* En anglais uniquement
Erroneously regarded as a synth pop band -- and, every now and then, as a band that peaked with a song placed in a scene of Real Genius --
the Comsat Angels were one of the finest bands of the post-punk/new wave era. Often as moody if less dramatic than
Joy Division, their first and best albums -- 1980's Waiting for a Miracle, 1981's Sleep No More, and 1982's Fiction -- featured abstract pop songs with sparse instrumentation, many of which were bleak and filled with some form of heartache. The albums were almost unrelentingly sullen, but they were always transfixing. The band then fell prey to various commercial pressures for several years. In the '90s they resurfaced with a pair of powerful albums that resembled logical extensions of their earliest work, and then they vanished again.
After numerous incarnations and name changes, the Sheffield-based
Radio Earth -- guitarist and vocalist
Stephen Fellows, drummer
Mik Glaisher, keyboardist
Andy Peake, bassist
Kevin Bacon -- found themselves opening for
Pere Ubu in Newcastle. After the gig, the quartet realized that they had been blown off the stage and intimidated by the headliners' sense of focus and ability to confuse. Following a rethink, they came back as the less self-conscious
Comsat Angels (the name referenced a short story by J.G. Ballard). They took a loan from
Glaisher's father to record and release the Red Planet EP in 1979; BBC DJ
John Peel, who was sent a copy, liked what he heard, requested a few more copies and booked the band for one of his famous Peel Sessions.
An unintrusive deal with Polydor allowed the band to make three stunning albums and pay back Mr. Glaisher, but the label didn't know how to handle the band and the more influential music journalists shied away for whatever reason, though the coverage the band did receive tended to be glowing. Only "Independence Day," from the first album, managed to chart in the U.K. The albums were not distributed in the States, but the band did support
Gang of Four during some 1982 dates and were shocked at the reception they received -- the result of spins on college radio stations.
The
Comsats left Polydor for Jive, and 1983's Land, produced by
Mike Howlett, was a marked departure and a conscious aim for the top of the charts. It backfired, but 1985's 7 Day Weekend, produced by
Miles Davis associate and funk-pop producer extraordinaire
James Mtume, fared worse. (A parallel: imagine a fourth
Wire album that resembles
Level 42 much more than
Wire.) Released on Island in 1986, Chasing Shadows came to life with some help from high-profile fan
Robert Palmer; it too was second-rate compared to the first three albums, despite being less compromised, and
the Comsats were pleased enough to refer to it as their fourth album. Fire on the Moon, finished the following year and not released until 1990, was the band's lowest point, a very bland hard rock album credited to Dream Command.
At this point,
the Comsat Angels came to a full realization that their efforts at pleasing others -- label heads and consumers alike -- had been fruitless. They signed with RPM/Thunderbird in the U.K. and Caroline in the States, and released 1992's My Mind's Eye, a toughened updated of the 1979-1982 period. Unsurprisingly, it was met with commercial indifference and spotty critical praise.
Kevin Bacon, who had started to produce other artists, left the band after its release.
Terry Todd came in as Bacon's replacement on bass, and Simon Anderson was added as second guitarist. In 1995,
the Comsats issued The Glamour, their hardest album. It would also be their last.
Fellows released an album of ambient guitar instrumentals in 1997 and also managed
Gomez. Bacon produced additional acts (
Finley Quaye,
Longpigs,
Ziggy Marley) and put together some of his own electronic material.
Glaisher and
Peake continued to work together sporadically. In 2009, the band briefly reconvened for a handful of gigs. From the mid-'90s through the mid-2010s, all of their albums were either issued or reissued on CD. Waiting for a Miracle, Sleep No More, and Fiction alone were expanded by RPM (1995), Renascent (2006), and Edsel (2015). The last of those labels also combined Chasing Shadows and Fire on the Moon. ~ Andy Kellman