Erasure Wonderland



It’s September 1985 and my 15-year-old self thinks he is on to something. I’m in John Menzies, a newsagent-cum-Woolworths wannabe and the only record stockist in Stretford’s Arndale Centre. A mile away from a Mancunian footballing mega-corporation, the Arndale is a shithole of bad shops and a honey-pot for bored teenagers and grizzly pensioners. But, I’m on a mission - to seek out a fabulous new song I’ve heard on the radio. It’s called ‘Who Needs Love Like That?’ by a band called Eurasia and I’m so ‘with it’ that it isn’t even in the charts yet.

Erasure - wonderland

Wonderland is the classic 1986 debut of Erasure, formed by songwriter/synth player Vince Clarke and singer Andy Bell. Produced by Flood, Wonderland is accessible and catchy synth pop, but also sharp, emotionally charged and redolent of heartache. Wonderland (1986) / Erasure.

Unfortunately, the single is so obscure that the bloke behind the counter cannot find it. “We’ve got nothing by a band with that name,” he tells me unapologetically. It’s weird, because he seems to have fingered his way through the ‘Y’ section of the racks of suburban chart fodder. “I think their name begins with ‘E’,” I suggest timidly. “Ah,” he says, the shilling dropping, “I thought you said they were called ‘Your Asia’ – sorry about that.” I stifle a smirk.

A couple of minutes later he’s back, empty-handed. “I couldn’t find anything by Eurasia – the nearest thing I’ve got is by some group called Erasure – what did you say the song was called again?” He doesn’t hide his smirk. However, the mystery was solved - I had found my new band. And, for me, never again would Erasure be shrouded in ambiguity. Erasure were out and proud - the de facto purveyors of straight-up, honest pop delivered by a front man who was entirely comfortable in his own skin.

When I get home and play their debut single, it perfectly represents Erasure’s 25-year career. From its quivering vocal intro – introducing Andy Bell as a suitably functional if technically challenged vocalist – and Vince Clarke’s Eastern-flecked synth line, ‘Who Needs Love Like That?’ sounds like a newborn pop hit, blinking and cooing in its first blast of airtime. It’s a good song – maybe not a great song – and immediately set out to define the DNA of Erasure. From the off, Erasure seemed to be about the creation of pop music – substance over any stylistic smokescreens. Their debut album Wonderland - released 25 years ago - was unflinching in what Erasure seemed to represent. They were a band to latch onto. Were Erasure cool in 1985? Probably not. Did it matter if they kept churning out songs like ‘Who Needs Love Like That?’ Not a jot.

When they met in 1985 Andy Bell and Vince Clarke had cosmically different musical pedigrees. That latter was a one-man hit machine. He couldn’t help himself – the first half of the 80s is virtually soundtracked by Clarke-penned synth-pop anthems. He wrote Depeche Mode’s first three singles, including the ‘ohrwurm’ breakthrough tracks ‘New Life’ and ‘Just Can’t Get Enough’, before decamping to form Yazoo and deliver yet more classic pop songs with Alison Moyet. When the pair split in 1983, Clarke formed The Assembly with Eric Radcliffe and scored yet another hit single with the Feargal Sharkey-fronted ‘Never Never’. But, The Assembly ultimately became a source of frustration for Clarke and he decided to start up a new project, placing an advert in Melody Maker inviting a singer to join him.

Peterborough-born Andy Bell had been a fan of Clarke’s work and in 1985 was working in a meat-packing factory. Legend has it that Bell was the 43rd singer that auditioned for Clarke and that although Bell impressed, the initial idea for Erasure would see Clarke working with a variety of singers on the debut album. It didn’t quite work out that way, and once ensconced, Bell’s boundless energy and blue-collar charisma sparked a chemistry that would see him and Clarke through 13 studio albums and upwards of 20 million sales.

Erasure’s chart life, however, took a while to ignite. The first three singles that preceded the release of Wonderland failed to break into the Top 40. There were, however, sparks of intrigue; the aforementioned ‘Who Needs Love Like That?’ is a hindsight-enhanced classic, while (the admittedly risible in every way) Dollar made a better commercial first of the sweet paean to unrequited love, ‘Oh L’amour’, turning into a sizeable hit in 1987. The original Erasure version was backed with ‘Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight) – their first stab at covering ABBA.

This comparative lack of success – certainly by Clarke’s previous chart heroics – meant that Wonderland was released on 2nd June 1986 with little fanfare. The album was produced by Flood, who at that point in his pre-U2 career had not taken on sole production duties until he began to work with Clarke and Bell (although he had engineered tracks for New Order and Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds). The resultant album is dichotomous beast: aspects of Wonderland are deeply flawed - the record contains a couple of laughably bad songs - but somehow is a very easy album to love. The blemishes and clunky moments make Wonderland special. In an era of high-falutin’ imagery and trowled-on pretentiousness, Erasure’s honest transparency was particularly endearing.

Of the 11 tracks that make up the UK release of Wonderland, Bell and Clarke co-wrote eight and the album’s inconsistent quality points to the newly-formed collaboration flexing their collective muscles and working out boundaries. While there are a number of sparkling tunes - the excellent ‘Push Me Shove Me’ is the rallying cry to end an abusive relationship (“Now I know the game you play / I can see it in your eyes”) - Wonderland includes two or three stinkers. ‘Pistol’ is hilariously terrible; a camped-to-the-max police officer fetish anthem (“Blue boy go get your gun”), which was subsequently removed from the US version of the album.

But even a song as teeth-grindingly naff as ‘Pistol’ had a certain thrill – play it once and you’d probably be singing it for the rest of the day. And therein lay the magic of Erasure – a likeability factor that rode roughshod over cerebral critique. There was a sense that Wonderland showcased a band who were dedicated to the art of crafting pop music, and just happened to use synthesized sounds to make the music, as opposed to a synth band showing-off their technology via the medium of pop. It is a subtle difference, but one which - in this scribe’s opinion - became central to Erasure’s appeal.

Erasure - Wonderland

Arguably, the foundation for the duo’s success is present on Wonderland. The Bell-penned ‘Cry So Easy’ is a sophisticated take on electro-pop and although ‘Senseless’ maybe sugar-coated it hints at lustful delights (“Inhibition’s slipping away / Stay there, got a lot we can share”). If ‘Reunion’ belly-flops under the weight of a fromage-drenched chorus, ‘Heavenly Action’ is another simpering moment of songwriting purity, with the duo’s chemistry and sense of playfulness shining through.

Erasure Wonderland

The other aspect of Erasure’s charm was Andy Bell himself. Wonderland presented a gay man who appeared utterly at ease with his sexuality. In the mid-80s, major pop bands either went to great lengths to hide their homosexuality (Wham! anyone?) or portrayed gay men as cartoon characters (step forward Culture Club and Frankie Goes To Hollywood). From day one, it was apparent - even to this slightly-naive teenager - that Andy Bell was a reassuringly normal gay man, who didn’t feel the need to wear women’s smocks or make videos based on Roman orgies. And, okay, Bell danced like your Dad and his voice got a bit wobbly on the high notes, but that only added to the warmth of Erasure.

Erasure wonderland songs

However, the reaction to Wonderland was muted. Critics were initially unmoved and there was a sense that the album didn’t stack up to Clarke’s previous work. Some hacks felt that Andy Bell’s vocal style was desperately trying to imitate Alison Moyet – a pointless ploy if ever there was one and a pretty unfounded slice of journalistic bitchiness. Sales were not exactly of the hot cake variety; Wonderland stalled at number 71 in the UK album charts although it did crack the Top 20 in Germany.

But, if the majesty of Wonderland would prove to be a slow-burner, the events of October 1986 would demonstrate that the chemistry evoked on the debut was extremely close to producing classic pop. Only four months after the release of their debut album, Erasure released their fourth single, in the shape of a brand new song. ‘Sometimes’ felt like an instant, nailed-on classic. With its faux acoustic guitar and a lovelorn Bell musing that “The truth is harder / Than the pain inside” the song became Erasure’s first global hit. The Clarke-Bell songwriting partnership was learning fast. Erasure had lift-off.

Erasure Wonderland

They’d follow ‘Sometimes’ with a flurry of gold-plated singles including ‘It Doesn’t Have To Be’, ‘Chains Of Love’, ‘A Little Respect’ and ‘Stop!’ during a period which encompassed the career highs of 1987’s The Circus and the following year’s The Innocents album and Crackers International EP. These were heady times for – as the imminent release of their 14th studio album Tomorrow’s World confirms – one of Britain’s most enduring pop bands.

My 15-year-old self had been right – I was onto something that day in John Menzies.

The special edition reissue of Wonderland is out now

Intervention/Mute IR-009
Format: LP

Musical Performance: ****
Sound Quality: *****
Overall Enjoyment: ****1/2

Vince Clarke had already made his mark in two bands when, in 1985, he formed the synth-pop duo Erasure with singer Andy Bell. A founding member of Depeche Mode, Clarke had written three of its early hits, “Dreaming of Me,” “New Life,” and “Just Can’t Get Enough.” He left shortly after the release of that band’s first album, Speak & Spell (1981), and, with singer Alison Moyet, formed Yazoo (known in the US, for legal reasons, as Yaz).

After two albums with Yazoo, Upstairs at Eric’s (1982) and You and Me Both (1983), Clarke did a brief project with producer Eric Radcliffe before placing an ad in Melody Maker in 1985 to find a singer for his next venture. He chose Andy Bell, who had admired his work with Depeche Mode and Yazoo. The new group, Erasure, released its debut, Wonderland, the following year. While Clarke’s earlier band associations were brief, Erasure has now endured for more than 30 years.

My CD of Wonderland was pressed in 1985. Recently, when I played it, I was transported back to the early days of MTV, spiky hair, and the beginnings of synth pop. While I enjoyed reliving a time when I had hair, the recording felt dated. Kevin Gray’s remastering for Intervention Records’ reissue of Wonderland on vinyl fleshes out the music and gives it a larger, more impressive scale. The keys in the opening track, “Who Needs Love Like That,” are now more harmonically layered and textured, and the electronic percussion has more bounce and thickness.

Throughout the album, bass keyboards now punch harder and move more air -- on my 32-year-old CD, they seem to lie flat against the wall. Other details, ones that give structure to the music, also have stronger impact on vinyl. The percussion splashes in “Reunion,” an important part of the overall arrangement, are now more audible, focused, and precisely placed on the soundstage. Bell’s voice sounds more expressive -- on the CD, his vocals sometimes feel mannered; on the new LP, his singing is more emotionally involving and nuanced.

The intro to “Cry So Easy” is less involving on the CD, but on LP it fills the room, sounding larger and more complete. The electronic percussion has a harder-edged snap, and the bass keys are stronger and more forceful. The keyboard washes are somewhat reserved on CD, but expansive and deeper on this pressing. On CD, Bell’s backing vocals are far behind his lead vocal in the mix. On the new vinyl, they fill out the sound and help give his lead more emotional resonance; tiny keyboard arpeggios come farther out into the room, to pull me deeper into the music.

Erasure

Erasure Wonderland Cd

Wonderland was not immediately popular, but a 2003 remix of the final track, “Oh l’Amour,” became a hit. A bouncy, frothy pop song with a compelling rhythm track, “Oh l’Amour” is filled with Clarke’s witty use of electronics. Bell’s voice begins the song, accompanied by a chorus of his own multitracked vocals. His lead vocal is fuller and more nuanced on LP, and the backing chorus sounds richer, spreads wider, and is more essential in supporting his lead.

The keyboards have much more shimmer and life on vinyl, and the electronic drums are punchier, livelier, and hit harder. They’re still identifiably electronic, but their tone is now more intricate, and it’s easier to hear how clever and witty Clarke was in how he used them. If you don’t like synth pop, even this new pressing of Wonderland won’t make you a believer -- but it’s far more musically compelling and enjoyable now than on that early CD. I hear Erasure’s influence in the music of younger musicians, including Lady Gaga (listen to her “Bad Romance”) and Tegan and Sara.

Erasure Wonderland Cd

According to a note on Intervention’s website, “Mastering notes included with the tapes show that the original LP was bass-limited from 40Hz down. Of course we restored the wonderfully full bass response that’s present on the tapes, and mastered wide open with no compression applied.” Kevin Gray’s mastering, from the original analog tapes, results in a terrific-sounding LP. On the original CD, Wonderland is a nostalgic return to the 1980s -- a guilty pleasure. On this LP, the music fills the room with such a deep, wide soundstage that it’s easy to envision a dance floor coming alive to its sounds.

Erasure New Album

. . . Joseph Taylor
josepht@soundstagenetwork.com