Duran Duran are an English rock band
notable for a long series of popular singles
and vivid music
videos. They were the most commercially successful of the New
Romantic bands and a leading band in the MTV-driven "Second
British Invasion" of the United States. During the past three
decades they have placed 21 singles in the Billboard
Hot 100 and 30 in the Top 40 of the UK
Singles Chart. Duran Duran has sold more than 85 million records.
The band's hit singles include "Planet
Earth", "Girls On Film", "Rio","Hungry
Like the Wolf", "Save A Prayer", "Is There Something
I Should Know?", "Union of the Snake", "The
Reflex", "Wild
Boys," "Notorious",
"Skin
Trade" and the James Bond theme "A View to a Kill" in the 1980s, "Ordinary
World" and "Come Undone" in the
early 1990s,
and "Sunrise" and "What
Happens Tomorrow" in the 2000s.
They have won two Grammy Awards for their music videos.
Duran Duran was created by Nick
Rhodes (keyboards) and John Taylor
(bass), with the later addition of Roger Taylor
(drums), Andy Taylor (guitar), and Simon
Le Bon (lead vocals); none of the Taylors are related. The
group has never disbanded, but the line-up changed to include guitarist
Warren Cuccurullo from 1989 to
2001, and drummer Sterling Campbell from 1989 to
1991. The reunion of the original five members in the early 2000s,
leading to the release of Astronaut
in 2004, created a stir among music media and the band's fans.
Duran Duran's next album 'Red Carpet Massacre' is due for
release on October 30, 2007. The first single is most likely to be
"Nite Runner" (featuring Justin Timberlake and Timbaland).
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Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Beginning
(1978–1980)
- 1.2 Band
launch (1981–1982)
- 1.3 On
top of the world (1983–1984)
- 1.4 Band
falls apart (1985)
- 1.5 Struggle
for success (1986–1991)
- 1.6 Second
climb, Second fall (1992–1996)
- 1.7 Soldiering
on (1997–2000)
- 1.8 Reunion
(2001–2005)
- 1.9 New
direction (2006 and beyond)
- 2 Influence
- 3 Videos
- 4 Discography
- 5 See
also
- 6 Notes
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
History
Beginning (1978–1980)
John Taylor and Nick Rhodes formed Duran Duran in Birmingham,
England in 1978, naming the band after the villain "Dr.
Durand Durand", played by Milo O'Shea in Roger
Vadim's cult science-fiction film Barbarella.
Their first singer was Stephen Duffy. Several
drummers and guitarists were subsequently tried, as well as a handful
of vocalists, after Duffy left Duran Duran early in 1979.
Drummer Roger Taylor fell
in with Taylor and Rhodes after meeting them at a party. Then, John
Taylor, who originally played lead guitar, switched to bass. Guitarist
Andy Taylor came south from Newcastle to audition after responding to a
magazine advertisement, and London vocalist Simon Le Bon was
recommended to the band by an ex-girlfriend who worked at the Rum Runner nightclub where
the band rehearsed.
The owners of the club, brothers Paul and Michael Berrow, became the
band's management, paying them to work as doormen, disc jockeys and
glass collectors when they weren't rehearsing.
The group was generally considered part of the New
Romantic scene, with other style-and-dance bands such as Spandau
Ballet, Japan and ABC,
though they did not view themselves as a New Romantic band. In 1980,
they recorded two demo tapes and performed in clubs
around Birmingham
and London.
In late 1980, when touring as an opening act for Hazel
O'Connor, the band attracted critical attention which escalated into a
bidding war between the record companies EMI and Phonogram Records.
What they termed "a certain patriotism" toward the label of The
Beatles led them to sign with EMI in December. However, Nick
Rhodes said in a 1998 interview with Deluxe
magazine, that the band was "appallingly ripped off" by the EMI
contract.
In 1981, Duran Duran were Nick Rhodes, Simon Le Bon, and the unrelated
Taylors: Andy, Roger and John.
Like Depeche Mode, Duran Duran was
among the earliest bands which worked on their own remixes. Before the
days of digital synthesizers and easy audio
sampling, they created complex, multilayered arrangements of their
singles, sometimes recording entirely different extended performances
of the songs in the studio. These "night versions" were generally
available only on vinyl, as b-sides to
45 rpm singles or on 12-inch club singles, until the release
of the compilation Night Versions: The Essential Duran Duran
in 1998.
From the very beginning, the band had a keen sense of style.
They worked with stylist Perry Haines and fashion designers such as
Kahn & Bell and Antony Price to build a sharp and
elegant image, soon outgrowing the ruffles and sashes of the
pirate-flavoured New Romantic look. Their style did, however, display
the typical hair spray and mullet excesses of the 1980s,
but they have continued to present fashion as part of the package
throughout their career. In the 1990s, they worked with Vivienne
Westwood, and in the 2000s with Giorgio Armani—one advertising tagline reads,
"Styles change, style doesn't". The band retained creative control of
the band's visual presentation and worked closely with graphic designer
Malcolm Garrett and many others over the years to create album covers,
tour programmes, and other materials.
All five members of the band were photogenic — People
magazine called them "the prettiest boys in rock".
Teen and music magazines in the UK latched onto their good looks
quickly, and the U.S. soon followed. It was a rare month in the early
eighties when there was not at least one picture of the band members in
teen
magazines such as Smash Hits or Tiger Beat,
even if the sugary coverage was sometimes at odds with the band's
titillating videos and occasionally dark lyrics. It helped that each
member had a distinctive look and personality. John Taylor once
remarked that the band was "like a box of Quality Street [chocolates];
everyone is someone's favourite"
— an effect that has been strategically planned in more recent boy bands.
Duran Duran would later come to regret this early pin-up exposure, but
at the time it helped attract the national attention they sought.
Band launch (1981–1982)
The band's first album, Duran
Duran, was released on the EMI label in 1981.
The first single, "Planet Earth", reached the United
Kingdom's Top 20 at Number 12. A follow-up, "Careless
Memories," stalled at Number 37. However, it was their third single,
"Girls On Film", that attracted the most attention. The song went to
Number 5 in the UK, before the notorious video was even filmed. That
video, featuring topless women mud wrestling and depictions of other sexual
fetishes, was made with directing duo Godley
& Creme in August.
Two weeks earlier, MTV was launched in the United
States.
The band expected the "Girls On Film" video to be played in
the newer nightclubs that had video screens, or on pay-TV channels like
the Playboy Channel. Kevin
Godley explained the thinking behind it:
We were very explicitly told by Duran Duran's management to
make a very sensational, erotic piece that would be for clubs, where it
would get shown uncensored, just to make people take notice and talk
about it.
The raunchy video created an uproar and was banned by the BBC and heavily edited
for MTV. The band unabashedly enjoyed and capitalised on the
controversy, and the album peaked in the UK Top Twenty at Number 3. Adam Ant and Spandau
Ballet were key rival artists at this time, often jockeying
for position with Duran Duran on the UK charts.
Later in 1981, the band embarked on their first United States
club tour, followed by more dates in Germany and the UK.
This second tour of Britain coincided with a wave of riots sparked by
unemployment and racial tension, including those of Moss Side
and Toxteth.
The band played an eerily quiet Birmingham the day after the Handsworth
riots.
Duran Duran began to achieve worldwide recognition in 1982. In
May, they released their second album, Rio,
which scored four UK Top Twenty singles with "My Own
Way", "Hungry Like the Wolf", "Save
A Prayer", and the title song "Rio". A headlining tour of Australia,
Japan, and the U.S. was followed by a stint supporting Blondie
during that band's final American tour. Diana, Princess of Wales
declared Duran Duran her favourite band, and the band was dubbed "The
Fab Five" by the British press.
However, the Rio album did not do well in
the United States at first. EMI in the UK had promoted Duran Duran as a
New Romantic band, but that genre was barely known in the U.S., and Capitol
Records (EMI's American branch) was at a loss about how to sell them.
After Carnival (an EP
of Rio's dance remixes) became popular with DJs in
the fall, the band arranged to have most of the album remixed by David
Kershenbaum. Only after it was re-released in the U.S. in November,
with heavy promotion as a dance album, did Rio
begin to climb the American charts, six months after its European
success. MTV placed "Hungry Like the Wolf" and then several other Duran
Duran videos into heavy rotation, pushing it and "Rio" into the top
twenty on the U.S. charts in early 1983; the seduction ballad "Save A
Prayer" also did well."The
band was a natural for music television," noted Rolling
Stone magazine. "They may be the first rock
group to ride in on a video wave."
In the end, the album peaked at number 6 in the U.S. and remained on
the charts there for 129 weeks — almost two and a half years. In 2003, Rio
was listed at number 65 in the NME 100 Greatest Albums Of All Time.
On top of the world (1983–1984)
Duran Duran began 1983 by playing the MTV New Year's Eve
Rock'n'Roll Ball, with "Hungry Like The Wolf" still climbing the charts
in the U.S., and the American reissue of the "Rio" single to follow in
March. To satisfy America's newly awakened thirst for all things Duran,
the band decided to re-release their eponymous first album in the U.S.
in the middle of the year, with the addition of the new single "Is There Something
I Should Know?" This song went straight in at Number 1 in the UK (a
rarity then, and their first chart topper in their home country), and
reached Number 4 on the American charts. During the promotion of this
album, Rhodes and Le Bon served as MTV guest VJs for a show, during which artist and admirer Andy
Warhol dropped by to greet them. "Our first gigs in the United States
were crazy and culty,” Rhodes said later. “But when we came back after
“Hungry” was a hit, it was mayhem. It was Beatlemania.
We were doing a signing of the “Girls on Film” video at a store in Times
Square. We couldn’t get out of the store. The cops sealed off the
streets."
Also in 1983, keyboardist Nick Rhodes produced the UK Number 1
and US Number 5 hit "Too Shy" for the English band Kajagoogoo,
and Andy Taylor became the first member of Duran Duran to get married.
The band's main pop rivals were now Culture
Club and Wham!.
Duran Duran spent the next year as tax exiles,
writing songs at a chateau in France in May 1983 before flying to Montserrat
and then Sydney
to record and mix their third album. The band was under enormous
pressure to follow up the success of Rio, and the
recording process took over six months as different band members went
through bouts of perfectionism and insecurity.
A newly decadent lifestyle and substance abuse issues added
complications. In the documentary film Extraordinary World,
filmed a decade later, Rhodes described the effect on their sound as
"barely controlled hysteria, scratching beneath the surface".
The new album, Seven and the Ragged Tiger,
included the late 1983 hit "Union of the Snake"; following
"Hungry Like the Wolf", "Rio", "Save A Prayer" and "Is There Something
I Should Know", Duran Duran had had five U.S. Top Twenty hits from
three different albums in a single year. The band made music headlines
by deciding to release the "Union of the Snake" video to MTV a full
week before the single was released to radio, at a time when the
industry feared video really might
kill the radio star. They followed up with "New
Moon on Monday", and then with "The Reflex", which became their first
number one hit in the United States. "The Reflex" was their second and
final UK number one.
The band then embarked on a massive global tour that continued
throughout the first four months of 1984, including their first major
stadium dates in America. A film crew led by director Russell Mulcahy
followed the band closely, leading to the documentary film Sing
Blue Silver and the accompanying concert
film Arena.
The live album Arena was also
recorded during the tour and was released with the new studio single "The
Wild Boys", which went to Number 2 on both sides of the Atlantic.
In February 1984, the band appeared on the cover of Rolling
Stone magazine and won two Grammy awards in
the brand-new Long
Form and Short
Form music video categories. After the tour, Roger Taylor was married
in Naples,
Italy, followed by Nick Rhodes in London, wearing a pink velvet tuxedo and top
hat.
Halfway through the year, Duran Duran began a long break;
however, as most of them remained in London and were active in
celebrity circles, the band was never far from the tabloids or the
public eye. At the end of the year, the group was featured on the Band
Aid benefit single "Do They Know It's
Christmas?" along with other popular British musical acts. Simon Le Bon
sang a prominent vocal, between contributions from George
Michael and Tony Hadley.
Band falls apart (1985)
Even with Duran Duran on hold, band members were soon anxious
to record new music, leading to a supposedly temporary split into two
side projects. John and Andy Taylor wanted to break away from the
synth-rock of Duran Duran and pursue hard rock material; they
collaborated with Robert Palmer and Tony
Thompson to form the rock/funk supergroup
Power Station, which released
two Top 10 singles. Simon Le Bon and Nick Rhodes, on the other hand,
wanted to further explore the atmospheric aspect and formed Arcadia,
which released one Top 10 single. Roger Taylor was
primarily the drummer for Arcadia, but also contributed percussion to
the Power Station album.
Duran Duran were never the same after this break. According to
Rhodes, the two side projects "were commercial suicide... But we’ve
always been good at that."
The band was still off balance when they regrouped to contribute "A View to a Kill" to the
1985 James
Bond movie of the same name. This single
remains the only Bond theme to go to Number 1 on the U.S. charts and
the highest-placed Bond theme on the UK chart, reaching Number 2. It
was the last single the band recorded as the original five-piece for
twenty years.
As a follow-up to the Christmas 1984 Band Aid single, Duran
Duran performed in front of 90,000 people (and an estimated 1.5 billion
TV viewers) at the Live Aid charity concert in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, on July
13, 1985
while their Bond song held the top spot on the American charts. It was
not intended to be a farewell performance—the band planned only to take
a break after four years of non-stop touring and public appearances—but
the original five did not play live together again until July of 2003.
Their Live Aid set became infamous for Le Bon inadvertently hitting a falsetto note
in the chorus of "A View to a Kill", which he later described as the
most humiliating moment of his career.
At the end of 1985, he married model Yasmin
Parvaneh.
During the previous year, Le Bon had taken up the hobby of yachting, and
he drew unwanted media attention when his maxi-yacht Drum
capsized during the August 1985 Fastnet race, trapping him inside the
hull for twenty minutes.
Nevertheless, he went on to participate in the 1986 Whitbread Round the
World Race.
Struggle for success (1986–1991)
After releasing five albums in five years, each accompanied by
heavy media promotion and lengthy concert tours, the band lost two of
its core members to fatigue and tension in 1986. After Live Aid and Arcadia,
drummer Roger Taylor
retired to the English countryside, suffering from exhaustion.
This was originally announced as a one year sabbatical,
but it soon became clear that he would not be returning to the band. An
official press release was issued in April 1986 confirming his
departure. Guitarist Andy Taylor, on the other
hand, led the remaining members to believe he would return to work on a
new Duran Duran album even as he was signing a solo recording contract
in Los Angeles. The band
resorted to legal measures to get him into the studio, but after
numerous delays, they let him go at last. He played on only a few songs
on the next album while the disagreements were being settled.
In 1986, Duran Duran had now been reduced to a trio: Rhodes, John
Taylor, Le Bon
Without a guitarist or a drummer, the three remaining members,
Le Bon, Rhodes, and John Taylor had producer (and former Chic
guitarist) Nile Rodgers play a few tracks on
guitar, and hired studio musicians to play drums while they searched
for replacements. Finally in September 1986, Warren
Cuccurullo (formerly of Missing Persons and Frank
Zappa's touring band) was hired as a sessions guitarist. With Le Bon,
Rhodes, and Taylor, he recorded the rest of the Notorious
album, which was released in October 1986. The black-and-white
documentary film Three To Get Ready chronicled the
recording of the album, legal tensions, and preparations for the tour.
Although the song "Notorious" went to number two in
the U.S. and album sales were strong, the band found they had lost much
of the momentum and hysteria they had left behind in 1985. In the three
years between the release of Seven and the Ragged Tiger
and Notorious, many of their teenage fans had grown
up, and the music was funkier, more mature, and less "pop", given the
added experience of their work on Arcadia and Power Station and with
many gifted musicians. "Skin Trade" and "Meet
El Presidente", the two subsequent singles, made the charts but fared
poorly compared to the band's earlier successes.
Subsequently, Duran Duran's fame began to wane as they
struggled to escape the teen idol image and gain critical success
with more complex music. Rolling Stone
said, "In their search for musical maturity, the surviving Durans have
lost a good deal of their identity."
Another factor was the band's dismissal of early managers the Berrow
brothers. There was no announcement of the reasons for the decision,
but disagreements over money, and the brothers’ involvement in Le Bon's
yachting adventures (they were co-owners of Drum)
were thought to have played a part.
Whatever the reason, Duran Duran switched managers frequently and
undertook periods of self-management in the later stages of their
career. In addition, EMI (which fired its president and went through a
major corporate restructuring that summer) seemed to have lost interest
in promoting the band.
The next album Big Thing (1988)
yielded the singles "I Don't Want Your Love", "Do You Believe In Shame?"
and "All She Wants Is" (the last a top
ten hit in the UK). The record was experimental, mixing influences from
house
music and rave
music with Duran's atmospheric synth pop and Cuccurullo's creative guitar
work, as well as more mature lyrics (the juvenile title track
notwithstanding).
By the next year, after touring for the album finished, the band
regained a five-man membership as Cuccurullo and tour drummer Sterling
Campbell were made full members of Duran Duran.
The compilation album Decade:
Greatest Hits was released late in 1989, along
with the megamix
single "Burning The Ground", which
consisted of woven snippets of the band's hits from the previous ten
years. The single came and went with little fanfare, but the album
became another major seller for the band.
However, the tepid 1990 release Liberty
(a retreat from the experimentation of Big Thing)
failed to capitalise on any regained momentum, a pattern the band
repeated often in their later years. The album entered the UK album
chart in the top ten, but faded away quickly. The singles "Violence
of Summer (Love's Taking Over)" and "Serious" were only mildly
successful, and the album's soft rock did not fare well against
contemporaries like Alice in Chains and Jane's
Addiction, while Nirvana, Pearl Jam
and the grunge
revolution were just around the corner. For the first time, Duran Duran
did not tour in support of an album, performing on only a handful of
club dates and TV shows.
Sterling Campbell left the band early in 1991, going on to
work with Soul
Asylum and David Bowie. The quartet of Le
Bon, Rhodes, Taylor, and Cuccurullo would remain intact for six more
years. In December of 1991, Taylor (then 31) married nineteen-year-old
model/actress Amanda De Cadenet, and she gave
birth to his daughter in March 1992.
Second climb, Second fall
(1992–1996)
In 1993, the band released a second
self-titled album: this Duran Duran
album is known as The Wedding Album (for Nick Egan's cover art featuring the
wedding photos of the bands' parents) to distinguish it from the 1981
release. Listener demand for first single "Ordinary
World" forced it onto radio playlists months earlier than planned; it
reached Number 3 on the U.S. chart and Number 6 in the UK and won a
prestigious Ivor Novello Award award for song
writing.
"Come
Undone", a slinky number primarily written by Cuccurullo, made Number 7
in the U.S. and Number 13 in the UK. Both the band and the record label
seemed to be caught by surprise by the album's critical and commercial
success (#4 in the UK, #7 in the U.S.). Bassist John Taylor had been
considering leaving the band, but changed his mind. The band's largest
tour ever, which included stops in the Middle
East, the recently de-embargoed South Africa, and South
America, was halted after seven months when Le Bon suffered from
strained vocal
cords. After six weeks recuperation, the tour continued intermittently
for another five months, including appearances in Israel, Thailand, and Indonesia.
The band's upswing in momentum, however, was once again
swiftly curtailed, by the poor showing of the covers
album Thank You.
The album reportedly originated as a lighthearted tribute to the band's
influences, in the vein of Bowie's Pin Ups.
Some of the tracks were recorded in borrowed and makeshift studios in
hotel rooms (with the aid of programmer Mark
Tinley) while the band was on tour. The plan was to have an album ready
to release soon after the tour was finished, with another studio album
to follow quickly afterwards. Original drummer Roger Taylor even
returned from retirement to contribute on a few songs. However,
conflicts within the band and with Capitol/EMI caused repeated delays;
mix after mix was ordered and rejected, and by the time it finally came
out in 1995, the band had lost enthusiasm for the project.
Singles from Thank You included covers of Lou Reed's "Perfect
Day" and Grandmaster
Flash & the Furious Five's "White Lines" (with backing vocals
from the original artists). In a video interview provided with the
album's electronic press kit, Reed said
he considered Duran Duran's version the best cover ever done of one of
his songs.
Still, the critics lambasted the band's attempts at "911 is a Joke", "Lay
Lady Lay", "Ball
of Confusion" and "Crystal Ship", and the band only
completed a 1995 summer tour of radio station festivals under duress.
After that tour's completion, John Taylor co-founded the B5
Records label and recorded a solo album, founded and toured with the supergroup
Neurotic Outsiders, and reunited
the Power Station, though the project proceeded without him when he had
to withdraw to deal with his divorce from De Cadenet. Finally, after
struggling for months to record the next album, Medazzaland,
in January 1997 Taylor announced at a Duran Duran fan convention that
he was leaving the band "for good".
His departure reduced the band to two original members (Le Bon and
Rhodes) and Cuccurullo, who decided to continue recording under the
name Duran Duran.
Soldiering on (1997–2000)
In 1997, the band lost its final Taylor, leaving Rhodes, Le Bon, and
Cuccurullo.
Freed from some internal writing conflicts, the band returned
to the studio to rewrite and re-record many of the songs on Medazzaland.
(Taylor's work remains on only four tracks.) This album marked a return
to the layered experimentation of Big Thing, with
intricate guitar textures and processed vocals. The track "Out of My
Mind" was used as the theme song for the movie The
Saint, but the only true single to be released
in the United States was the quirky "Electric
Barbarella", which was the first single ever to be sold online.
The video for this single, featuring a sexy robot purchased and played
with by band members, had to be censored before airing on MTV, but
there was little of the controversy that had surrounded "Girls On
Film". "Barbarella" peaked at #52 in the U.S. in October of 1997.
Although Medazzaland was released in the U.S. in
October 1997, the album was never released in the UK. "Barbarella" was
later released in the UK as a single from the 1998 Greatest
compilation album and peaked at #23 on the UK chart in January 1999.
The group played a set at The Princess Diana Tribute Concert
on June
27, 1998 by
special request of her family.
Duran Duran parted ways with Capitol/EMI in 1999; though the
label has since used Duran's back catalogue to release their own
compilations of remixes and rare vinyl-only b-sides. The band then
signed what was intended to be a three-album contract with Disney's Hollywood
Records, but it lasted only through the poorly received 2000 album Pop Trash.
This slow-paced and heavy album seemed out-of-keeping with earlier band
material.
Rhodes' intricate production and Cuccurullo's songwriting and
experimentation with guitar sounds and time signatures were not enough
to hook the public, and the album did not perform well. The dreamy
single "Someone Else Not Me" lasted
barely two weeks on the radio, although its video was noted as the
first produced entirely with Macromedia Flash animation. While
supporting Medazzaland and Pop Trash,
Duran Duran toured with bassist Wes Wehmiller and drummer Joe Travers.
Reunion (2001–2005)
In 2000, John Taylor approached Le Bon and Rhodes with a
proposal to re-form Duran Duran's classic line-up. They agreed, and
after completing the Pop Trash tour fired
Cuccurullo by letter.
Cuccurullo then announced on his website that he was leaving Duran
Duran to resume work with his 1980s band Missing
Persons. This announcement was confirmed the next day by the Duran
Duran's website, followed a day later by the news that John, Roger, and
Andy Taylor had rejoined. To fulfill contractual obligations,
Cuccurullo played three Duran Duran concerts in Japan in August 2001,
ending his tenure in the band.
Throughout 2001, 2002 and 2003, the band worked on writing new
material, initially renting a house in St. Tropez
where sound engineer Mark Tinley built a recording studio for their
first serious writing session. They then returned to London to do some
self-financed work with various producers (including old friend Nile
Rodgers) and search for a new record deal. It proved difficult to find
a record label willing to gamble on the band's comeback, so Duran Duran
went on tour to prove the drawing power of the reunited band. The
response of the fans and the media exceeded everyone’s expectations.
The band played a handful of 25th-anniversary dates in July
2003. Tickets sold out for each show within minutes, and celebrities
turned out en masse for reunion shows booked at
small venues the band had played on their first trip to America in
1981. In August, the band were booked as presenters at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards, only
to be surprised with a Lifetime Achievement Award.
They also received a Lifetime Achievement award from Q Magazine
in October, and the equivalent Outstanding Contribution award at the BRIT
Awards in February 2004.
The pace picked up with a sold-out tour of America, Australia
and New Zealand. The band played a full concert at a private Tailgate
Party at Super Bowl XXXVIII, their
performance of "The Wild Boys" broadcast to millions during the
pre-game show. A remix
of the new track "(Reach Up for the)
Sunrise" was released on the Queer Eye for the
Straight Guy TV show soundtrack
in February, while the Queer Eye guys (the modern "Fab Five") hailed
Duran Duran as "the first metrosexuals".
Duran Duran then celebrated their homecoming to the UK
with fourteen stadium dates in April 2004, including five sold-out
nights at Wembley Arena. The British press,
traditionally hostile to the band, accorded the shows some very warm
reviews.
Duran Duran brought along bands like Scissor
Sisters and Goldfrapp as opening acts for
this tour.
The last two shows were filmed, and the concert DVD Duran Duran: Live
From London was released in November.
Finally, with more than thirty-five songs completed, the band
signed a four-album contract with Epic Records in June, and completed the
new album, now entitled Astronaut,
with producer Don Gilmore. The album was released in
October 2004 and entered the UK charts at Number 3 and the U.S. charts
at Number 17. The first single was "(Reach Up for the)
Sunrise", which reached Number 1 on the Billboard U.S Dance Chart in
November and peaked at number 5 on the UK singles chart, Duran Duran's
highest chart position since "A View To a Kill" in 1985. A second
single, "What Happens Tomorrow",
debuted at #11 in February. After a world tour in early 2005, Duran
Duran headlined the massive Live 8 concert, Rome on 2 July 2005 in the
Circus
Maximus.
New direction (2006 and beyond)
In early 2006, Duran Duran covered John
Lennon's song "Instant Karma" for the Make Some
Noise campaign sponsored by Amnesty
International to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Lennon's death. In
early 2006 the band performed at two high profile events — the Nobel
Prize Awards and the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin,
Italy.
After a couple of weeks of songwriting in California, the band
began working with producer Michael Patterson in
London, and continued intermittently for the next several months. At
one point, they reported having fifteen tracks nearly complete, but no
further news emerged from the band for months afterward. In September,
the band held meetings in New York City with Justin
Timberlake and producer Timbaland with an eye to a potential
collaboration and were soon reported to have completed three songs with
the producer, including a duet with Timberlake.
On October
25, 2006,
Andy Taylor parted ways with Duran Duran for the second time. In an
official announcement on their website, Duran Duran pledged to continue
with four members, stating that an "unworkable gulf" had developed
between them and Taylor and that "we can no longer effectively function
together". For the remaining 2006 tour dates, Dominic Brown, who had
previously taken Taylor's place during absences on the American arena
tour in 2005, stood in as guitarist.
Taylor's departure forced the band to scrap months of studio work;
nevertheless they quickly turned the situation around, writing and
recording a new album which included the Timbaland recordings.
On June 17th, the band played a one-off gig in New York City
at Hammerstein Ballroom. Before they played their set, they came on
stage and played five songs from their new album over the PA system.
During the show, they played "Nite Runner" live.
On June 26, Duran Duran officially announced that the new
album, due out 30 October 2007, would be called Red Carpet
Massacre. Along with title, they announced seven tracks to be
included on the new album: "Nite Runner" (co-written with and featuring
Justin Timberlake and Timbaland), "Skin Divers" (featuring Timbaland),
"Red Carpet Massacre", "Box Full O' Honey", "Last Man Standing", "The
Valley", and "Falling Down" (co written with and featuring Justin
Timberlake).
The band performed in Wembley Stadium at the Concert
for Princess
Diana on July 1, 2007, being introduced by Prince William (standing
next to his brother Prince Harry) as "one of my mother's favourite
bands". The following Saturday, July 7, 2007, they performed a second time at Wembley
Stadium at the Live Earth concert,
London.
Influence
Although they began their career as "a group of art school,
experimental, post punk rockers",
the band's quick rise to stardom, polished good looks, and embrace of
the teen press almost guaranteed disfavour from music critics, the
British music press being particularly venomous. During the 1980s,
Duran Duran were considered the quintessential manufactured, throw-away
pop group, not too different from boy bands entirely created by their
behind-the-scenes managers. However, according to the Sunday
Herald, "To describe them, as some have, as the
first boy band misrepresents their appeal. Their weapons were never
just their looks, but self-penned songs."
As Moby said
of the band in his website diary in 2003: "... they were cursed by what
we can call the 'bee gees' curse. which is: 'write
amazing songs, sell tons of records, and consequently incur the wrath
or disinterest of the rock obsessed critical establishment'."
Several of the band's contemporaries (The
Bangles, Elton John, Kylie
Minogue, Paul Young) have named
themselves fans of the band's simple, uplifting pop. Le Bon himself
described the group as "the band to dance to when the bomb drops".
Successors like Barenaked Ladies, Beck, Jonathan
Davis (of Korn),
the Deftones,
Garbage,
Kaiser
Chiefs, The Bravery, The
Killers, Gwen Stefani and No Doubt, Gavin
Rossdale and Bush, Wyclef
Jean, Savage
Garden, Justin Timberlake, Marilyn
Manson, Fred
Durst of Limp
Bizkit, The
Orb, OutKast,
Coldplay
and Pink have all cited Duran Duran as a
key band in their formative years. The newest crop of performers to
name Duran Duran as influences include Dido,
Franz Ferdinand, Panic!
at the Disco, Lostprophets (who took their name from
the title of a Duran Duran bootleg tape), Goldfrapp,
The Killers ("Nick Rhodes is an
absolute hero of mine - their records still sound fresh, which is no
mean feat as far as synths are concerned," said Brandon
Flowers), the Scissor Sisters ("the reason we got
into music") and The Strokes. Mark
McGrath of Sugar
Ray has called himself one of their biggest fans, and has said he
"wanted to be John Taylor"; Sugar Ray's videos have
included affectionate parodies of Duran Duran videos.
Nick Rhodes has directly lent his production techniques to the
bands Kajagoogoo
(White Feathers)
and The Dandy Warhols (Welcome to the
Monkey House), and numerous bands have covered
their music on record and in concert.
The band's music has been used by several hip
hop artists, most notably Notorious B.I.G., who sampled Duran
Duran's 1986 single "Notorious".
Videos
The MTV
cable channel and the band were launched at about the same time, and
each had a hand in propelling the other to greater heights.
MTV needed showcase videos with charismatic performers. Les Garland, senior executive vice
president at MTV, said "I remember our director of talent and artist
relations came running in and said, “You have got to see this video
that’s come in.” Duran Duran were getting zero radio airplay at the
time, and MTV wanted to try to break new music. “Hungry Like the Wolf”
was the greatest video I’d ever seen".
The band's video work was influential in several ways. First, Duran
Duran filmed in exotic locales like Sri Lanka and Antigua,
creating memorable images that were radically different from the
then-common low budget "band-playing-on-a-stage" videos. Second, rather
than simply playing their instruments, the band participated in
mini-storylines (often taking inspiration from contemporary movies:
"Hungry Like The Wolf" riffs on Raiders of the Lost Ark,
"The Wild Boys" on The Road Warrior,
etc.). Videos were obviously headed in this direction already, but
Duran Duran led the trend with a style, featuring quick editing,
arresting graphic design, and surreal-to-nonsensical image inserts,
that drew attention from commentators and spawned a wealth of
imitators. Duran Duran were among the first bands to have their videos
shot with a professional movie camera on 35 mm
film, rather than on videotape with cheaper video cameras,
making them look superior to many of the quickly and inexpensively shot
videos which had been MTV staples until then. MTV provided Duran Duran
with access to American radio markets that were unfriendly to British
music, New Wave music, or "anything with synthesisers". Because MTV was
not available everywhere in the United States at first, it was easy to
see a pattern: where MTV went, listener demand for Duran Duran, Tears
for Fears, Def Leppard and other European bands
with interesting videos went through the roof.
The members of Duran Duran
making fun of themselves in the "Rio" video.
Duran Duran's sun-drenched videos for "Rio", "Hungry Like The
Wolf" and "Save A Prayer", and the surreal "Is There Something I Should
Know?" were filmed by future movie director Russell
Mulcahy, who made a total of eleven videos for the band. Duran Duran
have always sought out innovative directors and techniques, even in
their later years when MTV gave them little airplay. In addition to
Mulcahy, they have had videos filmed by influential photographers Dean
Chamberlain and Ellen von Unwerth, Chinese
director Chen
Kaige, documentary filmmaker Julien Temple, and the Polish Brothers, among
others. According to Nick Rhodes, "Video is to us like stereo was to
Pink Floyd".
In 1984, Duran Duran introduced video technology into their
live stadium shows by being among the first acts to provide video
screens above the stage. They have recorded concerts using IMAX and 360 degree panoramic
"immersive video" cameras, with 10.2 channel audio. In 2000, they experimented
with augmented reality technology,
which allowed three-dimensional computer-generated images to appear on
stage with the band.
Duran Duran appeared on several century-end video countdowns:
The MTV "100 Greatest Videos Ever Made" featured "Hungry Like The Wolf"
at #11 and "Girls On Film" at #68, and the "VH1: 100 Greatest Videos"
listed "Hungry" at #31 and "Rio" at #60. MTV named "Hungry" the
fifteenth of their most-played videos of all time.
The band has released several video compilations, starting
with the self-titled "video album" Duran Duran,
for which they won a Grammy award, up to the 2004 two-disc DVD
release Greatest,
which included alternative versions of several popular videos as Easter
eggs. In addition to Greatest, the documentary Sing
Blue Silver, and the concert film Arena
(both from 1984) were released on DVD in 2004. Live From London,
a concert video from one of their sold-out 2004 reunion shows at
Wembley Stadium, was released in the fall of 2005.
Other video collections, concert films, and documentaries
remain available only on videotape, and Duran Duran have not yet
released a collection which includes all their videos. The band has
said that a huge amount of unreleased concert and documentary footage
has been filmed over the years, which they hope can be edited and
released in some form in the near future.
Discography
-
Main article: Duran Duran discography
- Duran Duran
(15
June 1981)
#3 UK, #10 U.S - 6 million albums sold worldwide
- Rio (10 May 1982) #2 UK, #6 U.S -
10 million
- Seven and the Ragged Tiger
(21
November 1983)
#1 UK, #8 U.S - 12 million
- Notorious (18
November 1986)
#16 UK, #12 U.S - 5 million
- Big Thing (18 October
1988) #15
UK, #24 U.S - 3 million
- Liberty (20 August 1990) #8 UK, #46 U.S -
800.000
- Duran Duran
AKA The Wedding Album (23
February 1993)
#4 UK, #7 U.S - 6.5 million
- Thank You
(27
March 1995,
covers) #12 UK, #19 U.S - 1.5 million
- Medazzaland (14 October
1997) #58
U.S - 500.000
- Pop Trash (19 June 2000) #53 UK, #135 U.S
- 400.000
- Astronaut (11 October
2004) #3
UK, #17 U.S - 2 million
- Red Carpet Massacre
(30
October 2007)
Notable Singles
| Year |
Single |
UK Top 75 |
Billboard Hot 100 |
Album |
| 1981 |
Girls On Film |
5 |
- |
Duran Duran |
| 1982 |
Hungry Like The Wolf |
5 |
3 |
Rio |
| 1982 |
Save A Prayer |
2 |
- |
Rio |
| 1983 |
Is There Something I Should Know? |
1 |
4 |
Duran Duran |
| 1984 |
The Reflex |
1 |
1 |
Seven And The Ragged Tiger |
| 1984 |
Union Of The Snake |
3 |
3 |
Seven And The Ragged Tiger |
| 1985 |
The Wild Boys |
2 |
2 |
Arena |
| 1985 |
A View to a Kill |
2 |
1 |
A View to a Kill (OST) |
| 1986 |
Notorious |
7 |
2 |
Notorious |
| 1993 |
Ordinary World |
6 |
3 |
Duran Duran (The Wedding Album) |
| 1993 |
Come Undone |
13 |
7 |
Duran Duran (The Wedding Album) |
| 2004 |
(Reach Up for the) Sunrise |
5 |
89 |
Astronaut |
See also
Notes
-
Malins (2006), pp. 271-272.
-
Simon Le Bon update on
DuranDuran.com - "For those of you who weren't there [at Hammerstein
Ballroom show], we debuted what will probably be the next single from
DD, 'Nite-Runner,' and that went down a storm as well."
-
Sims (1999), p. 96.
-
Malins (2006), p. 60
-
Pattenden, Sian. "Blame It On Rio", Deluxe Magazine Ltd., December
1998, pp. 125-129.
-
"Despite hailing from Birmingham, theirs was a new kind of rock'n'roll
excess...Nick Rhodes' non-smudge mascara and pancake foundation, the
band's mix of tight black leather trousers, giant white shirts (tucked
in), and giant hair, with more mousse than Alaska)..." Sims (1999), pp.
96–7.
-
De Graaf, Kaspar; Garret,
Malcolm (1982). Duran Duran: Their Story. UK:
Cherry Lane Books, 14. ISBN
0-86276-171-9.
-
Green, Michelle (July 22, 1985). "A Madcap Video Shoot in Paris Yields a View
to a Kill for: The Five Faces of Duran Duran". People.
Retrieved on 2007-05-14.
-
De Graaf & Garret (1982), p. 15.
-
Shuker (2001), p. 170.
-
Malins (2006), pp. 77–79.
-
Shuker (2001), p. 170.
-
Malins (2006), p. 118.
-
Denisoff (1986), pp. 364–5.
-
Denisoff (1986), p. 365.
-
"Dramatic—Beatle-Style Mania as Princess Diana's Favourite Group Fly
In", The Daily Mirror,
Trinity Mirror, July 1983.
-
Extraordinary World documentary film, Picture
Music International, UK 1993. (PMI MVN4911463)
-
Hauptfuhrer, Fred (3
September 1985).
"Wedding bells toll for Duran Duran's Nick
Rhodes, who marries an Iowa heiress". People.
Retrieved on 2007-05-18.
-
Malins (2006), p. 172.
-
A
view to a spill. People Weekly, Aug 26, 1985. Lizard King
Press Articles.
-
Malins (2006), p. 181.
-
Malins (2006), pp. 187–190.
-
Coleman, Mark (January
29, 1987). "Review of Notorious".
Rolling Stone.
Retrieved on 2007-05-14.
-
Malins (2006), p. 174.
-
Malins (2006), p. 186.
-
D'Antonio,
Christian; Santone, Marcello [2006-03-01]. Duran Duran 1981/2006 —
Glam Pop Party. Italy: Editori Riuniti/Momenti Rock, ??. ISBN 8-83595-857-1.
-
Malins (2006), p. 213.
-
Malins (2006), p. 219.
-
Simon Le Bon bio. Syn Entertainment
corporate website. Retrieved on 16 May 2007.
-
Green, Michelle (23 January
1997). "Duran Duran Comes Undone". Rolling
Stone. Retrieved on 2007-05-18.
-
Haring, pp. 77–9.
-
Malins (2006), p. 246.
-
"Thousands in party tribute to Diana",
BBC News, 28
June 1998.
Retrieved on 2007-05-18.
-
Malins (2006), p. 256.
-
Malins (2006), pp. 263–264.
-
Ferber, Lawrence. "Wild Boys take 2", Southern
Voice, Window Media, 29
October, 2004]].
-
Malins (2006), pp. 273–274
-
Duran
Duran and Timbaland, HHN Live (2006-10-03).
Retrieved on 2007-05-14.
-
Dominic
Brown: Musician with Duran Duran. dombrown.com. Retrieved on 2006-05-16.
-
Moby (August 31, 2003). Duran
Duran. moby.com. Retrieved on 2007-05-17.
-
De Graaf & Garret (1982), p. 19.
-
Malins, Steve (September 2005). Duran Duran - Notorious Wild Boys Stay The
Distance. musicOMH.com. Retrieved on 2007-05-17.
-
Duran Duran. The Covers Project.
Retrieved on 2007-05-17.
-
"Duran Duran became multimedia stars because MTV, to paraphrase bassist
John Taylor, could not get videos of 'Stairway to Heaven'". Denisoff
(1986), p. 365.
-
Burns, Gary. Music Television. The Museum of
Broadcast Communications. Retrieved on 2007-05-17.
-
Denisoff, p. 364.
References
- Carver, John. (1983). Duran Duran.
Anabas Publishing Ltd., UK. ISBN
1850990018.
- David, Maria. (1984). Duran Duran.
Colour Library Books Ltd, UK. ISBN
0862832519.