Video Killed The Radio Star The Buggles
  • 8 years ago
Background information
Origin Wimbledon, London, England
Genres New wave, synthpop, art pop[1]
Years active 1977–81, reunion performances 1998–present
Labels Island, Carrere, ZTT[2]
Associated acts Yes, The Trevor Horn Band, Art of Noise
Past members Geoff Downes
Trevor Horn
Buggles were an English new wave band formed in London in 1977 by singer and bassist Trevor Horn and keyboardist Geoffrey Downes. They are best known for their 1979 debut single "Video Killed the Radio Star" that topped the charts in 16 countries.

Formed in London, the duo released their first album, The Age of Plastic, in January 1980 with "Video Killed the Radio Star" as its lead single. Its music video gained notoriety for being the first shown on MTV in the US in August 1981. Soon after the album's release, Horn and Downes joined the progressive rock band Yes, recording and releasing Drama in the process. Following a tour to promote the album, Yes disbanded in 1981. That year, The Buggles released a second album, Adventures in Modern Recording. Its lack of commercial success led to the break up of the group.

Since 1998, Horn and Downes have occasionally performed The Buggles' songs.
Downes claimed the group's name derived as a pun on the rock band The Beatles, saying: "It was originally called The Bugs ... studio insects—imaginary creatures who lived in recording studios creating havoc. Then somebody said as a joke that The Bugs would never be as big as The Beatles. So we changed it to The Buggles."[3] Horn later spoke of its name: "I know the name's awful, but at the time it was the era of the great punk thing. I'd got fed up of producing people who were generally idiots but called themselves all sorts of clever names like The Unwanted, The Unwashed, The Unheard ... when it came to choosing our name I thought I'd pick the most disgusting name possible. In retrospect I have frequently regretted calling myself Buggles, but in those days I never really thought much about packaging or selling myself, all that really concerned me was the record."[4]

Horn began his career producing jingles and punk rock groups.[5] Downes was a keyboardist in She's French and graduated from Leeds College of Music in 1975, after which he moved to London for keyboard work. The two first met in 1976 at auditions for Tina Charles' backing band[6] and worked with her producer, Biddu, whose backing tracks had an influence on their early work as The Buggles.[7] Horn met musician Bruce Woolley while playing the bass guitar in the house band at the Hammersmith Odeon.[8] Both expressed an interest in Kraftwerk and Daniel Miller, leading them to read Crash by J.G. Ballard. Said Horn, ""We had this idea that at some future point there'd be a record label that didn't really have any artists—just a computer in the basement and some mad Vincent Price-like figure making the records ... One of the groups this computer would make would be The Buggles, which was obviously a corruption of The Beatles, who would just be this inconsequential bunch of people with a hit song that the computer had written ... and would never be seen."[9]

In 1977, Horn, Downes and Woolley got together and began recording a selection of demos in a small room above a stonemason shop in Wimbledon, south west London, including "Video Killed the Radio Star", "Clean, Clean" and "On TV". Though unsure on what they wished to do with them, Downes remembered that "we knew even then ... there was some distant goal that had to be reached",[10] and proceeded to re-recorded on a 16-track recording studio in north London.[10] Initial searches for the right record label to record and release an album failed,[2][5][8][10] but Horn, having begun a relationship with Jill Sinclair, a co-founder of Sarm East Studios, managed to secure plans for a potential deal.[8] However, the demo of "Video Killed the Radio Star" caught the attention of producer Chris Blackwell of Island Records and, on the day Horn and Downes were due to sign with Sarm East, Blackwell offered them a more lucrative deal, which they accepted.[2] Downes claimed Island rejected them three times before a final deal was agreed upon.[11]

The Age of Plastic (1979–80) Edit
With a recording contract with Island secure, The Buggles recorded their debut studio album, The Age of Plastic, throughout 1979. Initially, the demo of "Video Killed the Radio Star" featured vocals by Tina Charles, who also helped fund the project. Although the song was primarily a Woolley composition, he ended his association with Horn and Downes before its release as a single to form The Camera Club.[12] Making The Age of Plastic involved several months of tiresome and intense experiment with studio equipment and techniques, struggling to capture the "magic" of the original demos.[10] Debi Doss and Linda Jardim, the female voices on "Video Killed the Radio Star", contributed their vocals to other songs on the album.

"Video Killed the Radio Star" was released first, as the album'
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