Men Without Hats
(Read all about Men Without Hats after the video)
Men Without Hats is a Canadian new wave/synthpop group, originally from Montreal, Quebec. Their music is characterized by the distinctive baritone voice of their American-born Canadian lead singer Ivan Doroschuk, as well as their elaborate use of synthesizers and electronic processing. They achieved their greatest popularity in the 1980s with "The Safety Dance", a worldwide Top Ten hit (#3 in the United States) and "Pop Goes the World". After a hiatus for most of the 1990s and 2000s, Doroschuk reformed the band in 2010, and released Love in the Age of War (2012). The reformed group, based in Vancouver, has continued to perform, including a European tour in 2015 and Australia in 2016.[1]
History
Early days
Men
Without Hats was founded in Montreal in 1977 as a punk rock band
featuring Ivan Doroschuk (vocals), Pete Seabrooke (guitar), Dave Hill
(bass) and John Gurin (drums). Ivan had previously sung in a band called
Wave 21 with Jérémie Arrobas (vocals, keyboards), Stefan Doroschuk
(bass) and Colin Doroschuk (guitar). In 1979, Wave 21 renamed themselves
to Men Without Hats, after the punk band.
The Doroschuk brothers, all three of whom are classically trained musicians, were born in Champaign, Illinois while their Canadian father was earning a doctoral degree.[2] They moved to Montreal as young children when their parents returned to Canada.[2]
The group's name came about because the brothers, following a
self-described principle of "style before comfort," refused to wear hats
during Montreal's cold winters, calling themselves "the men without
hats."[3]
In addition to the Doroschuks, the group has also included numerous
additional members and guest or touring performers, many of whom quickly
came and left during the first five years. Frontman and songwriter Ivan
Doroschuk was the only constant member, while Stefan and Colin
Doroschuk as well as Arrobas remained as relatively steady members
through the early 1980s.[3]
Their first recording to be released was the 1980 EP Folk of the 80's.
At this point, the band had changed styles from punk to new wave and
officially consisted of Ivan (vocals, bass) and Arrobas (keyboards);
also appearing on the EP were auxiliary members Stefan Doroschuk (bass),
Roman Martyn (guitars), and Lynne Thibodeau (backing vocals).[citation needed]
Shortly after the release of the debut EP, Martyn left and was
replaced by Jean-Marc Pisapia, who stayed only a short time before
leaving, and later founded The Box.[3] Pisapia was replaced briefly by Tracy Howe, who also left in short order, co-founding Rational Youth shortly after his departure.[3] Arrobas voluntarily left the group just before the recording of their next album.[3]
International success
Ivan
and Stefan (now promoted to full membership status) subsequently
recruited Allan McCarthy (percussion, electronics) to join the group,
and recorded their 1982 full-length debut album Rhythm of Youth. The trio subsequently enjoyed a hit in Canada with "The Safety Dance", which peaked at No. 11 in May 1983. The song soon charted in the United States, spending four weeks at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was a major hit in the UK Singles Chart, peaking at No. 6.[4]
The song also reached the top ten in various other European countries,
peaked at No. 2 in New Zealand, and was rated the 11th biggest-selling
single of the year in South Africa in 1983.
Adding Colin (who had guested on Rhythm of Youth) as an official fourth member, Men Without Hats released the album Folk of the 80's (Part III)
in 1984. While lead single "Where Do The Boys Go?" was a top 40 hit in
Canada, the album failed to match the international success of Rhythm of Youth.
In 1985, the band released the EP Freeways,
consisting of multiple (and multi-lingual) remixes of one of their
earliest efforts, Ivan and Arrobas's 1980 song "Freeways" (which had
previously been released as a B-side in 1982). To support the EP, the
group undertook a related tour, footage from which would later (in 2006)
be released on DVD as Live Hats.
Reshuffling the line-up again, the band released the album Pop Goes the World in 1987 with Ivan, Stefan, and Lenny Pinkas. The song "Pop Goes the World"
reached No. 20 on the Billboard Hot 100, No. 2 on the Canadian Singles
Chart, and was No. 1 in Austria. The song was later featured in the 1987
film Date with an Angel, and became the fifteenth biggest selling single in South Africa for 1988.
The group's next album, The Adventures of Women & Men Without Hate in the 21st Century, released in 1989, featured a cover of ABBA's song "SOS." The musicians on the album were essentially the touring band from Pop Goes the World,
which included Bruce Murphy on keyboards and guitar, Marika Tjelios on
bass, Richard Sampson on drums, and Heidi Garcia on vocals and
keyboards.
The 1991 album Sideways,
dominated by electric guitars instead of keyboards, revealed a
dramatically different sound for the band, based in part on Ivan's
exposure to Nirvana.[5] According to Ivan, "We had a contractual obligation for one more album with Polygram
so I said to them, we'll take half of the allotted budget if they would
allow us to do the record I wanted... so we did this guitar-oriented
record but Polygram were horrified. 'Men Without Hats without keyboards
aren't going to work,' they claimed and that was the end of the story
with Polygram."[5] The line-up on the album was Ivan on vocals, Felix Matte on lead guitar, John Kastner on rhythm guitar, Stefan on bass, Michel Langevin on drums and Colin on keyboards.
The group officially disbanded in 1993,[6] after the career setback of failing to attract another American label as a result of the negative reception to Sideways. The band's final concert was a benefit to support a women's shelter in Montreal,[citation needed] with guitarist Denis D'Amour replacing Matte and Kastner, who both had left the band in 1992.[citation needed]
Projects during the 1990s and 2000s
After
disbanding, lead singer Ivan and keyboardist Bruce Murphy went on to
record several demos in 1993 for a concept album tentatively titled UFO's are Real, which was never released.[7] Ivan recorded and released a solo album, The Spell,
in 1997. Former band member Allan McCarthy died due to AIDS
complications in 1995. Under the name MacKenzie-Parker Gang, Stefan and
Mack MacKenzie (of the Canadian alt-country band Three O'Clock Train) released Ride for Glory (1999), a post-modern Western-themed album.
After a ten-year hiatus, No Hats Beyond This Point
was released in November 2003, returning the band to their early new
wave style. In interviews around the time of the release, the band had
mentioned a tour to support the release and a box set dedicated to the
band's early years, which was to include the Folk of the 80's and Freeways
EPs, the band's first two albums, a concert that was televised in 1985,
unreleased demos and remixes of "The Safety Dance". None of this came
to fruition, though, and the band split up once again in early 2004.
This was the end of Stefan's involvement with Men Without Hats.
Colin turned his attention to opera and classical music, becoming
Artistic Director of Montreal's Northern Opera Theatre and
composer-in-residence at British Columbia's Ballet Victoria.[8] His works include the opera Evangeline, based on a Longfellow poem, first performed in 2014.[8]
In 2006, the Trilogie Musique label released a DVD called Live Hats,
featuring a concert at Le Spectrum theater in Montreal on August 8,
1985 that had been televised that year. The release was unauthorized by
the band, and it was pulled out of print shortly after.
Reformation in 2010
Ivan
reformed Men Without Hats in 2010 as the frontman and lead vocalist, no
longer playing keyboards, and joined by backup musicians that he hired
through auditions.[9]
The Ivan-fronted band debuted on September 24, 2010, at the Rifflandia
Music Festival in Victoria, British Columbia, performing ten songs from
the Men Without Hats back catalogue. The revived band was described by
the Austin American-Statesman as "simply singer Ivan Doroschuk and some hired guns"[10] and by Stefan as a "tribute band."[11]
Despite these initial reactions, the band's "Dance If You Want Tour"
opened in March 2011 with a well-attended and positively received
performance at Austin's South by Southwest event.[12]
In June 2011, Ivan told a festival audience that the group would record a new studio album, announcing the news at North by Northeast in Toronto. The album was originally to be titled Folk of the 80's (Part IV), but in March 2012, the band posted on Facebook that it would instead be called Love in the Age of War, and would be released that summer.
Love in the Age of War, produced by Dave Ogilvie of Skinny Puppy,
was released in June 2012 and received mostly favorable reviews.
Ogilvie and Doroschuk set out to faithfully reproduce and update the
group's classic synthesizer sound of the 1980s, intentionally making a
follow-up album to 1982's Rhythm of Youth.[13]
According to Doroschuk, they pretended to be "working on a 24-track
machine, for example, and not the virtual, infinity-plus-one number of
tracks that you can get today. We went out and got the old synths that
we used back then... the identical instruments, so it wasn't soft
synths, it was really real synthesizers."[13]
By 2011, Doroschuk had taken on three of his touring musicians as full band members: James Love
on guitar and backing vocals, Louise (Lou) Dawson on keyboards and
backing vocals, and Mark Olexson on keyboards and backing vocals, all of
whom performed on Love in the Age of War.[5][14]
Colin Doroschuk also appeared on the album as a vocalist. After the
album was recorded, Doroschuk doubled down on the band's
synthesizer-heavy sound by replacing Olexson with Vancouver musician
Rachel Ashmore, on keyboards and backing vocals, as the group's second
synthesist.[14][9]
Men Without Hats again toured the United States in 2013, as part of
the 1980s-themed "Regeneration Tour," with contemporaries such as Howard Jones, Andy Bell of Erasure, and Berlin. The band's continuing activity has included tours in Europe in 2015 and 2016.[5][15]
As part of a "Totally '80s" show that toured Australia in July 2016,
Doroschuk performed as Men Without Hats without other band members,
"singing with the house band.... [to] set the stage for a proper visit
with the full band."[1] In October 2016, prior to a European tour, Sho Murray replaced Love as guitarist.[15][16]
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