HEAVEN 17
Taking their name from the Anthony Burgess novel A Clockwork Orange,
the U.K. techno-pop trio Heaven 17 grew out of the experimental
dance project the British Electric Foundation, itself an offshoot
of the electro-pop outfit Human League. The core of Heaven 17
was comprised of Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh, a pair of onetime
computer operators who first teamed in 1977 as the Dead Daughters,
a duo which integrated synthesizer patterns with a heavy reliance
on tape loops. Soon, Ware and Marsh were joined by Philip Oakey
and Adi Newton and changed their name to the Human League, where
they remained before exiting together in 1980.
As a means of establishing the synthesizer as an expressive, human
instrument, Marsh and Ware formed the British Electric Foundation,
a production project which employed a variety of musicians and
singers including Tina Turner, Sandie Shaw and Gary Glitter. The
B.E.F.'s debut, 1980's Music of Quality and Distinction, Vol.
1, also included vocalist Glenn Gregory, a former photographer
whom Ware and Marsh met at a Sheffield drama center; in 1981,
the duo enlisted Gregory for Heaven 17, the first and most successful
B.E.F. alter ego, and debuted with the single "(We Don't
Need This) Fascist Groove Thang," a minor hit banned by the
BBC over its title. An album, Penthouse and Pavement, followed
the same year.
By the release of 1983's The Luxury Gap, the B.E.F. had fallen
by the wayside, and Heaven 17 had become Ware and Marsh's primary
focus; the LP proved highly successful, spawning the hit singles
"Temptation," "Come Live with Me," "Crushed
by the Wheels of Industry," and "Let Me Go." The
follow-up, How Men Are, was another British hit, but the group
receded from view after its release; when they returned in 1986
with the album Pleasure One, it was with a number of guest musicians
and vocalists.
After the commerical failure of 1988's Teddy Bear, Duke &
Psycho, Heaven 17 officially disbanded; Ware focused on production
chores, and worked on Terence Trent D'Arby's debut Introducing
the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby. In 1990, he and
Marsh resurrected the B.E.F. aegis, releasing Music of Quality
and Distinction, Vol. 2 the following year. In 1997, a reformed
Heaven 17 returned with Bigger than America.