
Duran Duran biography
Duran Duran personified New Wave for much of the
mainstream audience. And for good reason, too.
Duran Duran's reputation was built through music videos, which accentuated
their fashion-model looks and glamourous sense of style. Without music videos,
it is likely that the band's pop-funk -- described by the group as the Sex
Pistols meets Chic -- would never have made the group international pop stars. While
Duran Duran did have sharper pop sensibilities than their New Romantic
contemporaries like Spandau Ballet and Ultravox, none of their peers exploited
MTV and music video like the Birmingham-based quintet. Each video the group
made was distinctive, incorporatin a number of cinematic styles to showcase the
band as either part of the jet-setting elite ("Rio") or as worldly
adventurers ("Hungry Like the Wolf").
While early videos like "Girls on Film" and "The Chaffeur"
sparked controversy in England over their sexual content, their best-known
clips were often based on hit contemporary movies. "Hungry Like the
Wolf" uncannily recalled Raiders of the Lost Ark, while "Union of the
Snake" and "The Wild Boys" brought to mind The Road Warrior.
The clever videos helped make Duran Duran's rise to popularity remarkably
swift. Between 1982 and 1984, they rocketed from underground British post-punk
sensations to teen idols. But their fall from grace was equally fast. By the
late '80s, the group's lineup had fragmented, and the remaining members had
trouble landing hist singles. Nevertheless, the group pulled off a surprising,
if short-lived, comeback in the early '90s as a sophisticated soft-rock trio.
Inspired by David Bowie and Roxy Music, as well as post-punk and disco,
schoolmates Nick Rhodes (keyboards) and John Taylor (guitar) formed Duran Duran
in 1978 with their friends Simon Colley (bass, clarinet) and Stephen Duffy
(vocals). Taking their name from a character in Roger Vadim's psychedelic
sci-fi film Barbarella, the group began playin gigs in the Birmingham club
Barbarella, supported by a drum machine. Within a year, Duffy and Colley both
left the group -- Duffy would later form the Lilac Time -- and were replaced by
former TV Eye vocalist Andy Wickett and drummer Roger Taylor. After recording a
demo, John Taylor switched to bass and guitarist John Curtis joined the band,
only to leave within a matter of months.
The group placed an ad in Melody Maker, which drew the attention of Andy
Taylor, who became their guitarist, but Duran Duran were still having trouble
finding a vocalist. Following Wickett's departure in 1979, a pair of singers
passed through the group before Simon LeBon, a former member of the punk band
Dog Days and a drama student at Birmingham University, joined in early 1980.
By the end of 1980, Duran Duran had become popular within the burgeoning New
Romantic circuit in England and had secured a record contract with EMI. "Planet
Earth," the band's first single, quickly rose to number 12 upon its spring
1981 release. Immediately, Duran Duran became the leaders of the New Romantic
movement, becoming media sensation in the British music and mainstream press. The
group's popualrity increased through their cutting-edge music videos,
especially the bizarre, racy clip for "Girls On Film." Although the
BBC banned the Godley & Creme-directed video, the single became the group's
first Top 10 hit, setting the stage for the fall release of their eponymous
debut album.
Duran Duran reached number three upon its release and stayed in the charts for
118 weeks. The band quickly followed the album with Rio in the spring of 1982. Rio
entered the charts at number two, and its singles -- "Hungry Like the
Wolf" and "Save a Prayer" -- became Top 10 hits. By the November
release of the US-only remix EP Carnival, the band were superstars in Europe,
but only just beginning to make headway in America. Their exposure in the US
was helped greatly by the emergence of MTV, who put the group's stylish videos
into heavy rotation. MTV's constant playing of the videos paid off, and
"Hungry Like the Wolf" became a Top 10 hit early in 1983. Rio
followed the single into the Top 10, eventually selling over two million
copies.
Duran Duran-mania was in full-swing across America, with "Is There
Something I Should Know" reaching the Top 10 -- it became the group's
first English number one that summer -- and the group's first album climbing
its way to number 10. Duran Duran capitalized on their popularity by releasing
Seven and the Ragged Tiger in time for 1983's holiday season. The record hit
number one in the UK and number eight in the US, spawning the hit singles
"Union of the Snake" and "The Reflex," their first number
one US hit and their second British chart-topper. The band took an extended
break after completing their year-and-a-half long international tour in the
spring of 1984. In November, they released the non-LP single "Wild
Boys," which reached number two in the UK and the US, where it was added
to the live album Arena.
By 1985, Duran Duran fever was beginning to cool off, and after the band
completed the the title track for the James Bond film A View to A Kill, the
group went on hiatus. Andy and John Taylor formed the supergroup the Power
Station with vocalist Robert Palmer and former Chic drummer Tony Thompson in
January, releasing their eponymous debut album in the spring; it spawned the
Top 10 singles "Some Like It Hot" and "Get It On (Bang a
Gong)." The remaining members of Duran Duran -- Nick Rhodes, Simon LeBon
and Roger Taylor -- responded with their own side project, Arcadia, which
released an album called So Red the Rose in the fall of 1985; the album
launched the Top 10 hit "Election Day." Early in 1986, Roger Taylor
announced he was taking a year-long sabbatical from the group. He never
returned.
Several months later, Andy taylor also left, reducing Duran Duran to a trio. Late
in 1986, the band released Notorious, their first album in nearly three years. While
it was relatively successful, going platinum in the US and generating a Top 10
hit with the title track, it was noticeably less popular than their earlier
records. For the remainder of the decade, Duran Duran's popularity continually
declined, with 1988's Big Thing producing "I Don't Want Your Love,"
their last Top 10 single for five years.
The greatest hits album Decade was released late in 1989, followed several
months later by Liberty, the first Duran Duran album to fail to go gold. By
that point, former Missing Persons guitarist Warren Cuccurullo had become a
permanent member of the group. In 1993, the band returned from a prolonged
hiatus with Duran Duran, a mature, layered record of lite funk and soulful
adult contemporary pop that became a surprise hit. "Ordinary World"
and "Come Undone" became Top 10 hits in America, with the former
reaching the Top 10 in the UK as well; the album itself climbed into the Top 10
in both continents and went platinum in America.
Not only did the record restore their commercial status, but it earned them
some of their best reviews of their career. The group followed the album with
one of their poorest-received efforts, the all-covers Thank You, that managed
to go gold in America despite its negative reviews. While Duran Duran was
recording the followup to Thank You in 1996, John Taylor left the band to
pursue a solo career.
Warren Cuccurullo has since left Duran Duran to re-form his old group Missing
Persons and Duran Duran has returned to it's original line-up with the return
of John, Andy and Roger Taylor.