Some called them New Romantics, others referred to them as Futurists or as the Blitz Kids. Born in the beginning of the 80's at a London club called the Blitz, Blitz Kids is probably the name that best encapsulates this youth movement which brought fashion and extravaganza to a new level.
Steve Strange and Rusty Egan are the two names behind these club nights, the first with its daring look and tons of mascara, the second the person in charge to the synth music that took this wild mob to the floor - Both would later work together in the Visage, the band which delivered the huge hit "Fade to gray".
From this club nights resulted a movement which would later become better know as New Romantics, highly influenced by both the music and aesthetics of David Bowie. Boy George and Culture Club, Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, Ultravox, Bow Wow Wow, Heave 17, Gary Numan, Human League, Soft Cell or Adam and the Ants were just some of the names that provided the soundtracks for the crazy lives of these mob which Graham Smith covers and portrays in the book entitled "We can be Heroes, Punks, Poseurs, Peacocks and People of a a Particular Persuasion" which has just come out:.
(http://www.amazon.co.uk/We-Can-Heroes-Particular-Persuasion/dp/1908717653
For those wishing to revisit these extravagant nights please check the London media on a regular basis and look for Blitz has been hosting one off club nights in this city. Aside from these nights, some of the aforementioned bands have been making regular comebacks, as it is the case of Heaven 17 which, after has been playing regular gigs featuring both the band songs and the songs recorded at the British Electric Foundation, inviting to these gigs household names such as Boy George, Midge Ure or Green Garthside.
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