Dave Formula

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Dave Formula
Background information
Birth name David Tomlinson
Also known as David Tomlinson, Dave Tomlinson, Dave Formula
Born (1946-08-11) 11 August 1946
Whalley Range, Manchester, England
Genres Rock, beat, post-punk, synthpop, new wave, electronic, new romantic, jazz, funk
Instruments Keyboards, synthethizer
Years active c. 1965–present
Labels Decca Records, Virgin, EMI, Polydor
Associated acts St. Louis Union, Magazine, Visage, Ludus, Howard Devoto, The Angel Brothers
Website Dave Formula's official MySpace site
wire-sound: Dave Formula

Dave Formula, (born David Tomlinson[1] 11 August 1946, Whalley Range, Manchester, England[2]), is an English keyboardist and film-soundtrack composer from Manchester, who played with the post-punk band Magazine and New Romantic ensemble Visage during the end of the 1970s and the beginning of the 1980s and in the "world music" band The Angel Brothers.

Biography

Early Years and St. Louis Union

He lived his early youth in Whalley Range, Manchester.[3]

He worked under the name of David Tomlinson and achieved some success back in the mid-sixties with the R and B blues/soul band St. Louis Union, including appearances on 'Top of the Pops' and in the film 'The Ghost goes gear' (featuring also the Spencer Davis Band); at the time he formed the group, worked as an apprentice television engineer.[2] Later he was a cabaret musician and before joining Magazine, he shared a flat with record producer Martin Hannett.

Magazine

Formula joined Magazine in 1978 after the departure of Bob Dickinson until the band's breakup in 1981. His multi-layered keyboard sounds, made with equipment such as the Yamaha CP70 electric grand piano, Hammond B-3, an ARP Odyssey, a Yamaha SS30 string synth and in later albums a Prophet 5, were a defining part of the band.

Magazine reformed in February 2009 with Dave Formula returning to play keyboards.

Visage

Formula joined New Romantic ensemble Visage with Magazine's McGeoch and Barry Adamson in 1978; he played on their first two albums, Visage and The Anvil. He left the ensemble in 1983 after having some differences with drummer Rusty Egan regarding the musical style of their third album.

Ludus

Formula joined Ludus by 1982. He was one of his last members. He played and wrote some songs which were released.[4]

The Angel Brothers

Whilst lecturing in popular music, Formula met up with Keith Angel, Dave Angel & Andy Seward which eventually led to him joining the "world music" band The Angel Brothers in 2003, playing on their two critically acclaimed albums "Punjab To Pit Top" and "Forbidden Fruit".

Design For Living

After his stint with Magazine, he formed part of a band called Design For Living.[5]

Solo Album

In January 2007 Formula began working on a solo album. Recording has been at his own Red Bird Studios. Entitled "Satellite Sweetheart" it features over 30 guest musicians. The list includes almost all the members of Magazine – Howard Devoto, Barry Adamson, John Doyle, John McGeoch (Posthumously) and Robin Simon as well singer/ songwriter Robert Wyatt, Swing Out Sister’s Corrine Drury, Dennis Rollins, Joel Purnell. The release was delayed due to the Magazine 2009 activity and the album was released in February 2010 on Wire Sound.[6] A video of the collaboration with Howard Devoto; "Via Sacra" is on YouTube [7]

Discography

For St. Louis Union, see Discography of St. Louis Union.
For Magazine, see Discography of Magazine (he didn't participate in the Shot By Both Sides debut single).
For Visage, see Visage discography.
  • Satellite Sweetheart album (release February 2010)

References

  1. 2.0 2.1 Manchester Beat – "St. Louis Union are tops", a newspaper from 1965
  2. Dave Formula interview Yeah, I grew up in Whalley Range Dave Formula
  3. Ludus – The Damage (booklet notes)
  4. "The Great Rock Discography", p. 492. Edited by M.C. Strong. Published by Giunti, 1998. ISBN 88-09-21522-2, ISBN 978-88-09-21522-1
  5. http://www.wire-sound.com/
  6. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pKosPhd2dI

External links

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