The Eurythmics
Sweet Dreams
The Eurythmics
Source: allmusic.com
Eurythmics
were one of the most successful duos to emerge in the early '80s.
Where most of their British synth pop contemporaries disappeared from
the charts as soon as new wave faded away in 1984, Eurythmics
continued to have hits until the end of the decade, making
vocalist
Annie Lennox a star in her own right, as well as establishing
instrumentalist Dave Stewart as a successful, savvy producer and
songwriter. Originally, the duo channelled the eerily detached sound
of electronic synthesizer music into pop songs driven by robotic
beats. By the mid-'80s, singles like "Sweet Dreams (Are
Made of This)" and "Here Comes the Rain Again" had
made the group into international stars, and the group had begun to
experiment with their sound, delving into soul and R&B. As the
decade wore on, the duo's
popularity eroded somewhat -- by the late
'80s, they were having trouble cracking the Top 40 in America,
although they stayed successful in the U.K. During the early '90s,
Eurythmics took an extended hiatus, as both Lennox and Stewart
pursued solo careers.
The origins of Eurythmics lay in the Tourists, a British post-punk band of the late '70s formed by Lennox and Stewart. The pair met in London while she was studying at the Royal Academy of Music. Stewart had recently broken up his folk-rock group Longdancer and
was writing
songs with guitarist Pete Coombes. Immediately after meeting, Stewart
and Lennox became lovers and musical partners, forming a group called
Catch with Coombes, which quickly evolved into the Tourists in 1979.
Though the band only was together for two
years, the Tourists
released three albums -- The Tourists, Reality Effect, and Luminous
Basement -- which all were moderate hits in England; two of their
singles, "I Only Want to Be With You" and "So Good to
Be Back Home Again," became Top Ten hits.
In the Garden During 1980, Lennox and Stewart's romantic relationship dissolved and, along with it, so did the Tourists. Though they were no longer lovers, Lennox and Stewart decided to continue performing together under the name Eurythmics and headed to
Germany to
record their debut album. Featuring support from various members of
Can and Blondie drummer Clem Burke, among others, the duo's debut, In
the Garden, was released in 1981 to positive reviews, but weak sales.
Following the failure of In the Garden, Stewart
set up a home studio
and Eurythmics recorded a second album, Sweet Dreams
(Are Made of This), which was released in 1983.
Touch
"Love Is a Stranger" was the first British single pulled
from the album, and it became
a minor hit in the fall of 1982, a few
months before the LP appeared. The title track was released as a
single in the spring, and it rocketed to number two on the U.K.
charts; shortly afterward, it climbed to number one on the American
charts. "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of
This)" was helped
enormously by its stylish, androgynous video, which received heavy
airplay from MTV, who had only recently become a major influence
within the music industry. After "Sweet Dreams,"
Eurythmics re-released "Love Is a Stranger" and it
reached the U.K. Top Ten (number 23 U.S.), beginning a string of hit
singles that ran for a year. Touch, the duo's third album, was
released toward the end of 1983 and continued their success
throughout 1984, spawning the hits "Who's That Girl?"
(number three, U.K.;
number 21, U.S.), "Right by Your Side"
(number ten, U.K.; number 29, U.S.), and "Here Comes the Rain
Again" (number eight, U.K.; number four U.S.). During the course
of 1984, Annie Lennox's theatrical gender-bending was becoming
increasingly notorious, which
helped their record sales. At the end
of the year, they released the soundtrack for the film adaptation of
1984, which received poor reviews and sales, despite the Top Ten U.K.
placing of its single, "Sexcrime (Nineteen Eighty-Four)."
Be
Yourself Tonight Released in the spring of 1985, Eurythmics'
fourth album, Be Yourself Tonight, boasted a tougher, R&B-influenced
sound and featured a duet with Aretha Franklin, "Sisters Are
Doin' It for Themselves." The duet became one of three hit
singles from the
album, in addition to "Would I Lie to You?"
(number 17, U.K.; number five, U.S.) and "There Must Be an Angel
(Playing with My Heart)" (number one, U.K.; number 22, U.S.).
Revenge, released the following year, followed the R&B and soul
inclinations of Be Yourself Tonight
to a harder-rocking conclusion.
Though the album peaked at number 12 in the U.S. and spawned the
number 14 hit "Missionary Man," its sales were noticeably
weaker than its predecessor. In the U.K., the group was slightly more
popular -- "Thorn in My Side" reached
the Top Ten -- but it
was evident that the group was past the point of its peak popularity.
Savage
As appropriate for a group passing their commercial pinnacle,
Eurythmics began branching out into other areas. During 1985
and 1986, Dave Stewart produced a number of
superstars, including Bob
Dylan, Daryl Hall, Tom Petty, and Mick Jagger. Annie Lennox began a
short-lived acting career, appearing in Revolution. Eurythmics
reconvened in 1987 to release Savage, which was greeted with mixed
reviews and weak sales. That same year,
Stewart married Siobhan
Fahey, a former member of Bananarama who had also appeared in the
"Who's That Girl" video; she would later be a member of
Shakespear's Sister, which was produced by Stewart. In 1988, Lennox
had a hit duet with Al Green with "Put a Little
Love in Your
Heart," taken from the Scrooged soundtrack. The following year,
Eurythmics released We Too Are One, which sold well in
Britain, reaching number one, but poorly in America, despite "Don't
Ask Me Why" becoming their first Top 40 hit since "Missionary
Man." Furthermore, the reviews were decidedly mixed on the
album.
Greatest
HitsEurythmics quietly went on hiatus as of 1990, releasing
Greatest Hits the following year. Lennox began a solo career in 1992,
releasing Diva, an album that would
eventually sell over two million
copies. Stewart continued producing records and writing film
soundtracks, as well as forming a band called Spiritual Cowboys. In
1995, he officially launched a solo career with the release of
Greetings from the Gutter. Lennox and Stewart re-formed Eurythmics
in 1999, releasing Peace, their first new studio album in a decade.
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