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Premier Hits

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Download links and information about Premier Hits by Gary Numan. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Electronica, Rock, New Wave, Alternative, Classical genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:16:09 minutes.

Artist: Gary Numan
Release date: 1997
Genre: Electronica, Rock, New Wave, Alternative, Classical
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:16:09
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Cars (Premier Mix) 3:39
2. I Die: You Die 3:42
3. Are 'Friends' Electric? (featuring Tubeway Army) 5:23
4. Down in the Park (featuring Tubeway Army) 4:23
5. We Are Glass 4:46
6. Bombers (Remastered) (featuring Tubeway Army) 3:53
7. We Take Mystery (To Bed) [Edit] 3:42
8. She's Got Claws 4:56
9. Complex 3:11
10. Music for Chameleons (Edit) 3:40
11. That's Too Bad (Remastered) (featuring Tubeway Army) 3:20
12. This Wreckage 5:23
13. Warriors 4:08
14. Love Needs No Disguise (featuring Dramatis) 4:38
15. White Boys and Heroes (Edit) 3:36
16. Sister Surprise (Single Mix) 5:01
17. Stormtrooper in Drag (featuring Paul Gardiner) 4:53
18. Cars 3:55

Details

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In the U.S., Gary Numan is remembered as a one-hit-wonder, while back home in his native England, he continued to crank out hit after hit and became a superstar in the process. His icy space-age persona and sound may be forever associated with early-80's British new wave (Flock of Seagulls, early Duran Duran, etc.), but he was the originator, and today seems pretty darned original. Numan was a scholar of the David Bowie Ziggy Stardust-era, and used Bowie's space alien approach as a starting point. While retaining his futuristic lyrics, Gary stripped Ziggy's sound free of the distorted guitar riffing and posturing, and replaced it with clinical synthesizers and a standoffish stage persona. His music also gives off a paranoid vibe at times, as evidenced on the hits "I Die: You Die" and "Are 'Friends' Electric?" But Numan's songs can also sedate you ("Down in the Park"), while other times sneak up on you (the unexpected punk rocker "Bombers"). And of course there's his sole U.S. hit, "Cars," which sounds like a not so distant ancestor to fellow futuristic weirdos Devo.