Thursday, August 09, 2007

Classic or New Romantic, but not CNR



This song isn't Classic New Romantic.... I think its just New Romantic... I still haven't figured out how they classify things. Then again, I would say its a Classic. It reminds me of a fun times and having a crush...

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi, miss you. I thought this might be of help only because I on the other side of 35 and remember, almost, the drug infested days of my youth.

New romanticism emerged in the UK music scene in the early 80s as a direct backlash against the aus-terity of the punk movement. At various times it became a catch-all term for quite disparate bands working within the pop world, and consequently works better as a description of a specific time rather than sound or style. Where punk railed against life on England's council estates, the new romantics celebrated glamour; ostentatious clothes and hedonism.
The coming of age of the video as a promotional tool was important to the development of new romanticism as were the outlandish haircuts (A Flock of Seagulls ) the frilled shirts (Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet) and the fact that men could be seen wearing mascara (practically everyone involved). Guitars, though present, were subordinate to synthesizers. The movement's early fulcrum was Stevo (Steven Pearse), whose Some Bizzare Album compilation in 1980 introduced such artists as Classix Nouveaux, Blancmange, Depeche Mode and Soft Cell. Centred on London clubs such as Blitz, this new gaggle of groups was at first termed 'futuristic'. The Human League had been active for some time in Sheffield but in a new incarnation perfectly amalgamated simple song ideas with basic keyboard skifis to define the essen¬tial new romantic blueprint. Adam And The Ants were historically linked with punk, as were, more obliquely, Culture Club, though both found a place on the fringe of the movement as a platform for major chart success.
If the most obvious historical ancestor of new romanticism was David Bowie, then Japan were his closest living relatives, aping even his fascination with the Orient. The two biggest stars were undoubtedly Duran Duran and Spandau Ballet. The former wrote classic pop hooks with casual ease for much of the period, though Spandau Ballet were always more visually than aurally appealing, despite the occasional win¬ning single (the melodrama of 'True' was resonant enough for PM Dawn to make it rap's first new romantic sample). Of less enduring fame or sub¬stance were Classix Nouveaux, Visage and A Flock Of Seagulls, despite the latter breaking through in the American market. Nevertheless, several excep¬tional singles were left behind that effectively defined the times, and it was to no great surprise that the movement was revisited in 1995 with the development of the 'Romo' scene.

Hope to see you in Van sometime soon,
Scott

10:55 PM  

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