| The Human League |

The
Human League today. From left: Susan Ann Gayle (née
Sulley), Philip Oakey, Joanne Catherall
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Sheffield, UK |
| Genre(s) |
Synthpop
New Wave |
| Years active |
1977–present |
| Label(s) |
Fast Product, EMI, Virgin,
A&M,
EastWest,
Papillion |
Associated
acts |
Giorgio
Moroder
Heaven
17
|
| Members |
Philip
Oakey
Joanne Catherall
Susan Ann Gayle |
| Former members |
Ian
Craig Marsh
Martyn
Ware
Philip Adrian Wright
Ian Burden
Jo
Callis |
The Human League are a British
synthpop/New
Wave band
formed in 1977 who, after a change in line up, achieved great
popularity in the 1980s and have continued recording and performing
with moderate commercial success in the 1990s and 2000s. Originally a synthesizer-based
group from Sheffield,
the only constant band member since the Human League formed in 1977 is vocalist and
songwriter Philip Oakey. Today the Human League
still are recording and performing. The group now is presented as a
trio of Oakey together with long-serving female vocalists Joanne
Catherall and Susan Ann Gayle (née
Sulley). Over the years, the Human League has been sampled and covered
by various artists including top singers like George Michael and Robbie
Williams. The band represents a huge influence for many electro-pop
acts including Depeche Mode, Madonna, Moby, and other bands around the
globe.
|
Contents
- 1 Original
line-up
- 2 1980s
- 3 1990s
- 4 2000s
- 5 Today
- 6 Discography
- 7 Awards
- 8 See
also
- 9 References
- 10 External
links
|
Original line-up
The original Human League July 1980
Martyn Ware and Ian Craig
Marsh were both working as computer operators in 1977, and combined a
love of pop music (such as glam rock and Tamla
Motown) with avant garde electronic
music. They acquired a Roland System 100 synthesizer
and began to create music in their own rehearsal facility. Initially
they formed a group called The Future with Adi
Newton. Newton left to form the outfit Clock DVA. Ware and Marsh searched for a
vocalist, but their first choice, Glenn Gregory (who would be the lead
singer of their later band Heaven 17), was unavailable.
Ware instead decided to invite Philip Oakey, an old school friend, and
a hospital porter at the time to join the band, "apparently by leaving
a note stuck to his door". Oakey accepted the invitation, despite never
having been in a band before. Shortly after, they decided to call
themselves "The Human League." A collection of demos from this period
was released on CD in 2002, titled The Golden Hour of The
Future, compiled by Richard X.
The name "Human League" derived from the game Starforce: Alpha
Centauri, which was the second professionally published science
fiction wargame,
by SPI. In the game, the Human
League arose in 2415 A.D., and were a frontier-oriented society that
desired more independence from Earth and the terraforming of systems
not naturally habitable.
In addition to Ware, Marsh and Oakey, the band recruited
photographer Philip Adrian Wright to run slide shows and films onstage,
and was credited as a full band member on record sleeves despite his
contributions being nonmusical.
The band released their debut single "Being
Boiled" in 1978 on Edinburgh's Fast
Product label.
The original line-up released two LPs
that were mildly successful: Reproduction
in 1979 and Travelogue
in 1980. Both reached the Top 40 of the UK
Album Charts (though Reproduction
did not achieve this until two years after its release).
After the release of Travelogue,
disillusionment with the band's limited success, particularly after
contemporary Gary Numan's "Cars" single
became a smash hit, led to the breakup of the band's original lineup in
late 1980, with Ware and Marsh eventually forming Heaven
17 with vocalist Glenn Gregory and Oakey retaining legal
rights to the Human League name, in exchange for royalties paid to Ware
and Marsh for future band revenues.
1980s
The Human League (Mk2) 1981
Following the split of the original line-up, Wright and Oakey
released another fringe single, "Boys and Girls". In order to fulfil
their European tour commitments, they recruited bass player Ian Burden,
and fronted the band with two singers, Susanne Sulley (now called Susan
Ann Gayle) and Joanne Catherall, schoolgirls whom
they had met in Sheffield's Crazy
Daisy Nightclub, and managed to complete the tour.
In 1981, Virgin records paired them with former Stranglers
producer Martin Rushent, and the first result
was the single "The Sound of the Crowd",
which saw them at last achieve success in the singles chart. Guitarist
Jo Callis (formerly of The Rezillos) was now recruited to the
band, and with Rushent at the helm, The Human League recorded their
most successful album to date, Dare.
It achieved huge success, fuelled by its further hit singles, "Open Your
Heart", "Love Action"/"Hard Times" and most famously "Don't
You Want Me", which reached number one in the UK charts during the
Christmas of 1981
and was one of the biggest selling singles of that year, and it also
charted at number one in the US during the summer of 1982. These three
releases were accompanied by striking promo videos ("Love
Action" based on the movie The Graduate).
In the summer of 1982, a remix album of Dare
entitled Love and Dancing was released under the
group name League Unlimited Orchestra, reaching number three on the UK
album chart. During their Dare phase, the Human
League were often associated with New Romantic movement.
In November 1982, the Motown influenced electro
pop single "Mirror Man" reached number two in the UK chart. The
follow-up single released during April 1983, "(Keep Feeling)
Fascination" similarly peaked at number two. The following months
proved to be difficult ones for the band as they struggled to record a
follow up to Dare. A six song EP
called Fascination!
compiled the singles "Mirror Man" and "Fascination" together with the
new track "I Love You Too Much" from the original recording sessions
for their new album, later to be named Hysteria.
The EP was released in America as a stop-gap and also became a strong
seller as an import in the UK.
The band spent many expensive months agonizing over each and
every sound recorded as the band tried to follow up Dare,
and as things became ever more stressful the producer Martin Rushent
left the project, at which point the band ditched much of the material
recorded so far and started over again with new producers Hugh Padgham
and Chris Thomas (though some of Rushent's contributions to certain
tracks from the earlier sessions were included on the released album).
Finally in May 1984
the band released the politically charged single "The Lebanon". Its
rock guitar-driven harder edge was a considerable and surprising
departure from their previous material, and the single peaked at number
eleven in the UK. This was followed shortly after by the album Hysteria,
so called because of the difficult and tense recording process, it
entered the UK charts at number three however it climbed no further and
critics and fans were divided by the new direction the band had taken.
The second single was the rather downbeat "Life
On Your Own", with its opening line of "winter is approaching, there is
snow upon the ground" making it a strange choice of single to be
released in the middle of summer. Again the single missed the UK top
ten reaching number sixteen, and with the parent album Hysteria
failing to live up to expected sales thoughts of a third single were
put on hold.
However, later that year, success outside of the Human League
came for Oakey in the shape of the huge hit single "Together in
Electric Dreams", a collaboration with one of his idols, synth pioneer Giorgio
Moroder. The track was taken from the film soundtrack to Electric
Dreams and was to prove a massive hit. The pair
then recorded an album for Virgin, Philip Oakey &
Giorgio Moroder, but this met with rather less success and
the following two singles failed to make the UK Top 40. However the
success of the Oakey and Moroder track encouraged the Human League's
record label to release one final single from Hysteria
in November 1984, the ballad "Louise" (UK number 13).
In 1986,
the group found themselves in creative stagnation, struggling to record
material to follow up on their previous success. Key songwriter Jo
Callis departed, replaced by drummer Jim Russell, and Virgin paired the
Human League up with cutting-edge American R&B producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
who had just scored a huge worldwide hit earlier that year with Janet
Jackson's Control.
The result was the Crash
album. The album featured much material written by Jam and Lewis' team,
and showcased their distinctive DX7-led sound, making it quite a departure from
previous Human League material. It did provide an American number-one
single, "Human",
but other singles made smaller chart impact.
In November 1988, a greatest hits
compilation album was released which reached number 3 in UK.
1990s
In 1990, the band released their last album for Virgin
Records, Romantic?.
Longstanding members Adrian Wright and Ian Burden, together with newer
recruit Jim Russell, had by now left the band (although Jo Callis did
return to play on some of the sessions and co-wrote two songs,
including the minor hit single "Heart Like a Wheel"). New to the
line-up were keyboardist Neil Sutton (who co-wrote over half the
album's songs), and guitarist/keyboardist Russell
Dennett, who (along with Oakey) made a cameo appearance in Reeves
& Mortimer's 1992 comedy TV pilot The Weekenders,
playing in a club as "Electric Russell". The Romantic?
album did not re-capture the group's huge commercial success of 1981
(with its second single "Soundtrack to a Generation" barely charting),
and Virgin chose not to renew their recording contract with little
warning causing great animosity between the company and the band that
lasts to this day.
The Human League returned in 1995, now signed to EastWest, with
the single "Tell Me When" giving them their first
major hit since 1986's "Human", and the accompanying album Octopus
going silver. On the album credits, cover artwork and in videos, the
group was now presented simply as a trio of Oakey/Catherall/Sulley. In
reality however, half a dozen other musicians had input to the record,
including producer Ian Stanley (former Tears
for Fears keyboard player), continued playing and songwriting
contributions from Neil Sutton and "Electric Russell" Dennett, and
Oakey co-writing one track with Jo Callis. The next single from the
album, "One Man in my Heart" (sung by Sulley), and a remix of "Don't
You Want Me", were also UK hits, however the subsequent "Filling up
with Heaven" and the non-album "Stay With Me Tonight" (from the
greatest hits compilation in 1996) barely made the UK Top 40. A follow up to
Octopus was slow to materialise and a subsequent
change in management at EastWest saw the cancellation of the band's
contract.
2000s
The band did not release their next album, Secrets,
until 2001. The band was still presented as the "Phil & the
girls" trio, although Neil Sutton was credited with keyboards, and
co-wrote most of the material with Oakey. Despite being extremely well
received by critics (the music climate at the time seeing a new
interest in electronic pop music with the electroclash
movement), the band's new record label, Papillion (a subsidiary of Chrysalis
Records), was closed by the parent company shortly after the album's
release, leading to poor promotion and sales. UK radio stations also
refused to play "All I Ever Wanted" because, now in their 40s, the band
didn't match the radio stations' self-imposed demographic target
audience. Secrets
hit number 44 on the UK album chart in its first week but was absent
from it the following week. Susan Gayle is on record as saying that the
rejection of Secrets was the lowest the band had
been since 1991 and nearly caused them to call it a day.
Throughout the years following, the band have continued to
tour, enjoying success as a live act, and releasing a DVD of Brighton show
in 2003. In the last few years they have participated in a couple of '80s revival tours,
whilst more often going out on the road on their own, playing their
many top-ten hits to packed houses throughout the UK and frequently
further afield.
On September 22, 2006, the band performed on the ABC
television show, Jimmy Kimmel Live.The
highlight of 2006 was the band playing to an audience of 15,000 at the
Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles in October, this was followed up by an 11
venue tour of the UK and Europe in November and December.
Today
The Human League (with Stage lineup) at Falkirk festival in May 2007
The Human League are currently unsigned to a record label. The
group is run as a self-contained business with its own offices,
studios, and employees. The principal band members hold key
appointments and most business is handled by them 'in house'. The
current band line-up is as follows:
- Philip Oakey - Vocals, since 1977
- Susan Ann Gayle - Vocals, since 1980
- Joanne Catherall - Vocals, since
1980
- Neil Sutton - Keyboards, since 1990
- Nic Burke - Multi-instrumentalist, since 2001
- Rob Barton - Percussion, since 2001
- David Beevers - On-stage engineering,
since 1990
In the free U.K. newspaper Metro in
December 2006, Oakey stated that the band's project for 2007 would be
to record new material, with Gayle later confirming to the The
Falkirk Herald newspaper in May 2007 that a new album would
be released in her words 'in the near future'. The band also continue
with their core business of playing live, with appearances at a number
of key music festivals in the UK and Europe during 2007, at many of
which they are the advertised headliners.
The Human League are to mark their 30th anniversary with a
special "Dare Tour" in December 2007 where they will play their most
successful album in its entirety, to start the set list.
Discography
-
Main article: The Human League
discography
Awards
- 1982 BRIT Awards - Best British breakthrough
act
- 2004 Q Awards - The Q Innovation In Sound
See also
- List of
number-one hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
- List of New Wave
bands and artists
References
- Guinness Book
of British Hit Singles - 16th Edition - ISBN
0-85112-190-X
- The Guinness Book of 500 Number One Hits - ISBN 0-85112-250-7
- Guinness Book of British Hit Albums - 7th Edition - ISBN 0-85112-619-7
- Guinness Rockopedia - ISBN
0-85112-072-5
- The Great Rock Discography - 5th Edition - ISBN 1-84195-017-3
- Susan Gayle speaking on Interview for The Raft.com
- Interview Susan Ann Gayle for Falkirk Herald 01/05/07
-
www.league-online.com [1]
External links
The Human League does not have an official website. But there
are a number of unofficial sites on-line: