Julia's Club Eighties

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Soft Cell...

Soft Cell is a Synth-Pop duo formed during the early 1980s. It consists of Marc Almond (vocals) and David Ball (synthesizers). Lyrics by the duo often focused on love and romance as well as the darker side of life, with subjects such as kinky sex, transexualism, drugs and murder. The duo had a huge world-wide hit in 1981 with a cover version of "Tainted Love".

Soft Cell emerged from the New Romantic and New Wave era, but were part of the futurist scene, alongside the likes of Depeche Mode, OMD, The Human League and Gary Numan. The darker nature of their music also made Soft Cell popular in the emerging Goth scene.


Origins

Both Marc Almond and David Ball grew up in seaside towns (Southport and Blackpool respectively), and later met while students at the Leeds Polytechnic Fine Arts University (now Leeds Metropolitan University). Almond, a performance artist, collaborated with Ball on a few avant-garde multi-media performances at the university. Ball, a gifted multi-instrumentalist, decided to experiment widely with analogue synth sounds and technique, and this, coupled with Almond's performance art and kitchen sink lyrics, led the two to create Soft Cell.


Early Soft Cell

Their initial efforts at recording resulted in an EP called Mutant Moments, funded by Ball, made with a simple 2-track recorder. This was released independently with only 2000 vinyl copies pressed and has since become a highly valued collector's item among Soft Cell fans. Their early shows and EP caught the interest of certain record labels, such as Mute Records and Some Bizarre Records, both of which pioneered the new wave of synthesizer bands. Soft Cell's next recording, "The Girl with the Patent Leather Face," appeared as a contribution to the Some Bizarre compilation album, which featured other (then unknown) bands such as Depeche Mode, The The, and Blancmange. Their first single, "A Man Can Get Lost" 7"/"Memorabilia" 12" was produced by Daniel Miller, the founder of Mute Records. While the single was a club hit, Soft Cell remained essentially unknown.


"Tainted Love"

Showing impatience in the wake of the chart failure of "Memorabilia", Mute Records allowed Soft Cell to record a second and final single in an attempt to score a chart hit. The band opted to record a radically reworked cover version of "Tainted Love", a 1964 northern soul classic originally sung by Gloria Jones (the wife of Marc Bolan) and written by Ed Cobb of The Four Preps.

Released in 1981, Soft Cell's "Tainted Love" was a number-one hit in seventeen countries, including the United Kingdom, as well as a number eight single in the United States during 1982, and went on to set a then-Guinness World Record for the longest consecutive stay on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart (43 weeks). The A-side of the 12 inch single of "Tainted Love" actually featured a two-song medley, with "Tainted Love" blending into the classic Motown hit "Where Did Our Love Go?" by The Supremes. At the peak of the song's popularity, many radio stations opted to play the full medley, utilizing their own edits to shorten the 9-minute track.

According to Marc Almond's book, "Tainted Life," Soft Cell exited the "Tainted Love" recording sessions with only modest expectations that the track might dent the UK Top 50. Further, Almond wrote that his only significant contribution to the song's instrumentation (besides the vocals) was the suggestion that the song begin with a characteristic "bink bink" sound which would repeat periodically throughout. Almond also wrote that he dedicated this song to his on-off partner Christian Andrews. While "Tainted Love" was Soft Cell's only Top 40 hit in the United States, the band had approximately eight Top 40 hits in the UK, including "Bedsitter", "Say Hello, Wave Goodbye", "Torch", and "What!", each of which broke the UK Top 5.

Usually an artist releasing a cover version as a single would write the song that appears on the B-side, as this would still entitle the artist to some songwriting royalties stemming from sales of that single. However, as Soft Cell wrote neither "Tainted Love" nor "Where Did Our Love Go" (the 7" B-side track), they lost the opportunity to make a greater sum of money from songwriting royalties stemming from one of the most popular songs of the '80s. Almond expressed regret for this in his book, and chalked the error up to naivete.


Covers and Sampling

Due to its enduring popularity, Soft Cell's version of "Tainted Love" along with other songs from Non-stop Erotic Cabaret have been covered and sampled a number of times, including:

* A version from argentinian DJ and show host Clotta Lanzetta, now translated as Falso Amor.

* 1984 Coil covered Tainted Love as one half of the double A-Side Panic/Tainted Love this record was the first ever AIDS benefit record and Marc Almond appeared in the video as "Death". Marc would also provide vocals on the group's next release Horse Rotorvator.

* 1992 Inspiral Carpets covered Tainted Love in the NME's Ruby Trax 3CD Box

* 1995 The Alternative Rock group Shades Apart from New Jersey covered Tainted Love in the CD single of 1995 (Revelation 40 PR1)

* 1999 Australian punk/rockabilly band The Living End covered the song as a B-side for their single "All Torn Down".

* 2000 German techno band Scooter covered "Sex Dwarf" on their Sheffield album.

* 2001 Glam/hard rock band Marilyn Manson covered the song on the album Not Another Teen Movie O.S.T. and Lest We Forget: The Best Of Marilyn Manson. Also as a bonus track on The Golden Age of Grotesque.

* 2004 German techno producer Thomas Schumacher samples "Tainted Love" on his single Tainted Schall.

* Industrial band Nine Inch Nails covered the song "Memorabilia" in 1994 which appeared the Closer to God single and on their 10th anniversary re-release of The Downward Spiral in 2004. They also covered "Sex Dwarf" live during the 1989 Pretty Hate Machine tour.

* 2005 Pussycat Dolls covered the Soft Cell version with Tainted Love and Where Did Our Love Go? combined as one song for their debut album, PCD.

* 2006 Lil Scrappy's song's "Money In The Bank" main riff took samples from part of the beat of Tainted Love

* 2006 Rihanna extensively samples "Tainted Love" on the single "SOS" from her album A Girl Like Me.

* 2006 Psytrance producer Bulletproof samples "Tainted Love" on the vinyl EP Tainted Love.

* 2007 DJ Richard Grey samples "Tainted Love" on "Warped Base". Drum-and-Bass-style single, the vocal version still features Mark Almond's vocals.

* 2007 Chicago electronic duo Microfilm do not cover Soft Cell, but name-check their album NonStop Erotic Cabaret (as well as NonStop Ecstatic Dancing) in the lyrics of their track 'Non-Stop Dreaming'; Soft Cell were an influence on the original sound of Microfilm's early tracks.


Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret

Their first album, Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret, further explored the trademark Soft Cell themes of squalor and sleaze. "Seedy Films" talks of long nights in porno cinemas, while "Frustration" and "Secret Life" deal with the boredom and hypocrisy associated with suburban life. A companion video entitled Non-Stop Exotic Video Show was released alongside the album and featured videos directed by Tim Pope, who later found fame as director of music videos by The Cure. The video generated some controversy in Britain, mainly due to the scandal involved with the "Sex Dwarf" promotional film. The original version of the music video featured Almond and Ball in a bloody butcher shop surrounded by chainsaws, nude actors, and dwarves. However, the film was confiscated by police and censored before it was even released. As a tongue-in-cheek substitute, a re-filmed "Sex Dwarf" appeared in Non-Stop Exotic Video Show featuring Almond dressed in a tuxedo, directing a symphony orchestra of dwarves.

In 1982, the duo spent most of their time recording and relaxing in New York City, where they met a woman named Cindy Ecstasy. It was Cindy Ecstasy who introduced them to the new club drug of the same name. By their own admission, most of Non-stop Ecstatic Dancing was recorded and mixed under the influence of ecstasy.

By now, the shadow of "Tainted Love" was beginning to haunt the band, and the pressures of stardom, not to mention the constant drug use, were taking their toll. Marc Almond also formed the group Marc and the Mambas, featuring collaborations with The The's Matt Johnson and future Almond collaborator Annie Hogan, as an offshoot in order to experiment out of the glare of the Soft Cell spotlight. Soft Cell followed their remix album with a full length album appropriately titled The Art of Falling Apart. The singles were modest successes in Britain. Again, Soft Cell courted some controversy when their second single from the album, "Numbers," was banned from the BBC due to references in the song to the drug speed.

By 1983, they had decided amicably to dissolve the band and released one final album called This Last Night in Sodom, a critical success but a commercial failure. The album departed from its predecessors by having a much grittier feel, featuring more live drums and guitars than previous albums. However, the controversial subject matter still remained true to the Soft Cell ethos, with songs such as "L'Esqualita" that glamourized transvestite culture in Manhattan.


Solo years

During Almond's solo years, he and Ball continued to keep in touch. Dave Ball's wife played cello in Marc Almond's solo band. Almond and David Ball did not work again together until the nineties, when Ball arranged some music for Almond's "Tenement Symphony." David Ball formed The Grid in 1990. The Grid split up in 1996, but reformed in 2003.


Reunion

Almond and Ball's reunion as Soft Cell became official with well-received initial concerts - they performed at the opening of the Ocean nightclub in London in March 2001 to strong reviews, and a mini tour followed later in the year. The album Cruelty Without Beauty was released in late 2002, followed by a European tour in early 2003. The new album featured their first new songs together in almost twenty years. One of those songs was their 2003 single "The Night" (UK #39). Interestingly, Soft Cell had considered recording "The Night" back in 1981 in place of "Tainted Love" as their last-ditch attempt to score a chart hit. In a 2003 interview with BBC's Top of the Pops, keyboardist David Ball asserted, "I think history has kind of shown that we did make the right choice [in 1981]."

In August 2007 the band announced they were working on a remix album, "Heat - The Remixes". The remix album is expected to be released in late October 2007 and will include classic Soft Cell tracks remixed by such acts as Manhattan Clique, Cicada, Richard X, Ladytron, MHC, Mark Moore, Kinky Roland, Spektrum, George Demure, Yer Man and many more


SOURCE: wikipedia.org




SOFT CELL - 12" SINGLES
Tracklisting:
- 007 theme - SOFT CELL, 3m36s
- barriers - SOFT CELL, 7m6s
- bedsitter - SOFT CELL, 7m53s
- born to lose - SOFT CELL, 2m56s
- disease and desire - SOFT CELL, 4m5s
- down in the subway - SOFT CELL, 7m52s
- facility girls - SOFT CELL, 7m19s
- fun city - SOFT CELL, 7m31s
- her imagination - SOFT CELL, 5m22s
- insecure me - SOFT CELL, 8m18s
- it's a mugs game - SOFT CELL, 8m12s
- loving you - hating me - SOFT CELL, 6m38s
- memorabilia - SOFT CELL, 7m40s
- memorabilia 91 (extended grid remix) - SOFT CELL, 6m52s
- numbers - SOFT CELL, 10m27s
- persuasion - SOFT CELL, 7m36s
- say hello wave goodbye 91 (the long goodbye - extended mendelson remix) - SOFT CELL, 5m3s
- say hello, wave goodbye - SOFT CELL, 8m56s
- soul inside - SOFT CELL, 12m1s
- tainted dub - SOFT CELL, 9m15s
- tainted love 91 - SOFT CELL, 5m53s
- tainted love,where did our love go - SOFT CELL, 8m58s
- torch - SOFT CELL, 8m30s
- what! - SOFT CELL, 6m10s
- where the heart is - SOFT CELL, 9m46s
- where the heart is 91 - SOFT CELL, 8m44s
- you only live twice - SOFT CELL, 6m59s

DOWNLOAD LINK: sc1, sc2, sc3
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posted by blogger at 11/10/2007 03:59:00 AM

2 Comments:

Hey Julia,
Don't know if I just missed it in your awesome list of Soft Cell covers but remember there was a great cover of Tainted Love from around 86-87 by Impedance. Love that cover!
Love the blog as always!
Max

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