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| The
League spent the early part of 1980 recording their second album
and tracks for the Holiday
'80 double single, which was released in April that year.
The double single failed to trouble the UK Top 75 and Virgin
swiftly replaced it with a three track single-disc
version, which fared better. |
| The
group's electronic sound was now beginning to grow again in
popularity, as interest in the burgeoning New Romantic / Futurist
scene developed. |
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| This
movement had grown out of London's glamorous Blitz club, which
spawned a number of the characters who would rise to fame in
the early part of the new decade, such as Steve Strange of Visage
and Boy George of Culture Club. But The League had little time
for these so-called Futurists... |
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| Martyn:
"It's a very old-fashioned view of futurism, which is like
people walking about like Michael Rennie out of The Day The
Earth Stood Still or something. That's not futurism - that's
more nostalgia than anything else."
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| Philip
later remarked, "I was doing all these Steve Strange things
a long time ago, years ago when David Bowie first came 'round.
I remember me and Martyn went to a party dressed up the first
time we saw Roxy Music. Everyone thought we were Andy Mackay
and Eno. But I've stopped doing all that now. It became a bit
common, so I don't do it at all anymore." |
| Adrian:
"We're surviving all these different fashions. When the
Futurist thing stops, we'll carry on." |
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Still, when the group's second album, Travelogue,
was released in May that year, it was more warmly received than
Reproduction,
reaching Number 16 in the UK charts and eventually spending
an impressive 42 weeks in the Top 75.The album was generally
brighter in tone than its predecessor, and most agreed that
Travelogue demonstrated that the group were finally fulfilling
their potential. |
| In
support of the album, the group undertook what would be their
final UK tour - twelve dates beginning on May 15th at the Mayfair
in Newcastle, and ending on May 29th at Wakefield's Unity Hall.
On this tour, Adrian directed the slides and lights from the
stage, having previously worked off-stage. This was followed
by dates in mainland Europe, including an Amsterdam show on
June 10th, which was broadcast on Dutch radio. |
| By
this time, The Human League were sufficiently prominent to receive
a mention in a Top 10 hit by new wave band The Undertones. |
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| Their
My Perfect Cousin single included these cheeky lines:
"His ma's bought him a synthesizer / Got The Human League
in to advise her / Now he's making lots of noise / Playing around
with the art school boys / Philip's trying to attract his attention
/ But what a shame - it's in vain - total rejection..." |
| Ian:
"We haven't worked that out. We think it's all related
to an interview that Martyn and Philip did on the radio, where
Philip said something like 'rock and roll is dead, guitars are
old-fashioned' - they perhaps took exception to that." |
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Travelogue
was followed in June by the re-issue of Empire
State Human ,
the first 15,000 copies of which were accompanied by a free
single, Only
After Dark .
It sold more copies than the original release, though still
not enough to crack the UK Top 40. The group were becoming increasingly
frustrated. |
| Martyn:
"We were on thirty quid a week each. Everybody's going,
'Oh, great albums, mate', you know, 'really influential', and
people flying out from all over Europe and Japan and going,
you know, 'What is it like, doing the industrial / post-industrial
funk?' and all this stuff, and we're going, 'It's fine, but...
we're actually skint'..." |
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