Great reaction! I love the Midge Ure Ultravox era (starting with this album), the lead single "Vienna" from this album us iconic! Billy Currie is a synth magician!
Billie Currie an exceptional talent on the Synthed up Viola & Violin, Astradyne is my all time favourite, Passing Strangers & New Europeans are right up there as well.
The joys of the "New Wave" genre is that, as others said, there were so many sounds and options. The Cars, Blondie, Ultravox, Strange Advance, Kraftwerk, Japan, Visage, Spandau Ballet, Roxy Music, Split Enz, Depeche Mode, Yaz, The Psychedelic Furs, The Fixx, Gang of Four ... just a small sampling of bands that were all labelled "New Wave" yet all had such different sounds and styles.
That is so cool to me. I didn't even think to add The Cars to it and I've done a couple songs by them. So cool. I loved Television too but that was a whole different genre lol I guess there were elements in this that reminded me of that track I did by Television.
Ultravox's best tracks can be found on their albums Systems of Romance (with John Foxx on vocals), Vienna and Rage in Eden (with Midge Ure on vocals), all three co-produced by the band and legendary German producer Conny Plank. In my opinion their other albums didn't reach these creative heights.
Ultravox were and are one of the most underrated bands of all time. Astradyne was an album track rather than a single..... the whole Vienna album is worth listening to from start to finish. Sooooo many bands have been influenced by Ultravox not only musically but visually... they were pioneering in every way. They pioneered music videos too. Midge Ure and Billy Currie were also in Visage (one of the first electronic "dance" acts, born out of the Blitz club/New ROmantic scene. Billy Currie was also in Gary Numan's Tubeway army and Gary Numan was heavly influenced by earlier Ultravox (with John Foxx at the helm before Midge ure joined). It's mind blowing to me that anyone who listens to Electronic music (or indeed any of the slew of bands that sound like Ultravox 2.0: Muse, The Killers, White Lies et al) don't seem to know about Ultravox and just how important and inflential they were.
I guess that’s why reaction channels are good for something at the very least, and that is unearthing what has been buried under the weight of time itself. Whoa sorry I shouldn’t hit the pen and reply to comments 😂😂
They started out as punk with synths and turned into what was called New Romantic. As a prog kid there was a lot for me to like with Ultravox when they hit this phase of keyboards and electric violins and Synth solos. Their bass player passed away this week.
When I bought this on vinyl in 1980, I had heard a couple of the singles. So I didn't expect this. It was mind-blowing to me and my love for this track has never waned. It still sounds fresh and awesome today. I went to their comeback tour and they started with this. Hearing it live gave me chills and the crowd cheered when Billy Currie stepped back from his synth to do his party piece! This is an album that sounds awesome from one song to the next. There is never an urge to skip tracks!
I'm a mad Ultravox fan, and was fortunate to be involved in some gigs with Billy Currie. The guy is a synth God. Check out his solo on On Broadway live with Gary Numan. Sublime. Thanks for showing a new audience 😊
Dude that’s awesome! From this song alone I could tell these guys were the real deal. That’s dope you were involved with him. He’s great. I’ve been meaning to get back to this album lol
Don't get confused when people start recommending "new wave" that sounds almost completely different from band to band, track to track. New Wave is a fairly wide and deep "genre", rife with sub-genres!
This is true. At one time the Cars, the Police, the Pretenders, Blondie, Joe Jackson, Elvis Costello, Rockpile and a whole host of others were all lumped together as New Wave, in spite of sounding nothing like each other.
Billy Currie is a classically trained pianist and violinist which gives Ultravox their electronic/classical sound. Billy Currie and Midge Ure also played on Visage's first two albums and Billy Currie also backed Gary Numan/Tubeway Army on his first major tour. If you like this genre then check out Fade to Grey by Visage and Are Friends Electric? by Tubeway Army.....and Theme for Great Cities by Simple Minds.
Heh. Thanks for reviewing my all time favourite tune. Glad you loved it as much as I do. Now then, complete your education and listen to the "Rage in Eden" album.
@@L33ReactsFrom the same album Private Lives. Got it on now at ridiculous volume in the car. It’s so dramatic and incredible. So many others on that album, the Rage in Eden album and Quartet album (which was produced by George Martin of The Beatles fame). Edit: if you like thundering drumming you’ll love Western Promise. It’s like nothing else.
This was a great reaction. Thank you. I'm so happy to see an almost 30 year old listening to an almost 45 year old Ultravox song. I've been a fan since 1980. You should listen to the entire Vienna album. It's an amazing experience to listen to all the songs together. I liken it to listening to Soundgarden's Superunknown or Nine Inch Nails The Downward Spiral albums. They're pretty much masterpieces. Actually as for Ultravox, Vienna, Rage in Eden and Quartet are an amazing set of music. As much as I absolutely love Vienna, if I had to pick one Ultravox album to listen to forever, it would have to be Rage in Eden. I believe that was the band at the height of their powers. Also, RIP to Chris Cross. He past away on 3/25/24. Cheers to him and the music he leaves with us.
So much to say about this one: 1. "Vienna" is one of my favorite early 80s albums, period. 2. Ultravox isn't really new wave. They often got lumped in with the "New Romantic" movement of the early 80s, but they were really their own thing, combining Kraftwork-style electronic Krautrock with very British post-punk energy and a great sense of melody to make music that was uniquely their own. They're almost their own genre. 3. For years I only owned the U.S. vinyl album, with "Astradyne" closing Side One. In the mid-2010s I picked up the European CD release, which had the songs on Side One in almost exact reverse order, with "Astradyne" opening the album. THAT took some getting used to. 4. Their bass player Chris Cross (not to be confused with soft rock artist Christopher Cross) died earlier this week. He was a founding member, and may I believe have played in every incarnation of the band. A sad loss. Glad you enjoyed this so much, Lee! You have a lot more great music of theirs to look forward to, from both this album and its follow-up "Rage in Eden" (and even the one that came after that, "Quartet," and maybe even the one before it, "Systems of Romance," with a different singer and guitarist). Happy listening!
I saw in the chat he just passed away. Such a Shame. This was fantastic in so many ways. I really want to hear more from this "Vienna" album. Apparently it's a winner:) that's wild they messed with the track listing. That would mess me up too, I get used to things. My apologies for calling them new wave then hopefully we get there soon then lol
They were one of the most innovative and influential bands of the 80’s, a fantastic time to be alive if you liked music. Warren Cann, the Drummer mixed traditional with digital drums effortlessly when digital first came on the scene, reverse engineered and rebuilt the drums to get the perfect understanding to sample and loop to create amazing rhythm . The four band members worked so closely the wrote and performed as a whole. EPIC MUSIC from the 80’s. Enjoy! 🎼🎤🎧🎸🎸🥁🎻🎹
L33, the more I check the reaction the better it gets....it's an outstanding 'choon'......great album worth checking when you get the chance as many of theirs......go well fella
We were inspired by Astradyne in 1979/80 and it still has a frission in 2024.Excellent live in 1980 and in 2014. Simon Artley....(Still owning an original vinyl) Manchester UK
John Foxx was founding member and front man of the band that started out in 1974 and they were Tiger Lily at that time before becoming Ultravox! Their 1977 debut album was self titled. John Foxx, Chris Cross, Billy Currie, Warren Cann, and guitarist Stevie Shears. Their second album was also released in 1977 and was titled Utravox! ha!-ha!-ha! which guitarist Stevie Shears was let go after the release of that album because he was still in that punk rock mode, and John Foxx and the other members wanted to go into further creative wise musically. Which they did with their third album Systems of Romance (they decided to drop the ! and just went with Ultravox) with a new guitarist Robin Simon. I saw Ultravox in concert (I was 23) on March of 1979 at the Whiskey A Go-Go-Go nightclub in Hollywood, CA. They financed their own US tour that year because Island Records had dropped them due to poor sales of their albums. Right before the end of March of that year there were creative differences between John Foxx and the other members in the band, except between him and Robin Simon. So John Foxx quit and Robin Simon did as well. It was Billy Currie that decided to reform Ultravox and brought in Scottish musician Midge Ure who replaced John Foxx on lead vocals, and guitarist Robin Simon. The 1980 album Vienna is an overall good album, but for me personally Ultravox was much better with John Foxx. He released his solo debut album Metamatic in 1980 as well. Which that is an excellent album.
This track blew me away, the first time I heard it. Ultravox became my #1 band. Bought all their albums seen them in concert. You like drums? Check out their song "The Voice" from the live album Monument. I think that'll blow you away too. It did me. There's singing in this one too😂
Great reaction Lee, this was my fav band growing up, be great if you did stick with this album, it’s a winner! Tracks like new Europeans, western promise and private lives all stick out, not forgetting Vienna, prob what song they are best known for.. on a side note, Steven Wilson seems to be working his way through remastering all their albums and has already did the Vienna album 😁😁👍
@@pflynn581No Visage was sort of first. Rusty Egan assembled that band for studio project Visage. Billy Currie asked Midge to join Ultravox after they'd worked together on the first Visage album.
Midge Ure's vocals are incredible. He's very distinctive like a Gabriel or Collins. There are lots of amazing techno or new wave bands from the 80's. The rabbit hole will be deep.
Check out the pleasure principle album by gary numan from the same era if you wanna hear great synthesiser music ,Billy Currie played with gary at that time too
Some people hate this era of Ultravox. I recently saw an interview with Gary Numan and he referred to Midge Ure as "that other singer", quite disrespectful really.
Wrong Ultravox 😏 (just kidding, it's a matter of taste of course, but the first three albums with John Foxx singing show a totally different - and much better IMO - band).
As someone who discovered Ultravox during the Midge Ure era, I must humbly disagree. I bought their second album "Ha! Ha! Ha!" as an import (and paid extra for the privilege), and was very disappointed to find I'd unwittingly purchased a raw and ragged punk album (at least compared to their later efforts). For me, the early 80s Ultravox is in a class by itself, and will always be some of my favorite music of the period.
@@brucehenninger2662 As someone who discovered them with their first album and saw them live for the Ha!-Ha!-Ha! tour, the Midge Ure era was disappointing hairdresser pop tailored for MTV
@@realdocloco Well, maybe so, but to quote Genesis, "I Know What I Like!" And so do you. We shall respectfully have to agree to disagree. (And I am a little jealous that you got to see them at all, much less in their pre-Ure days. Maybe I'd feel differently if I'd caught one of their Fox live shows.)
Brilliant. Ultravox’s single “Vienna,”
changed the musical world here in the UK. I was maybe 11 and it was so otherworldly.
Great reaction! I love the Midge Ure Ultravox era (starting with this album), the lead single "Vienna" from this album us iconic! Billy Currie is a synth magician!
Billie Currie an exceptional talent on the Synthed up Viola & Violin, Astradyne is my all time favourite, Passing Strangers & New Europeans are right up there as well.
The joys of the "New Wave" genre is that, as others said, there were so many sounds and options. The Cars, Blondie, Ultravox, Strange Advance, Kraftwerk, Japan, Visage, Spandau Ballet, Roxy Music, Split Enz, Depeche Mode, Yaz, The Psychedelic Furs, The Fixx, Gang of Four ... just a small sampling of bands that were all labelled "New Wave" yet all had such different sounds and styles.
That is so cool to me. I didn't even think to add The Cars to it and I've done a couple songs by them. So cool. I loved Television too but that was a whole different genre lol I guess there were elements in this that reminded me of that track I did by Television.
@@L33Reacts Thanks for the comment, and Television was considered art-rock, punk and new wave.
Hey Robert, you got it right on the targets… these 1980’s bands made and still make history! It’s all I’ve had to say,.. thanks so much!
Roxy Music is from very early.
Ultravox's best tracks can be found on their albums Systems of Romance (with John Foxx on vocals), Vienna and Rage in Eden (with Midge Ure on vocals), all three co-produced by the band and legendary German producer Conny Plank. In my opinion their other albums didn't reach these creative heights.
The brilliance of Billy Currie - electric viola and ARP Odyssey synthesizer - had his own inimitable signature sound.
And the PPG Wave
For a drummer I would think that "The Song (We Go)" from the album Quartet would be a better demonstration of the brilliance of drummer Warren Cann.
Ultravox were and are one of the most underrated bands of all time. Astradyne was an album track rather than a single..... the whole Vienna album is worth listening to from start to finish. Sooooo many bands have been influenced by Ultravox not only musically but visually... they were pioneering in every way. They pioneered music videos too. Midge Ure and Billy Currie were also in Visage (one of the first electronic "dance" acts, born out of the Blitz club/New ROmantic scene. Billy Currie was also in Gary Numan's Tubeway army and Gary Numan was heavly influenced by earlier Ultravox (with John Foxx at the helm before Midge ure joined). It's mind blowing to me that anyone who listens to Electronic music (or indeed any of the slew of bands that sound like Ultravox 2.0: Muse, The Killers, White Lies et al) don't seem to know about Ultravox and just how important and inflential they were.
I guess that’s why reaction channels are good for something at the very least, and that is unearthing what has been buried under the weight of time itself. Whoa sorry I shouldn’t hit the pen and reply to comments 😂😂
They started out as punk with synths and turned into what was called New Romantic. As a prog kid there was a lot for me to like with Ultravox when they hit this phase of keyboards and electric violins and Synth solos. Their bass player passed away this week.
When I bought this on vinyl in 1980, I had heard a couple of the singles. So I didn't expect this. It was mind-blowing to me and my love for this track has never waned. It still sounds fresh and awesome today. I went to their comeback tour and they started with this. Hearing it live gave me chills and the crowd cheered when Billy Currie stepped back from his synth to do his party piece! This is an album that sounds awesome from one song to the next. There is never an urge to skip tracks!
RIP Chris Cross.
What a shock to hear that he passed away! too young!
Superb album. One of the most atmospheric tracks,ever. So glad you enjoyed it.the synths are singing
I'm a mad Ultravox fan, and was fortunate to be involved in some gigs with Billy Currie. The guy is a synth God. Check out his solo on On Broadway live with Gary Numan. Sublime.
Thanks for showing a new audience 😊
Dude that’s awesome! From this song alone I could tell these guys were the real deal. That’s dope you were involved with him. He’s great. I’ve been meaning to get back to this album lol
Your musical journey is as wide as the ocean. So lucky you have 60 years of greatness to discover
Don't get confused when people start recommending "new wave" that sounds almost completely different from band to band, track to track. New Wave is a fairly wide and deep "genre", rife with sub-genres!
Thank you for the tip. I will keep that in mind. I really liked this. I hope to continue on with this album. I hear its fantastic
This is true. At one time the Cars, the Police, the Pretenders, Blondie, Joe Jackson, Elvis Costello, Rockpile and a whole host of others were all lumped together as New Wave, in spite of sounding nothing like each other.
This is synthpop, or synthwave .
Synth pop , synth wave
Billy Currie is a classically trained pianist and violinist which gives Ultravox their electronic/classical sound. Billy Currie and Midge Ure also played on Visage's first two albums and Billy Currie also backed Gary Numan/Tubeway Army on his first major tour. If you like this genre then check out Fade to Grey by Visage and Are Friends Electric? by Tubeway Army.....and Theme for Great Cities by Simple Minds.
was what they now call "space music" ... blew me away in 1984 when i listened it the first time (yes a few years later after the release)
Heh. Thanks for reviewing my all time favourite tune. Glad you loved it as much as I do. Now then, complete your education and listen to the "Rage in Eden" album.
I bloody love this track and still play Ultravox albums to this day.
I need to do more by them. Any suggestions??
@@L33ReactsFrom the same album Private Lives. Got it on now at ridiculous volume in the car. It’s so dramatic and incredible. So many others on that album, the Rage in Eden album and Quartet album (which was produced by George Martin of The Beatles fame). Edit: if you like thundering drumming you’ll love Western Promise. It’s like nothing else.
"The Voice".... amazing.
This was a great reaction. Thank you. I'm so happy to see an almost 30 year old listening to an almost 45 year old Ultravox song. I've been a fan since 1980. You should listen to the entire Vienna album. It's an amazing experience to listen to all the songs together. I liken it to listening to Soundgarden's Superunknown or Nine Inch Nails The Downward Spiral albums. They're pretty much masterpieces.
Actually as for Ultravox, Vienna, Rage in Eden and Quartet are an amazing set of music. As much as I absolutely love Vienna, if I had to pick one Ultravox album to listen to forever, it would have to be Rage in Eden. I believe that was the band at the height of their powers.
Also, RIP to Chris Cross. He past away on 3/25/24. Cheers to him and the music he leaves with us.
So much to say about this one:
1. "Vienna" is one of my favorite early 80s albums, period.
2. Ultravox isn't really new wave. They often got lumped in with the "New Romantic" movement of the early 80s, but they were really their own thing, combining Kraftwork-style electronic Krautrock with very British post-punk energy and a great sense of melody to make music that was uniquely their own. They're almost their own genre.
3. For years I only owned the U.S. vinyl album, with "Astradyne" closing Side One. In the mid-2010s I picked up the European CD release, which had the songs on Side One in almost exact reverse order, with "Astradyne" opening the album. THAT took some getting used to.
4. Their bass player Chris Cross (not to be confused with soft rock artist Christopher Cross) died earlier this week. He was a founding member, and may I believe have played in every incarnation of the band. A sad loss.
Glad you enjoyed this so much, Lee! You have a lot more great music of theirs to look forward to, from both this album and its follow-up "Rage in Eden" (and even the one that came after that, "Quartet," and maybe even the one before it, "Systems of Romance," with a different singer and guitarist). Happy listening!
I saw in the chat he just passed away. Such a Shame. This was fantastic in so many ways. I really want to hear more from this "Vienna" album. Apparently it's a winner:) that's wild they messed with the track listing. That would mess me up too, I get used to things. My apologies for calling them new wave then hopefully we get there soon then lol
They were one of the most innovative and influential bands of the 80’s, a fantastic time to be alive if you liked music.
Warren Cann, the Drummer mixed traditional with digital drums effortlessly when digital first came on the scene, reverse engineered and rebuilt the drums to get the perfect understanding to sample and loop to create amazing rhythm . The four band members worked so closely the wrote and performed as a whole.
EPIC MUSIC from the 80’s. Enjoy!
🎼🎤🎧🎸🎸🥁🎻🎹
check their legendary Return to Eden concert 2009 and see how the big boys do their stuff
Jepp, that for sure was a hell of a gig and Astradyne was the best version I think I`ve ever heard, so full of richness if you get what I mean
L33, the more I check the reaction the better it gets....it's an outstanding 'choon'......great album worth checking when you get the chance as many of theirs......go well fella
We were inspired by Astradyne in 1979/80 and it still has a frission in 2024.Excellent live in 1980 and in 2014.
Simon Artley....(Still owning an original vinyl)
Manchester UK
John Foxx was founding member and front man of the band that started out in 1974 and they were Tiger Lily at that time before becoming Ultravox! Their 1977 debut album was self titled. John Foxx, Chris Cross, Billy Currie, Warren Cann, and guitarist Stevie Shears. Their second album was also released in 1977 and was titled Utravox! ha!-ha!-ha! which guitarist Stevie Shears was let go after the release of that album because he was still in that punk rock mode, and John Foxx and the other members wanted to go into further creative wise musically. Which they did with their third album Systems of Romance (they decided to drop the ! and just went with Ultravox) with a new guitarist Robin Simon. I saw Ultravox in concert (I was 23) on March of 1979 at the Whiskey A Go-Go-Go nightclub in Hollywood, CA. They financed their own US tour that year because Island Records had dropped them due to poor sales of their albums. Right before the end of March of that year there were creative differences between John Foxx and the other members in the band, except between him and Robin Simon. So John Foxx quit and Robin Simon did as well. It was Billy Currie that decided to reform Ultravox and brought in Scottish musician Midge Ure who replaced John Foxx on lead vocals, and guitarist Robin Simon. The 1980 album Vienna is an overall good album, but for me personally Ultravox was much better with John Foxx. He released his solo debut album Metamatic in 1980 as well. Which that is an excellent album.
Billy Curry also played on Steve Howe's Turbulance album with Bruford on drums. Great album.
This track blew me away, the first time I heard it. Ultravox became my #1 band. Bought all their albums seen them in concert. You like drums? Check out their song "The Voice" from the live album Monument. I think that'll blow you away too. It did me. There's singing in this one too😂
Vienna was the first vinyl album I owned, I love this track!
Great reaction Lee, this was my fav band growing up, be great if you did stick with this album, it’s a winner! Tracks like new Europeans, western promise and private lives all stick out, not forgetting Vienna, prob what song they are best known for.. on a side note, Steven Wilson seems to be working his way through remastering all their albums and has already did the Vienna album 😁😁👍
Astradyne live - Chris Cross playing bass guitar & a synth at the same time. ruclips.net/video/E-kVZsO1GCk/видео.html
I have the Vienna cd, and as much as I like the Astradyne track, the live version in Rage in Eden in on another level.
Saw them live at Sweetwater's festival Pukekawa New Zealand 1985 fantastic performance, miss those days...!!!
Love Astradyne since I first heard it in 1981.
Midge Ure's prior band "Visage" had the UK hit single "Fade to Grey" in 1980. Definitely worth a listen if you have a liking for New Wave synth. 😊
Simultaneous band.
@@pflynn581No Visage was sort of first. Rusty Egan assembled that band for studio project Visage. Billy Currie asked Midge to join Ultravox after they'd worked together on the first Visage album.
Listen to previous album "rage in edin" its magic, also look for early dead can dance and cocteau twins
I think Gary Numan has cited Ultravox as an influence. "Savage" would be a great Gary Numan album to start listening to...😉
Midge Ure's vocals are incredible. He's very distinctive like a Gabriel or Collins.
There are lots of amazing techno or new wave bands from the 80's.
The rabbit hole will be deep.
I always thought of Ultravox as new wave, pop, rock with prog overtones. This tune would be great for TV or film soundtrack.
Check out the pleasure principle album by gary numan from the same era if you wanna hear great synthesiser music ,Billy Currie played with gary at that time too
this is brilliant
Right???
Rush referred to Ultravox as an influence in the early 80s. It sounded like some of Tony's solo stuff.
great band great album😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
Check this from their live reunion show ten or so yrs ago. It's on YT somewhere.
Return to Eden tour
Talk Talk - Life’s What You Make It
Cars - Heartbeat City
Billy Idol - All Summer Single
Yaz - Situation
Blondie - Union City Blue
Taiti i ciavei ..par Furlan..❤
Kane on your wall. Cool.
Edit. Return to Eden dvd. Sorry
You should listen to their hit Vienna :)
Some people hate this era of Ultravox. I recently saw an interview with Gary Numan and he referred to Midge Ure as "that other singer", quite disrespectful really.
Genesis jumped on the New Wave bandwagon but weren't really New Wave.
Midge!
Edit: Your speech @ the end: you have imposter syndrome. I have it too.
Wrong Ultravox 😏 (just kidding, it's a matter of taste of course, but the first three albums with John Foxx singing show a totally different - and much better IMO - band).
I don't know, this was my first song of theirs, lol. I thought it was fucking awesome. But if the older stuff is even better... damn lol
As someone who discovered Ultravox during the Midge Ure era, I must humbly disagree. I bought their second album "Ha! Ha! Ha!" as an import (and paid extra for the privilege), and was very disappointed to find I'd unwittingly purchased a raw and ragged punk album (at least compared to their later efforts). For me, the early 80s Ultravox is in a class by itself, and will always be some of my favorite music of the period.
@@brucehenninger2662 As someone who discovered them with their first album and saw them live for the Ha!-Ha!-Ha! tour, the Midge Ure era was disappointing hairdresser pop tailored for MTV
@@realdocloco Well, maybe so, but to quote Genesis, "I Know What I Like!" And so do you. We shall respectfully have to agree to disagree. (And I am a little jealous that you got to see them at all, much less in their pre-Ure days. Maybe I'd feel differently if I'd caught one of their Fox live shows.)
@@brucehenninger2662 yes, that's why I said "in my opinion". Everybody has a different story with the same artist or band 👍