Art of Noise | |
---|---|
Origin | London, England |
Genres | Synthpop, Avant-garde, Ambient, New Wave, Alternative Hip hop |
Years active | 1983 - 1990, 1998 - 2000 |
Labels | ZTT China |
Website | http://www.theartofnoiseonline.com |
Past members | |
Anne Dudley J.J. Jeczalik Gary Langan Trevor Horn Paul Morley Lol Crème |
Art of Noise (also The Art of Noise) were an avant-garde synthpop group formed in 1983 by engineer/producer Gary Langan, programmer JJ Jeczalik, along with arranger Anne Dudley, producer Trevor Horn and music journalist Paul Morley.[1] The group's mostly instrumental compositions were novel melodic sound collages based on digital sampler technology, which was new at the time. Inspired by turn-of-the-century revolutions in music, the Art of Noise were initially packaged as a faceless anti- or non-group, blurring the distinction between the art and its creators. The band is noted for innovative use of electronics and computers in pop music and particularly for innovative use of sampling.
The name of the group alludes to the essay The Art of Noises by noted futurist Luigi Russolo. From the earliest releases on ZTT, the band referred to themselves as both Art of Noise and The Art of Noise. Official and unofficial releases and press material use both versions.
Contents |
In early 1983, two of Trevor Horn's production team, programmer JJ Jeczalik and engineer Gary Langan were working on a scrapped drum riff from a session from Yes's 90125. They sampled it into a Fairlight CMI, using the then new Page R sequencer. This was the first time an entire drum pattern had been sampled into the machine. They then added non-musical sounds on top of it, before playing the track to producer Trevor Horn. He then got arranger Anne Dudley involved in what would become a long-term side project. Jeczalik, Langan, Dudley & Horn became known as the Art of Noise along with one of Horn’s business partners, ex-NME journalist Paul Morley, who originally named them the Art of Noises before Jeczalik dropped the end ‘s’. This was the first time that Horn had been part of a group since he had parted company with his Buggles partner Geoff Downes after they had been part of Yes. It would also be the first and last time that he would enjoy chart success as an artist since the New Wave hit in 1979 with "Video Killed the Radio Star". The team had first assembled in 1981 to produce ABC's The Lexicon of Love album, which led to an increase in profile for all concerned and would go later work with Frankie Goes to Hollywood on what would become the album Welcome to the Pleasuredome.
The technological impetus for the Art of Noise was the advent of the Fairlight CMI sampler, an electronic musical instrument invented in Australia that Horn was reportedly among the first to purchase. With the Fairlight, short digital sound recordings called samples could be "played" through a pianolike keyboard, while a computer processor altered such characteristics as pitch and timbre. While some musicians were using samples as adornment in their works, Horn and his companions saw the potential to craft entire compositions with the sampler, tossing the traditional rock aesthetic out the window, or at least turning it on its ear. It should be noted that others were working contemporaneously towards this goal (see Jean Michel Jarre and Yello). Producer and musician Tony Mansfield had made extensive use of the Fairlight for Naked Eyes' eponymous debut album (the first pop album to feature such a hefty dose of the CMI). Horn had previously put the sampling keyboard to great use on The Lexicon of Love, mostly in order to tweak live-based elements of performance but also to embellish the compositions with sound effects (such as a cash register's bell on "Date Stamp").
In February 1983—with Paul Morley providing much of the band's art direction—Horn, Dudley, Jeczalik, and Langan formed the initial incarnation of The Art of Noise. The group's debut EP, Into Battle with The Art of Noise, appeared in September 1983 on Horn's fledgling ZTT label. It immediately scored a hit in the urban and alternative dance charts in the USA with the highly percussive, cut-up instrumental track "Beat Box", a favorite among poppers.
The bass hook of this song was also famously featured, with the addition of a synthesizer melody over the top of it, as the theme tune for the ITV game show The Krypton Factor.
"Moments In Love"—a ten-minute, downtempo/R&B, instrumental ode to sensuality that appeared on both Into Battle and Who's Afraid—was remixed and released as a single in 1984 (first released in the USA in 1983, where it was a moderate hit on the U.S. R&B singles chart). It was played at Madonna's wedding; used in the soundtrack to the movie Pumping Iron II: The Women; used in a number of advertisements; and remixed, covered, and sampled by other artists for years afterward. It has also appeared in numerous chill out compilations and has become a staple of smooth jazz radio station playlists.
It was also around 1985 that Dudley, Jeczalik, and Langan made an acrimonious split from Morley and Horn as well as from the ZTT label. The circumstances of the reorganization were never well-publicized, but several sources indicate that there were disputes over creative control:
After the split, the remaining members moved to the UK-based China Records label, keeping some of the band's original imagery and ethos alive in their second album, In Visible Silence. This album spawned the Grammy Award-winning cover of the Peter Gunn theme, recorded with twangy guitar legend Duane Eddy, who had a huge hit, years earlier, with Peter Gunn in 1959. The Peter Gunn video featured comedian Rik Mayall sending up the private eye. From this same album, the "Beat Box"-like single, "Legs," was a mild underground hit in dance clubs, and in 1986, "Paranoima" achieved some success when a remix of it was released as a single with overdubbed vocal samples provided by the supposedly computer-generated character Max Headroom.
Around 1986, Jeczalik and Dudley started appearing in photographs without masks, alienating some fans that had come to appreciate Morley's "art for art's sake" aesthetic. The upcoming soundtrack pieces continued The Art of Noise's evolution into a pop band and away from Morley's faceless "nongroup."
By 1987, the band's membership was down to just Jeczalik and Dudley. That year saw the release of their album In No Sense? Nonsense! The album featured Jeczalik's most advanced rhythmic collages to date, plus lush string arrangements, pieces for boys' choir, and keyboard melodies from Dudley. It did not produce any hits, although their record label made efforts to push remixes of "Dragnet" into the dance clubs. The album is often regarded by fans to be among their best work, despite the inclusion of arguably novelty tracks composed for the soundtracks of the movies Dragnet and Disorderlies. Less faithful critics, however, criticised the album for being too pretentious and lacking in the humour and catchiness that characterised previous releases. The Art of Noise appeared to have taken inspiration from fellow sonic collage artist Boris Blank (of Yello) with the track "Roller 1"; though the melodic compositions are significantly different, it bears a striking resemblance to the programming used on Yello's "Let Me Cry". In 1987, The Art of Noise provided the score for two movies, Hiding Out and Dragnet, and one particular movement was used in both films. Their brass-based connecting passage between sections from the original Dragnet television show's theme song was used as incidental music during a dramatic scene—an armed chase through the rafters of a gymnasium—near the end of Hiding Out.
In 1988, a one-off collaboration with singer Tom Jones (a cover of Prince's "Kiss"—a staple in Jones' stage shows) renewed the public's interest in the Art of Noise and provided the group's biggest hit in the mainstream. The track appeared on several albums by Jones, and China Records included the song on the greatest hits compilation The Best of the Art of Noise, the first edition of which also contained tracks licensed from ZTT.
The follow-up album, Below the Waste, failed to achieve much success upon its release in 1989. While it did spawn the memorable single "Yebo!" (featuring the unique vocals of Zulu performers Mahlathini and the Mahotella Queens) and what appears to be a Mancini tribute in the form of Robinson Crusoe, some critics felt the album was a hollow imitation of its predecessors, lacking the aesthetic and creative fullness of previous releases.
In 1990, Dudley and Jeczalik declared that the Art of Noise was done; they had officially disbanded.
The rest of the decade saw China Records releasing various Art of Noise compilations: The Ambient Collection, The FON Mixes, The Drum and Bass Collection, Art Works, and reissues of Best of without the ZTT-era tracks. Some of these featured new remixes by other artists. The China label eventually folded.
Although Dudley and Jeczalik had already dissolved the group, in 1990 they assisted in the promotion of the lightly remixed compilation The Ambient Collection that the China label released to cash in on the burgeoning ambient house scene, and Jeczalik approved the remixes that appeared on The FON Mixes the following year.
Dudley became well-known for composing numerous film and television scores in the 1990s. The most famous of these is probably The Full Monty, which won an Academy Award for Original Music Score.
In 1995–1997, Jeczalik and In No Sense? Nonsense! coengineer Bob Kraushaar produced a number of instrumentals oriented toward dance clubs under the name Art of Silence, issuing an album titled artofsilence.co.uk. Jeczalik also embarked on a new career in trading in futures contracts.
Four-fifths of The Art of Noise worked on the Yes album 90125, with Trevor Horn producing, Gary Langan engineering, and Anne Dudley and J.J. Jeczalik providing arrangements and keyboard programming. Many of the samples used on that album also appear on Into Battle. The same four also appeared on Malcolm McLaren's 1982 album Duck Rock and the 1982 album The Lexicon of Love by ABC, on which Dudley also cowrote a track and began her scoring career.
Anne Dudley and Killing Joke's Jaz Coleman collaborated on the 1990 album Songs from the Victorious City, inspired by a trip the two made to Egypt.
The Art of Noise also gets a full writing credit for The Prodigy's "Firestarter", which samples the female "hey, hey" voice from "Close to the Edit". The Prodigy also contributed the remix "Instruments of Darkness (All of Us are One People)" to the 1991 compilation The FON Mixes. Also, an edited version of "Close to the Edit" is featured on the monthly educational Amiga game, Ready Robot Club. The Art of Noise is also credited for the music to the ITV series The Krypton Factor.
Anne Dudley produced two tracks for the 1993 Deborah Harry album Debravation: "Strike Me Pink" and "Mood Ring," as well as cowriting and playing keyboard on "Strike Me Pink." She has scored orchestrations for dozens of pop releases over the years, and both scored and produced the album Voice for her neighbor Alison Moyet. Cathy Dennis added lyrics to one of Dudley's compositions and recorded it as "Too Many Walls", which became a U.S. Top 10 hit in 1991.
The group's version of "Peter Gunn" was used as the theme music for the 2008 BBC TV series Bill Oddie's Wild Side.
According to an interview with J.J. Jeczalik reported in the ZTT fanzine Outside World in 1991, Jeczalik, Anne Dudley, and Gary Langan were inspired by the commercial success of The FON Mixes and had discussed reuniting the group as a trio again. In preparation to record a new album, J.J. and Gary traveled to Cuba to gather new source material. However, no new recordings were produced with the new lineup, and the Art of Noise remained defunct.
A 1997 album Balance - Music for the Eye was never released, but it is not known what line-up this featured.[7]
In 1998, Trevor Horn, Paul Morley, and Anne Dudley began talking about the original intent of the project, its relevance in 20th-century music, and the impending turn of a new century. The group temporarily reformed, adding guitarist Lol Creme but leaving J.J. Jeczalik and Gary Langan conspicuously absent. 'With it' dance act Way Out West provided engineering and production tasks usually fulfilled by these men.
A new single, Dream On—which featured remixed versions of the forthcoming album track, Dreaming In Colour—was released to club DJs later that year, showcasing mixes by Way Out West. A second single, Metaforce, featuring a rap by Rakim, preceded the 1999 release of the concept album The Seduction of Claude Debussy on the ZTT label.
The Seduction album marked an evolution, rather than a return, to the band's glory days, taking the form of a cohesive concept album depicting the life and works of Claude Debussy. However, while impressive from a technical and critical standpoint, it failed to score as a pop album.
The album did, however, form the basis of a 17 minute soundtrack for London's Millennium fireworks celebrations on the banks of the River Thames. The firework display was synchronized to an edit of "Seduction" which also featured a collage of samples from some of Britain's most famous pop and rock songs, plus classical composers. It was broadcast live on 95.8 Capital FM and BBC London 94.9. Trevor Horn worked on the project with Jill Sinclair, Bob Geldof, Capital Radio executive Clive Dickens and producer Ross Ford.
After performing a handful of live shows in the UK and U.S., the band dissolved. A DVD (Into Vision) and CD (Reconstructed) were released in 2002 and 2003 respectively, featuring music recorded and filmed in Chicago, at the Coachella Festival (10 September 1999), at the Shepherd's Bush Empire (22 March 2000) and Fountain Studios, Wembley, London (1 June 2000).
In 2003, a "20th Anniversary Edition" of Into Battle was released the first time in CD form, including bonus tracks and a bonus DVD of their promo videos and a selected discography slideshow of album art. The CD substituted the original version of "Beat Box" with the later "Diversion One".
In early 2004, the Karvavena label released an Art of Noise tribute album, The Abduction of The Art of Noise. This album contains covers of various tracks, including a new version of "Beat Box" performed by J.J. Jeczalik under his Art of Silence moniker. 2004 saw Dudley and Horn perform "Close (To the Edit)" together at a The Prince's Trust charity event.
August 21, 2006 saw ZTT release a 4-CD Art of Noise box set, entitled And What Have You Done With My Body, God?, consisting of tracks exclusively from the 1983–85 ZTT era, from the initial tentative demos created by Gary Langan and J.J. Jeczalik in the wake of the Yes 90125 sessions, to selections from the Ambassadors Theatre performances featuring Horn and Morley, recorded at concerts profiling ZTT acts—prior to which, Langan, Jeczalik, and Dudley had abandoned the label (and, for the time being, the band). The set featured over 40 unreleased remixes, demos, and works in progress, as well as the complete vinyl version of Into Battle...—sourced from the original masters—for the first time on CD. The project was conceived, researched and compiled by music journalist and Art of Noise aficionado Ian Peel, who also wrote the box set's accompanying 36-page book, which featured new interviews with all of the original members.
ZTT Records and Salvo are set to release a new retrospective album entitled Influence around July 2010. The album will include the hits, the collaborations, soundtracks and unreleased material spanning both the ZTT & China Records periods. For more information about this upcoming release go to the Latest News section of the authorised Art of Noise website The Art Of Noise Online http://www.theartofnoiseonline.com
Year | Title | Chart positions | Album | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
UK[1] | US Hot 100 | US Modern Rock | |||
1984 | "Beat Box" | - | 101 | n/a | Into Battle with the Art of Noise (EP) |
"Close (To the Edit)" | 8 | 102 | n/a | Who's Afraid of the Art of Noise? | |
1985 | "Moments in Love" | 51 | - | n/a | |
"Legs" | 69 | - | n/a | In Visible Silence | |
1986 | "Peter Gunn" (featuring Duane Eddy) | 8 | 50 | n/a | |
"Paranoimia" (featuring Max Headroom) | 12 | 34 | n/a | remixed from In Visible Silence | |
1987 | "Dragnet" | 60 | - | n/a | In·No·Sense? Nonsense! |
1988 | "Kiss" (featuring Tom Jones) | 5 | 31 | 14 | The Best of the Art of Noise |
1989 | "Yebo!" (featuring Mahlathini and the Mahotella Queens) | 63 | - | - | Below the Waste |
1990 | "Art of Love" | 67 | - | - | The Ambient Collection |
1991 | "Instruments of Darkness (All of Us are One People)" | 45 | - | - | The FON Mixes |
"Shades of Paranoimia" | 53 | - | - | ||
1999 | "Metaforce" (featuring Rakim) | 53 | - | - | The Seduction of Claude Debussy |
1983–1985 |
|
---|---|
1985–1987 |
|
1987–1990 |
|
1998–2000 |
|