| Thomas Dolby was an indelible part of the electronic music landscape on both sides of the Atlantic in the '80s. The Zelig of synthpop, he was seemingly there or thereabouts at all points of that crucial decade. He enjoyed huge solo success with the singles "She Blinded Me With Science" and "Hyperactive!", composed and performed on hits for everyone from AOR giants Foreigner to none-more-quirky new wave girl Lene Lovich, produced three superlative albums for Prefab Sprout, and even co-wrote the much-sampled early rap classic "Magic's Wand" by Whodini. With his "mad professor" image of specs and lab-coat, the Oxford-educated boy (he went to Abingdon, the school later attended by Radiohead) was a sort of Brit version of Kraftwerk's men-machines, a techno wiz whose music and productions proved influential on the development of homegrown electro-pop. And, like so many of the Class of '81-2, he was encouraged to make his mark by punk, although in truth he was less moved by the three-chord garage-band thrash of the Clash et al. than he was by the DIY proto-electronica of the Normal, David Bowie and Brian Eno's collaborations in Berlin, and the experiments of certain Germans. "Punk hit big in '77-8, but there was also a counter-culture of krautrock, Kraftwerk and Bowie-Eno's albums [Low and Heroes]," he recalls. "That had a big effect on me." Seeing Gary Numan perform "Are 'Friends' Electric?" on Top of the Pops in 1979 was empowering to say the least. "There was the sense that ... |