Thomas Dolby
The Golden Age Of Wireless

EMI    CDP 7 46009 2  (1982)

Rock/Pop
CD, 10   Tracks, 43:22  Length
01 She Blinded Me With Science Thomas Dolby 03:41
02 Radio Silence Thomas Dolby 03:47
03 Airwaves Thomas Dolby 05:16
04 Flying North Thomas Dolby 03:54
05 Weightless Thomas Dolby 03:46
06 Europa And The Pirate Twins Thomas Dolby 03:21
07 Windpower Thomas Dolby 04:20
08 Commercial Breakup Thomas Dolby; Tim Kerr 04:19
09 One Of Our Submarines Thomas Dolby 05:13
10 Cloudburst At Shingle Street Thomas Dolby 05:45
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Synthesizer Thomas Dolby
Bass Mark Heyward-Chaplin
Drums Justin Hildreth
Guitar Kevin Armstrong
Producer Thomas Dolby
Personal Details
Index # 955
Owner Dave
Tags Synth Pop
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Talk to anyone who was the right age in the early '80s for both pop radio and the dawn of MTV, and "She Blinded Me with Science" will inevitably come up. The most famous song from the reissued version of the album, it's a defiantly quirky, strange number that mixes its pop hooks with unusual keyboard melodies pitched very low and a recurrent spoken word interjection ("Science!") from guest vocalist/video star Magnus Pike. To Thomas Dolby's credit, the rest of the album isn't simply that song over and over again, making The Golden Age of Wireless an intriguing and often very entertaining curio from the glory days of synth pop. Part of the album's overall appeal is the range of participating musicians, no doubt thanks in part to Dolby's own considerable range of musical work elsewhere. "She Blinded Me with Science" itself features Kevin Armstrong on guitar, Matthew Seligman on bass, mega-producer Robert "Mutt" Lange on backing vocals, and co-production with Tim Friese-Greene. Elsewhere, Andy Partridge contributes harmonica, Mute Records founding genius Daniel Miller adds keyboards, and Lene Lovich adds some vocals of her own. The overall result is still first and foremost Dolby's, with echoes of David Bowie's and Bryan Ferry's elegantly wasted late-'70s personas setting the stage. If anything, The Golden Age of Wireless is the friendlier, peppier flip side of fellow Bowie obsessive Gary Numan's work, where the melancholy is gentle instead of harrowing. Dolby's melodies are sprightly without being annoyingly perky, his singing warm, and his overall performance a pleasant gem. Especially fine numbers include the amusing romp "Europa and the Pirate Twins" and the nostalgia-touched, just mysterious enough "One of Our Submarines."