Featuring the core members Paul Humphreys and Andy McCluskey, the Liverpudlian synth pop group Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark formed in the late '70s. Humphreys and McCluskey began performing together in school, playing in the bands VCL XI, Hitlerz Underpantz, and The Id. After The Id split in 1978, McCluskey was with Dalek I Love You for a brief time. Once he left Dalek, he joined with Humphreys and Paul Collister to form Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. The group released its first single, 'Electricity', on Factory Records; the record led to a contract with the Virgin subsidiary DinDisc. Using their record advance, McCluskey and Humphreys built a studio, which allowed them to replace their four-track, and recorded with drummer Malcolm Holmes (formerly of The Id) and Dave Hughes (formerly of Dalek I Love You).
In 1980, the group released its self-titled debut album. 'Organisation' appeared the same year, which featured the U.K. Top Ten single "Enola Gay"; Hughes was replaced by Martin Cooper after its release. The band's next few albums -'Architecture & Morality' (1981), 'Dazzle Ships' (1983), and 'Junk Culture' (1984)- found the band experimenting with its sound, resulting in several U.K. hit singles. Recorded with two new members, Graham and Neil Weir, 'Crush', their most pop-oriented album, found more success in America than in Britain as the single "So in Love" hit number 26 on the charts. "If You Leave", taken from the "Pretty in Pink" soundtrack, was their biggest American hit, climbing to number four in 1986. 'The Pacific Age' was released the same year, yet America was the only country where it was popular. Shortly after its release, the Weir brothers left the band, followed by Holmes, Cooper, and Humphreys. McCluskey continued with the band, releasing 'Sugar Tax' in 1991; in the meantime, Humphreys formed The Listening Pool. Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark returned with 'Liberator' in 1993. It was followed three years later with 'Universal', which saw Humphreys return for some co-writing credits. By the late '90s, McCluskey had moved into artist management, while Humphreys revived the OMD name for occasional shows. A full-blown reunion came in 2006, including both McCluskey and Humphreys, plus Holmes and Cooper. Initially, OMD toured around a full-album performance of 'Architecture & Morality', and released one of their performances as 'Live: Architecture & Morality & More'. While it may have seemed the band wasn't interested in making another studio album, OMD's first post-re-formation record 'History of Modern' appeared on the 100% label in 2010. 'English Electric' followed in 2013, with a guest appearance from Propaganda's lead vocalist, Claudia Brücken. Recording sessions for 'English Electric' proved to be quite arduous and left the band wondering if they would continue. The tour that followed proved to rekindle their desire to make more music and as soon as they were off the road they began writing songs for another album. Taking its name, and some inspiration, from Italian divisionist / symbolist painter Giovanni Segantini's work titled "The Punishment of Luxury", the band's 13th album was made by the duo of McCluskey and Humphreys and released by White Noise Records in September of 2017. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]
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