Running in the family - Level 42 - 1987
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Level 42: Biografia | Biography
Source: allmusic.com
At
the beginning of their career, Level
42 was
squarely a jazz-funk fusion band, contemporaries of fellow Brit funk
groups like Atmosfear, Light of the World, Incognito, and Beggar &
Co. By the end of the '80s, however, the band -- whose music was
instantly
recognizable
from Mark King's thumb-slap bass technique and associate member Wally
Badarou's synthesizer flourishes -- had crossed over to the point
where they were often classified as sophisti-pop and dance-rock,
equally likely to be placed in the context of Sade
and
the Style Council as any group that made polished, upbeat, danceable
pop/rock. The band's commercial peak came with 1985's World Machine,
but they continued to record and tour sporadically throughout the
'90s and 2000s.
Featuring
Mark King (bass, vocals), Phil Gould (drums),Boon Gould (guitar), and
Mike Lindup (keyboards), the band formed in 1979. Before they
released their first single, "Love Meeting Love," the band
was pushed to add vocals to their music in order to give it a more
commercial
sound; they complied, with King becoming the lead singer. Released in
1981, their self-titled debut album was a slick soul-R&B
collection that charted in the U.K. Top 20, resulting in the release
of The Early Tapes. Level
42 had
several minor hit singles before
1984's
"The Sun Goes Down (Living It Up)" hit the British Top Ten.
Released in late 1985, World Machinebroke the band worldwide;
"Lessons
in Love"
hit number one in Britain and "Something About You" hit
number seven in America.
Their
next two records, Running in the Family (1987) and Staring at the Sun
(1988), were a big success in the U.K., yet only made some headway in
the U.S. Both of the Gould brothers left the band in late 1987; they
were replaced by guitarist Alan Murphy and
drummer
Gary Husband. Murphy died of AIDS-related diseases in 1989; he was
replaced by the renowned fusion guitarist Alan Holdsworth for 1991's
Guaranteed. The band followed Guaranteed in 1995 withForever Now.
Throughout
the remainder of the ‘90s and the 2000s, the band’s lineup
fluctuated, with King the lone constant and his brother, guitarist
Nathan King, on-board since 2001. Level
42 released
a studio album, Retroglide, in 2006.
Four
years later, the band celebrated its 30th anniversary with a special
tour, as well as a box set, Living It Up, which included a disc of
fresh acoustic versions recorded byMark King and Lindup.
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