Eurythmics - 20 Years Ago

Written by Eric Olsen
Published August 15, 2003

The rather stark photo on the cover of Annie Lennox's new CD Bare reminds us she isn't getting any younger, but it's still hard to believe the Eurythmics' (Lennox's duo with Dave Stewart) best two albums, Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) and Touch, were both released twenty years ago.

In the summer of '76 Dave Stewart met an alluring former Royal Academy of Music student, Annie Lennox, waitressing at a London restaurant, and they became musical and romantic partners. The pair joined with singer-songwriter-guitarist Pete Coombes to form the Catch in '77, which by '79 had evolved into the Tourists. The Tourists put out three semi-psychedelic power-pop albums including the excellent Reality Effect, highlighted by Lennox's spirited vocals on an inspired cover of the Dusty Springfield hit "I Only Want To Be With You."

The Tourists went their separate ways in '80, and Stewart and Lennox became Eurythmics. They recorded their first album, In the Garden, in Germany with Conny Plank producing and members of D.A.F. and Can guesting.

"I started recording on my own in my bedroom on a four-track, and then I moved up to eight-track ... I quickly got into making sounds and recording them without worrying about whether they were right or wrong. It just seemed natural to record with Annie: the two of us were obsessed with each other to the point of folie a deux, and often it was just the two of us recording alone," stewart told me in an interview.

Though the pair's romantic relationship was over by the time of the second Eurythmics album, '83's breakthrough Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This), their amazing musical relationship (co-writing virtually all of the Eurythmics' songs together) lasted until the end of the decade, generating seven smash albums (30 million albums sold worldwide), over 20 U.K. charting singles, and ten U.S. Top 40 singles.

Sweet Dreams features the synth-pop classic title track, and the jittery,
dreamy "Love Is a Stranger"; these and virtually all subsequent hits took advantage of the burgeoning video revolution with dramatic clips scripted by Stewart displaying Lennox in a series of indelible roles ranging from male gigolo to bouncing-bodiced gothic heroine (neatly symbolizing her equally broad range of vocal styles: icy Julie Andrews-clean soprano to toasty gutbucket soul).

Late-'83 saw the release of the exceptional Touch album, No. 1 in the U.K. and platinum in the U.S. The most endearing of the duo's albums, Touch has grand moody techno-pop in the form of "Here Comes the Rain Again" and the touchingly vulnerable "Who's That Girl," and the ebullient calypso-inflected brilliance of "Right By Your Side."

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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Eurythmics - 20 Years Ago
Published: August 15, 2003
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Alternative Rock, Music: Electronica, Music: Pop
Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments

#1 — August 15, 2003 @ 17:21PM — Bill Sherman [URL]

I loved the Tourists' albums and remember feeling initially disappointed by the early sparer Eurythmics' albums. By the time they released Be Yourself Tonight (their most pure pop elpee), I was on board with Dave and Annie. . .

#2 — August 15, 2003 @ 17:26PM — Eric Olsen

I loved the Tourists too and couldn't believe "Sweet Dreams" was the same people, but I loved the technopop sound from the beginning.

#3 — August 17, 2003 @ 20:22PM — Natalie Davis [URL]

Count me in as another Tourists and Eurythmics nut. The duo was amazing, and I love Annie's solo stuff. Lennox may be older -- and, as the heartbreaking Bare shows, wiser -- but she is still one gorgeous diva.

#4 — August 17, 2003 @ 20:45PM — Eric Olsen

I now see I didn't say anything about her solo stuff, much of which I like very much also - haven't heard the new one yet. You seem to hear all, Nat.

#5 — August 17, 2003 @ 20:56PM — Natalie Davis [URL]

It's my job.

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