Bombers (Gary Numan song)

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"Bombers"
"Bombers" cover
Single by Gary Numan/Tubeway Army
Released July 1978
Format 7" single
Recorded The Music Centre, Wembley 15 April 1978
Genre Post-punk
Length 03:52
Label Beggars Banquet
BEG 8
Producer(s) Kenny Denton
Chart positions
  • Did not chart
Gary Numan/Tubeway Army singles chronology
"That's Too Bad"
(1978)
"Bombers"
(1978)
"Down in the Park"
(1979)

"Bombers" is the second single by Gary Numan and his band Tubeway Army, released in 1978. The song is in a somewhat more conventional rock style than their punk-orientated debut, "That's Too Bad", and features sound effects simulating air raid sirens, dive bombers, and machine gun fire. Like its predecessor, the single earned indifferent reviews and failed to chart. It is one of the few recordings in his career which Numan did not produce himself.

Though their musical styles differ, the song's subject matter is generally seen as a thinly-disguised rewrite of David Bowie's "Five Years", the opening track of The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972).[1] Both songs feature detached observations of urban panic caused by impending catastrophe. "Bombers" (which has nothing to do with another Bowie track of the same name) is sung from the perspective of both a witness on the ground ("Look up, I hear the scream of sirens on the wall") and the bomber pilot ("And me I know just where you are, you see I'm a bomber man").

The B-sides were "Blue Eyes", which harked back to the fast-paced punk style of "That's Too Bad", and "O.D. Receiver", a slower piece whose lyrics reflected a Burroughsian world of drug addiction. All tracks on the original vinyl single were credited to 'Valerian', the name that Numan (born Gary Webb) had chosen for himself prior to Tubeway Army's debut; these would be his last releases using that nom de plume, henceforward he would call himself Gary Numan.

Contents

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Bombers" (Numan) - 3:52
  2. "Blue Eyes" (Numan) - 1:43
  3. "O.D. Receiver" (Numan) - 2:37

[edit] Production credits

[edit] Versions

Four recordings of "Bombers" have been released:

  • The original demo version, recorded 7-9 March 1978 at Spaceward Studios, near Cambridge. This recording was not released to the public until October 1984, on an album of previously-unissued tracks from the same sessions called The Plan. These sessions featured Gary Numan, Paul Gardiner, and Numan's uncle Jess Lidyard on drums.
  • The single version recorded on 15 April 1978 and released in July the same year. This session was produced by Kenny Denton, and featured a short-lived band line-up of Numan, Gardiner, Barry Benn and Sean Burke. It has since appeared on CD reissues of The Plan. The single features a slightly revised lyric: on the demo, the third verse starts with "All the junkies pulling needles from their arms." Beggars Banquet feared that the word "junkies" would prevent the song receiving airplay and so, for the single, Numan changed the line to "All the nurses pulling needles from their arms."[1]
  • A live version recorded 28 September 1979 (during 'The Touring Principle' concerts) and released on the B-side of the single "Complex" later that year. This arrangement differed from the earlier recordings, featuring a Roland CR-78 drum machine, violin and synthesizer, along with guitar, bass and conventional percussion (predominantly tom-toms). The track was included as a bonus track on various CD re-releases of The Pleasure Principle, as well as on an expanded version of Numan's live album Living Ornaments '79, where it appeared as the first of three songs utilising the same CR-78 preset drum pattern, the others being "Remember I Was Vapour" and "On Broadway".
  • Another live version, recorded 6 November 1993, and released on the album Dream Corrosion (1994). This rendition resembles the original, rock-oriented version of the song rather than the slowed-down version from The Touring Principle.

[edit] Trivia

An ink tracing by Garry Robson of Numan's face on the single's sleeve would provide the design for the 1979 reissue cover of Tubeway Army's eponymously-titled debut album.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Steve Malins (1998). The Plan: CD liner notes