Album Essentials: Thomas Dolby "The Golden Age of Wireless" (1982)
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By Dave Swanson - Summit FM Contributor
Released in the spring of 1982, 'The Golden Age of Wireless' introduced Thomas Dolby to a waiting world. The man, and his music, seemed a perfect fit for the coming era, but it would take a while for him to find a firm footing.
Rewinding the tape a bit back to the late 1970s, Thomas Dolby was an inspired young musician with an eye on the future of pop music. He joined a promising young band called Bruce Wooley & the Camera Club. I will assume this name means nothing to most, and that's a shame as they were a fantastic little combo. Led by singer/songwriter Bruce Wooley, they signed a record deal and released their debut LP, 'English Garden' in 1979. They combined energetic pop music with modern flair and a futuristic bend. The album was released in a slightly altered form in America and, though promoted well, failed to ignite any response. Interestingly, it would prove to be a great launchpad for nearly everyone in the band except their namesake.
Other band members included Matthew Seligman on bass, who would go on to hook up with Robyn Hitchcock in the Soft Boys and Robyn's solo bands. Other notable band members were Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes, with whom Wooley co-wrote the mega-hit 'Video Killed the Radio Star,' the original version of which is on the LP. Downes and Horne split the band to join Yes and become the Buggles, among other things. The keyboardist in this group was none other than Thomas Dolby, who was also finding his own voice. He too left the band initially forming a new band called the Fallout Club, then joining up with Lene Lovich writing her hit 'New Toy,'
Needing money to finance his recordings and not adverse to session work, he found himself in NYC providing synths for the album '4' by Foreigner. The lush intro to the hit 'Waiting for A Girl Like You' was all Dolby. The work helped the cash flow, and he continued working on what was to become his debut, 'The Golden Age of Wireless.'
The original UK release would be altered significantly once released in the U.S. on the Harvest imprint. Leaving off the more experimental instrumental 'The Wreck of the Fairchild' and replacing it with both sides of the single 'Urges' and 'Leipzig' added a more pop vibe, as did repositioning the highly catchy 'Europa And The Pirate Twins'; as the opening track. College radio jumped on the album making 'Europa; and 'Radio Silence' left of the dial favorites in 1982. Capitol, the distributor of Harvest in the US, was very happy with the momentum the album was receiving and his follow up single was to become his breakthrough.
'She Blinded Me With Science' wasn't released until the fall of 1982, some six months after the LP's release. Once issued, however, the ultra-catchy tune took off, reaching number 5 in America and number one in Canada and scoring top twenty around the globe except, for some reason, in his native England where it stalled out at 56. The video, on heavy rotation via MTV, certainly helped its hit status in America. The problem for Capitol was, despite it being a hit, it wasn't on the album. So the brainiacs at the label decided to alter the album one more time, making the 12" single version of 'She Blinded Me With Science' the lead-off track and removing the two they tagged on, to begin with, 'Urges' and 'Leipzig.' Eventually a third edition would appear that swapped out a remake of the song' Radio Silence' for the original version. Got that now?!
However you want to slice it, it's a batch of clever songs set in the early 1980s, though in listening today, don't sound bogged down by the technology choices of the era. If anything, the record benefits from its 80s gloss as it was pointing directions to the future of pop music. Tomas Dolby has maintained an interesting career that has linked him to everyone from Def Leppard to David Bowie and the Thompson Twins to Joni Mitchell. He has not released any new material since 2011. Some records are trapped in the era from which they came, others can transcend that and stand on their own, this is one of those.