Cars
"Cars" by Gary Numan was released in 1979, but it seems like the first song of the 1980s. It's as if he had gone into the future, discovered what it looked like, and then, after returning to the then-present, wrote a song to capture what he had seen.* "Cars" is science-fictional in that much of its music is played on synthesizers, that is, on musical instruments dependent upon twentieth-century electronic technology. The video for "Cars" is also science-fictional, with its robot-like humans or human-like robots, including the singer, who is dressed in a red leather space cadet suit, the same color as the robot Maximilian in The Black Hole from the end of the year. There is a darkened interior space like the inside of a spaceship, a lighted pyramid like a recharging booth or a force field, and rows of vertical lights as in the vast, curving corridors of the Death Star.
"Cars" is from Gary Numan's debut solo album The Pleasure Principle. On the cover is a photograph of Mr. Numan looking at a small, glowing, red pyramid. (Pyramids must mean something to him.) With its strange and mysterious artifact and its enthralled (or spooked) onlooker, the image reminds me of the pictures from the Led Zeppelin album Presence, from 1976. The Pleasure Principle had been preceded by two albums recorded by the band of which Gary Numan was a member, Tubeway Army. Those albums were Tubeway Army (1978) and Replicas (1979). I have heard the second but not the first. Evidently, both are replete with the themes and imagery of science fiction. (The album cover for Tubeway Army has a groovy and clever 1970s display face like the title logo of Star Wars.) Replicas is said to be a concept album about a dystopian future. Gary Numan and his bandmates were influenced by Philip K. Dick and J.G. Ballard, about whom I have written lately. I point that out not to draw attention to myself but to show that these arrows are still flying through the subjects before us. By the way, one of the members of Tubeway Army, Jess Lidyard, is or was nicknamed Rael. I take that to be a reference to the flying saucer religion Raëlism, founded in 1974.
A dozen years ago, I wrote about "Cars" and the song and video for "Breathe" by The Prodigy, released in 1996. The video for "Cars" is futuristic and science-fictional. The video for "Breathe" on the other hand is decadent and horror-fictional. I asked the question, What happened in those intervening years? My answer was that Neuromancer by William Gibson (1984) happened. That was a flippant answer and I don't put very much stock in it, but something did happen in those years during which genre fiction seems to have turned from science fiction and towards horror, fantasy, and weird fiction, as if writers, readers, and fans had lost confidence in the future and looked instead to the past. They stopped liking rocketships and computers and started liking vampires and zombies. Music seems to have followed suit. Or maybe it was the other way around. Or maybe both music and genre fiction descended at the same time, hand in hand. By the way, both Tubeway Army and The Prodigy were punk influenced.
The Prodigy play electronic music. Like Tubeway Army and Gary Numan, they are reliant upon twentieth-century technology for their sound. Nevertheless, their video for "Breathe" is in no way technological, nor futuristic, nor science-fictional. In fact, it's the opposite, a visual/video catalogue of horrors, filled with the imagery of squalor and decay. The video for "Sober" by the American band Tool, released in 1993, is similarly nightmarish. It's actually fascinating, perfect in its weirdness, creepiness, and horror. Made by way of stop-motion animation, it's like the dark flipside of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and those other specials we watched as children. We watched Ray Harryhausen movies when we were kids, too, and I have always thought that stop-motion animation of that type is very creepy, far superior in its effect and appearance to later computer-generated imagery or CGI. If you want to make a monster, make it from something real and physical rather than as a ghost out of a machine.
There were milder Gothic and romantic videos from that time. One I can think of is the video for "Cuts You Up" by Peter Murphy, released in 1990. Formerly of the British goth band Bauhaus, Peter Murphy played a kind of romantic hero in the video for "Cuts You Up." Running through a dark and gloomy forest, he's like Heathcliff, whose compound mononym denotes his wildness and his dark romantic nature. In Wuthering Heights (1847), Heathcliff is described as a "dark-skinned gipsy." That makes me think of the singer in "Going Mobile," who proclaims: "I'm an air-conditioned gypsy." Those two phrases are close enough to make a song rhyme. In popular culture, the gypsy is a free and romantic figure, unbound by convention and missed by both the police and the taxman. Another name for gypsies is Romany. Like the Gothic romance, they come from the dark and distant past.
I asked what happened between 1979 and "Cars," and 1996 and "Breathe." Another question is what happened between 1971 and "Going Mobile," and 1979 and "Cars." Exactly eight years to the month separated those two songs, but they are very different despite their somewhat shared subject matter. Both are science-fictional, but "Going Mobile" is happy, outward, exuberant. "Cars" on the other hand is insecure, fearful, closed in, even paranoid. You can almost see Pete Townshend smile as he sings his song. "Beep beep," he chirps, as if this were a number on Sesame Street. In his video for "Cars," Gary Numan is shifty-eyed and robotic. He seems fearful or suspicious. His face is a blank. There is close to a snarl on his lips. "Going Mobile" is a song of rebellion against authority. It flies in the face of the establishment. "Cars" on the other hand can't be taken as a political song. Its world is small, as small as the inside of a womb-like car where the singer feels "safest of all." I confess I don't know what happened, but there are and always have been outward songs and inward songs.
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*Maybe a better candidate for the first song of the '80s is "Are 'Friends' Electric?" released by Tubeway Army in May 1979. It's science-fictional, too, but as far as I know, it lacks a video.



