Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Telex

 
Artist: Telex
Telex

Group Members:

Marc Moulin, Michael Moers, Dan Lacksman

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1978, Brussels, Belgium
  • Disbanded: 1988
  • Genres: Electronica
  • Representative Albums: "I (Still) Don't Like Music: Remixes, Vol. 2," "I Don't Like Remixes (Original Classics 78-86)," "I Don't Like Music (Remixes, Vol. 1)"
  • Representative Songs: "Moskow Diskow," "Rock Around the Clock," "Twist À St. Tropez"

Biography

Telex was a synth-disco trio formed in Brussels, Belgium, in 1978 by keyboardist Marc Moulin, who had previously performed with Cos. He was joined by vocalist Michel Moers and composer/synthesist Dan Lacksman, and together, Telex crafted a slick, stylish brand of Europop/disco with relaxed tempos and often-processed vocals. Their debut album, Looking for Saint-Tropez, was released in 1979, containing signature songs like the title track, "Moskow Diskow," and slowed-down covers of "Rock Around the Clock" and Plastic Bertrand's "Ca Plane Pour Moi." Neurovision (1980) and Sex (1981) followed, with the latter employing lyricists Ron and Russell Mael. (A 1982 U.K.-only release, Birds and Bees, contains all but three of Sex's tracks, plus several singles.) Nothing much was heard from the group after 1984's Wonderful World until 1988, when Looney Tunes displayed an about-face toward goofy, effects-laden electronic music somewhat akin to the Art of Noise or Yello. The band broke up soon after, though all three members also released material. Ten years later, long after all Telex material had gone out of print, the band received the remix-album treatment on SSR's I Don't Like Music (Remixes), featuring a host of new-school electronic producers like Carl Craig, Buckfunk 3000, Patrick Pulsinger, and Glenn Underground. A separate disc, I Don't Like Remixes, presented the Telex originals. The set proved so popular that a second remix disc, I (Still) Don't Like Remixes, Vol. 2, was released the following year. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Telex (band)
Top
Telex
Origin Belgium Belgium
Genres Electronic music
Synthpop
Electropop
Hi-NRG
Post-disco
Years active 1978–present
(hiatus in new music
between 1986-2006)[1]
Website Official Website

The Belgian synthpop group Telex was formed in 1978 by Marc Moulin, Dan Lacksman and Michel Moers, with the intention of "Making something really European, different from rock, without guitar - and the idea was electronic music."[2] Mixing the aesthetics of disco, punk and experimental electronic music, they released a stripped-down synthesized cover version of "Twist à St. Tropez" by Les Chats Sauvages.

They followed up with an ultra-slow cover of "Rock Around the Clock", a hilariously relaxed and dispassionate version of one-hit-wonder Plastic Bertrand's punk song "Ça Plane Pour Moi", and a perversely mechanical cover of "Dance to the Music", originally by Sly Stone.

Like Kraftwerk, Telex built their music entirely from electronic instruments, and the sounds of the two groups have a certain similarity. However, unlike Kraftwerk's studied Teutonic irony, Telex favour a more joyously irreverent humour.

Their debut album, "Looking for Saint Tropez", featured the worldwide hit single "Moskow Diskow", one of the first ever electronic dance/pop songs.

In 1980 Telex's manager asked them to enter the Eurovision Song Contest. They entered, and were eventually sent to the finals, although they apparently hoped to come last: "We had hoped to finish last, but Portugal decided otherwise. We got ten points from them and finished on the 19th spot" (Marc Moulin).[3]

Their song "Euro-Vision" was a cheerful bleepy song with deliberately banal lyrics about the contest itself.

The Eurovision audience seemed unsure how to react to the performance, and after the band stopped playing there was mostly stunned silence, with scattered polite applause; Michel Moers took a photograph of the bewildered audience. The band walked off amidst sounds of muttering. A mark of the confusion caused by the performance was when vote-counting began, and Greece awarded Belgium three points, the announcer thought she had misheard and tried to award the points to The Netherlands.

All of this was clearly bad news for the band's English record label, Virgin Records, who were trying to pass them off as part of the New Romantic movement. The self-mockery of tracks like "We Are All Getting Old" didn't help either.

For their third album, Sex, Telex enlisted the suddenly hip US group Sparks to help write the lyrics. However, the band still refused to play live and preferred to remain anonymous — common practice in the techno music artists they later inspired, but unusual in 1981. The fourth Telex album, Wonderful World, was barely distributed.

In 1986, Atlantic Records, perhaps surprisingly, signed Telex and released Looney Tunes. By then, the band's earlier sound had influenced many other groups, but they had abandoned it in favor of sampling and a more up-tempo humorous style. "Temporary Chicken", for example, was a strange joke track about a man so desperate for work that he accepts a part time job in a chicken costume. It was social commentary, but so bizarre as to be almost incomprehensible to most listeners; the album found little commercial success.[citation needed]

In 1989, Telex revisited all of their old tracks and remixed them to resemble the house music and other genres that had followed in the wake of Telex and others' early pioneering work in electronic pop. The result was Les Rhythmes Automatiques, which apparently inspired Kraftwerk to do the same for their album The Mix in 1991.[dubious ]

After almost two decades of silence, Telex made a come-back in March 2006 with How Do You Dance on EMI. It comprised five original compositions as well as five covers. Their last release, as of 2006, is a cover of "On the Road Again", originally by Canned Heat. They also began producing remixes for other artists' single releases, including "A Pain that I'm Used To" by Depeche Mode and "Minimal" by the Pet Shop Boys.

Contents

Discography

Albums

  • 1979: Looking For St. Tropez
  • 1980: Neurovision
  • 1981: Sex (released in some countries as "Birds and Bees" with a slightly altered tracklisting)
  • 1984: Wonderful World
  • 1986: Looney Tunes
  • 2006: How Do You Dance?

Compilations and Remix albums

  • 1989: Les Rhythmes Automatiques (album of re-recorded back-catalogue))
  • 1993: Belgium...One Point (a box set of the first five albums plus bonus tracks)
  • 1994: Is Release A Humour? - We Love Telex (Japan only. remixed by Japanese DJs)
  • 1998: I Don't Like Music (remixed by Carl Craig and others)
  • 1998: I Don't Like Remixes: Original Classics 78-86 (a 'best-of' compilation)
  • 1999: I (Still) Don't Like Music Remixes Vol. 2 (DJ remixes)
  • 2009: Ultimate Best Of

References

  1. ^ Telex Official FAQ
  2. ^ Telex Podcast Episode #1 http://www.telex-music.com/audio.html
  3. ^ Telex - The Belgian Pop & Rock Archives

External links

Preceded by
Micha Marah
Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest
1980
Succeeded by
Emly Starr

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Telex (band)" Read more