

Keep reading about how Eno’s innovations shaped the sound of the 80s.
Roxy Music: One of the First Synth Bands
In 1970, Roxy Music burst onto the scene. Arguably the first Glam Rock band, Roxy Music was composed of art school kids who used lyric, dress, posture, and sound to paint a new blend of Art Rock.
One of their defining features was a spindly balding figure making noises on the synth, going only by the name “Eno.” You can hear him on the first song of their first album “Re-Make/Re-Model,” an early use of synths on a rock song.
Although he was later inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as part of Roxy Music, Eno didn’t spend many years in the band. Still, he gives those early records a distinct charm.
Devo: Synths Into the Mainstream
Eno went on to produce Ohio-based New Wave band Devo’s first album. Eno, tasked with producing their first album, convinced them to add synths to silly songs like “Mongoloid,” “Jocko Homo”, and “Uncontrollable Urge.”
Previously thought of as a punk rock band, this transformed Devo into one of the earliest examples of a genre that would dominate the 80’s: New Wave.
The Talking Heads: The New Order
Not to be stopped, Brian Eno produced three albums by the Talking Heads at a pivotal moment in their career. Hot on the tail of a successful debut, Eno took over the production of their most experimental period. More Songs About Buildings and Food, Fear of Music, and especially Remain in Light pushed the band into uncharted territory, with the final featuring many songs with repetitive, hypnotic, layered, African-influenced song structures that were unfamiliar to Western audiences.
This less-is more approach cleared the floor for the stripped-down, synth-driven bands like Depeche Mode, New Order, and Pet Shop Boys that would rule the 80s.
No New York
But every action has its equal opposite reaction. Hot on the tails of New Wave was No Wave. Sensing the edge had been taken off by these pop-y, synth-driven songs, New York art kids took punk and metal and shed it of the anthemic melodies of the Sex Pistols and the ear-worm riffs of Black Sabbath. This style of music can be heard in the wall of noise and malice of early records of Swans, Sonic Youth, James Chance and the Contortions, Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, and Glenn Branca.
And who from the mainstream was hip to this harsh sound but Brian Eno himself? A fan of the cutting edge, Eno curated and produced a record of several prominent No Wave bands. No New York was most people’s introduction to the genre. It would be heavily influential in the directions that post-hardcore metal would take in the 80’s.
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This post was previously published on CultureSonar.
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Photo credit: AVRO, CC BY-SA 3.0 NL, via Wikimedia Commons




