Naked Eyes

Location:
LOS ANGELES, California, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Pop / New Wave
Site(s):
Label:
Oglio/Fontana
Type:
Major
Even in the midst of the latest retro 80s revival, it is no small thing to be one of the rare acts whose music still gets consistent radio airplay. Naked Eyes is just such a band. Fans of their warm brand of synthesized pop, which comprised two albums and two huge 80s hits (Always Something There To Remind Me and Promises, Promises), cant help but launch into song at the sound of their immediately recognizable melodies.



By the time Naked Eyes formed, Pete Byrne and Rob Fisher had gone around on the Bath pub-n-club circuit while punk, and new wave were dominating the music scene, but nothing had clicked for them long term. They had a brief run with Neon from 1980-81, a band that also featured future Tears for Fears members Roland Orzabal, Curt Smith and Neil Taylor yet that essential something remained elusive.



On their own again in 82, Byrne and Fisher opted to keep things simple: Synths, and a two-man format. Early demos (one of which was their lush cover of the Burt Bacharach/Hal David classic Always Something There to Remind Me) led to a major label record deal and producer Tony Mansfield, who put the shine on their 1983 debut album, Burning Bridges (tweaked slightly and renamed Naked Eyes for America), which they recorded at the legendary Abbey Road Studios.



The release of Always proved successful around the world, and was rapidly followed up with Promises, Promises and When The Lights Go Out, proving that the band had more than just one good tune in them.



Pressure from the record label for a follow-up kept the band off the road, and in the studio and Naked Eyes recorded their second album, Fuel for the Fire (clearly the band preferred albums with heat-themed titles), but it failed to continue their momentum, (the quirky single, (What) In the Name of Love, (produced by Arthur Baker,) only reached 39 on the Billboard Top 40). Saddled with difficult second album woes brought about by changes at the record label, Byrne and Fisher called it quits.



Yet thats been far from the last word heard from Naked Eyes. Relocated to California, Byrne has kept their flame alight in the intervening years, assembling Everything And More, an album which includes all of the bands 12-inch dance remixes including a version of Promises, Promises which features Madonna. Byrne has also made a name for himself by working with Stevie Wonder, Brad Buxer (musical director for Michael Jackson) and as a producer and songwriter for among others The Olsen Twins. And he has released both a solo EP and full-length album of original tunes (2000s The World in Which We Love and 2001s The Real Illusion). Byrne and Fisher, who had remained close since the band breakup, reunited in early 1999 to work on new tracks, but Fisher died suddenly late in the year after complications following stomach surgery.



Since then, Byrne had been mulling over the idea of putting a new Naked Eyes together, and in 2005 finally put that idea in motion. Having recruited some of the most talented players in Los Angeles, Byrne has written several dazzling new songs and has headlined many sold-out shows across the U.S. Not that Naked Eyes will stop there. 2007 saw the release of a live concert DVD and the Naked Eyes "stripped" album, "Fumbling With The Covers." But there's more, Byrne is in the studio recording the next Naked Eyes electric album "Piccadilly" and a national tour will roll out this summer.



By Randee Dawn



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