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The Luxury Gap

Heaven 17

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Album Review

After creating a marvelous electronic debut, Glenn Gregory, Ian Marsh, and Martyn Ware decided to tamper with their winning formula a bit on Heaven 17's 1983 follow-up to Penthouse and Pavement. The result, which added piano, strings, and Earth, Wind, & Fire's horn section to the band's cool synthesizer pulse, was even better, and The Luxury Gap became one of the seminal albums of the British new wave. The best-known track remains "Let Me Go," a club hit that features Gregory's moody, dramatic lead above a percolating vocal and synth arrangement. But even better is the mechanized Motown of "Temptation," a deservedly huge British smash that got a shot of genuine soul from R&B singer Carol Kenyon. Nearly every song ends up a winner, though, as the album displays undreamed-of range. If beat-heavy techno anthems like "Crushed By the Wheels of Industry" were expected of Heaven 17, the melodic sophistication of "The Best Kept Secret" and "Lady Ice and Mr. Hex" — both of which sound almost like show tunes — wasn't. If there's a flaw, it's that while the band's leftist messages were more subtle and humorous than most of their time, they still seem rather naïve. But the music, which showed just how warm electro-pop's usually chilly grooves could be, is another matter entirely. [Note to collectors: there were differences in the original British and American pressings of the album. The 1997 reissue by Caroline follows the order of the British pressing, adding some extended remixes.]

Customer Reviews

Synth-Pop at it best

I was in Scotland when this album came out. I was a little incredulous when Marsh and Ware left Human League, and their debut album while good didn't blow me away. Then they followed up with Luxury Gap. This was their best work by far. The addition of some piano work and the horn section was amazing. Let Me Go could be heard in every club and radio station in Scotland. Every song on this album was hit-worthy. Key to the world is by far my favorite track. If you're a synth-pop enthusiast then this is a definite must-add to your collection.

Brings me back

Love this album. I can see all me junior year classmates so clearly! A great album. Brings me right back!

Biography

Formed: October, 1980 in London, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s, '00s, '10s

Taking their name from the Anthony Burgess novel A Clockwork Orange, the U.K. techno-pop trio Heaven 17 grew out of the experimental dance project the British Electric Foundation, itself an offshoot of the electro-pop outfit Human League. The core of Heaven 17 was originally comprised of Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh, a pair of onetime computer operators who first teamed in 1977 as the Dead Daughters, a duo that integrated synthesizer patterns with a heavy reliance on tape loops....
Full Bio
The Luxury Gap, Heaven 17
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