Computer Music

SYNTH POP

It’s hard to say where synth pop began – maybe with Roxy Music and the artful wobble of Eno’s VCS 3. Kraftwerk had an undeniable influence, as did Bowie’s Low LP.

One could argue that it rose from the ashes of punk, with its emphasis on simplistic song structures and DIY ethos. Would-be post-punk popsters like Daniel Miller and John Foxx switched on to the possibilities offered by cheap, monophonic synths, tapping into their limitations to create smart, sparse arrangements – a minimalism that became a synth pop hallmark. Artists like Fad Gadget and The Human League found acceptance with the post-punk crowd, thanks to their unusual, often extreme shows, while Ultravox and Gary Numan evoked a cold intellectualism a world away from the sex-and-drug excesses of stadium rockers.

Yet as the new wave gave way to new romanticism, synth pop followed suit. The once-experimental Human League fractured, reforming as a sleek pop outfit, while former Depeche Mode synth wizard Vince Clarke re-emerged with Yazoo and Erasure, each slicker and more accessible

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Computer Music

Computer Music4 min read
Hard Harmonies
It might feel like a relatively new concept within the production psyche, but the process that we describe as ‘hard-tuning’ has been around for nearly 30 years. Back in 1997, audio software company Antares released a new piece of software which it ca
Computer Music4 min read
Sugar Bytes Effectrix 2 €129
We’ve seen some very old software get updated recently, but this might well be the longest wait between versions that we’ve seen; the original Effectrix came out some 15 years ago. The concept was very innovative at the time: a bank of 14 effects wit
Computer Music5 min read
#3 Recreate Kraftwerk’s iconic Autobahn
The world of music in 1974 wasn’t prepared for an electronic music revolution, nor for that revolution to take place by way of a track that lasted for 22 minutes and 45 seconds… about a motorway. But that’s what happened. Up until ‘74, synth music ha

Related Books & Audiobooks