What's better when you're tired than watching music documentaries? Yesterday I watched "Synth Britannia" and it was the music that I grew up with thanks to my older brothers Peter and Nicke.
"Synth Britannia" documentary following a generation of post-punk musicians who took the synthesizer from the experimental fringes to the center of the pop stage.
In the late 1970s, small pockets of electronic artists including the Human League, Daniel Miller and Cabaret Volatire were inspired by Kraftwerk and JG Ballard and dreamt of the sound of the future against the backdrop of bleak, high-rise Britain.
The crossover moment came in 1979 when Gary Numan's appearance on Top of the Pops with Tubeway Army's Are Friends Electric heralded the arrival of synthpop. Four lads from Basildon known as Depeche Mode would come to own the new sound whilst post-punk bands like Ultravox, Soft Cell, OMD and Yazoo took the synth out of the pages of the NME and onto the front page of Smash Hits.
By 1983, acts like Pet Shop Boys and New Order were showing that the future of electronic music would lie in dance music.
I wonder who I have been if I did not have this music.
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