Latest Release
- NOV 17, 2023
- 1 Song
- The Pleasure Principle (Bonus Tracks) · 1979
- Replicas (1998 Remaster) · 1979
- The Pleasure Principle (Bonus Tracks) · 1979
- The Pleasure Principle (Bonus Tracks) · 1979
- Replicas (1998 Remaster) · 1979
- Savage (Songs from a Broken World) · 2017
- The Pleasure Principle (Bonus Tracks) · 1979
- Telekon · 1980
- The Pleasure Principle (Bonus Tracks) · 1979
- The Pleasure Principle (Bonus Tracks) · 1979
Essential Albums
- Gary Numan's third album, The Pleasure Principle, was not only the most influential synth-pop album this side of the Kraftwerk discography, it was also one of the key albums of the entire new wave era. While Numan found fame in the U.K. with his first two releases, this was the one that broke him on the other side of the Atlantic. Numan played some guitar on the earlier albums, but here he switches to strictly synths. Crucially, he retained his bassist and drummer instead of going all electronic, lending a visceral rock feel to his sound. The sharp, lean single "Cars" became an international smash, but the rest of the record packs an equal punch. The crunching, concise riffs and rhythms of tracks like "Metal" and "Engineers" perfectly echo Numan's technophile/sci-fi image. They also represent the next logical step David Bowie could have taken if he'd continued pursuing the electronic-oriented direction of his late-'70s albums with Brian Eno. Fortunately for all, Numan was on hand to pick up that stylistic thread.
- 2009
Artist Playlists
- He got America hooked on synthesizer-driven new wave.
- Synths of all stripes built on the back of the pioneering pop star.
- 2009
Compilations
Appears On
- Caroline Munro
About Gary Numan
British singer, producer, and multi-instrumentalist Gary Numan is a synth-pop trailblazer who helped push the genre into the mainstream with his shimmering 1979 hit “Cars.” Born on March 8, 1958, Gary Anthony James Webb grew up in Hammersmith, West London. After moving to a village in Surrey, his brooding teenage shyness eventually became the catalyst behind his paranoid yet theatrical productions. Liberated by music, Numan broke out in the late ‘70s as the frontman of New Wave band Tubeway Army, before releasing his solo debut, The Pleasure Principle, in 1979. The album was loaded with bangers like “Cars” and “M.E.”—the latter becoming a recognizable sample in Basement Jaxx’s 2001 dance anthem “Where's Your Head At.” Numan has remained an avid experimentalist over subsequent decades, delving into industrial music and darkwave on 1997 LP Exile, and remaining an influential force in synth-pop and ambient with albums like 2013’s Splinter and 2017’s Savage.
- FROM
- Hammersmith, London, England
- BORN
- March 8, 1958
- GENRE
- Rock