorded a song titled "Dance", but it was ultimately not included on the original album and was only released years later as a CD bonus track.

Reception

Reaction to the album was mixed, some critics applauding what they saw as a less commercial career move and others viewing the change of pace with cynicism. A few years after Dance's release Numan conceded, "if I was supposed to be a pop star doing music for the masses, it probably wasn't the right thing to do", but he praised the standard of playing on it. "She's Got Claws" was the album's sole single release, making number 6 in the UK charts, whilst the album itself peaked at number 3. It was Numan's first album to miss the number 1 spot since Tubeway Army's debut album in 1978, dropping out of the charts after 8 weeks.

Legacy

Numan very rarely performs any music from the album in concert. However live recordings and visual footage of "She's Got Claws", "Cry the Clock Said" and "Moral" ("Metal") appear on Numan's video/DVD Micromusic and album Living Ornaments '81, taken when they were previewed prior to the release of Dance at his Wembley 'farewell' concerts in April 1981. An early live recording of "Stories" also came to light in 2005 when Beggars Banquet released the expanded Living Ornaments '80 album on CD. Numan performed "Crash" and "Boys Like Me" during club dates in the US in 1982 but they have not been officially released, while "Night Talk" was performed live in 2004 to mark the 20th anniversary of Paul Gardiner's death, Numan's longtime bassist and co-writer of the track.

On his website on 30 March 2010, Numan mentioned that "Crash" was one of the songs rehearsed for his set at the Manchester and London "Back to the Phuture" shows.

Track listing

All tracks written by Gary Numan, except "Night Talk" and "Stormtrooper in Drag", co-written with Paul Gardiner.

  • Previous CD releases of Dance (Japan in 1990, and the UK in 1993) included "Love Needs No Disguise", Numan's 1981 single with Dramatis, as a bonus track. The track was subsequently replaced by its B-side, "Face to Face", for the subsequent edition of Dance, although it would be included on the 1996 Numan compilation, The Premier Hits.
  • Musicians

  • Gary Numan - Vocals, Polymoog, SCI Prophet-5, Roland Jupiter-4, Yamaha CP-30, ARP Odyssey, Roland CR-78, Linn LM-1, Claptrap, Guitar, Bass, Piano, Percussion, Claves, Handclaps
  • Paul Gardiner - Bass, Guitar, ARP Odyssey
  • Cedric Sharpley - drums
  • Chris Payne - Viola
  • John Webb - Roland Jupiter-4, Linn LM1, Handclaps
  • Jess Lidyard - Drums
  • Mick Karn - Fretless bass, saxophone
  • Nash the Slash - Violin
  • Roger Taylor - Drums, tom-toms
  • Rob Dean - Guitar
  • Tim Steggles - Percussion
  • Sean Lynch - Linn LM1
  • Connie Filapello - Vocals
  • Roger Mason - SCI Prophet-5, Yamaha CP-30
  • Mick Prague - Bass
  • Songs

    1Slowcar to China9:02
    2Night Talk4:24
    3A Subway Called 'You'4:36

    References

    Dance (Gary Numan album) Wikipedia