The Helicopters
For other uses, see Helicopter (disambiguation).
The Helicopters were a South African pop rock band active in the 1980s. They formed in 1981 in Vereeniging and were stylistically similar to the new wave bands Duran Duran and A Flock of Seagulls.[1] Benjy Mudie signed the group to Warner Bros. Records in 1984, where they released one album and several singles; in 1987 they moved to Epic and released a second full-length before disbanding. The band scored several hit singles in South Africa, including "Mysteries and Jealousy".[2][3] The group was a popular concert draw, able to fill stadiums in its home country.[4]
After the band's breakup, lead singer Bernard Binns moved to England, where he has released several solo albums.[5]
Discography
- Albums
- Love Attack (1985, WEA)
- Mysteries and Jealousies — 4:15
- In Love — 3:32
- Don't Vanish, It's a Love Attack — 3:33
- Night Vision Girl — 3:46
- Say That Again — 2:56
- Come and Dance — 3:26
- Kissing For Pleasure — 3:40
- Only For You — 4:05
- Miles Apart — 4:45
- Chased — 3:11
- In the Flesh (1987, Epic)
- Television — 6:14
- Western Skies — 4:46
- In the Flesh — 4:43
- Hi-Tech Man — 3:42
- Whisper Your Secret — 4:34
- Terror in the Attic — 5:27
- Yesterday Was Never — 4:16
- Television Part II — 1:04
- What Affair EP (1988, Gallo)
- The Best of The Helicopters (2002, RetroFresh)
- Singles
- "Flying High" (Klingel, 1981)
- "Mysteries and Jealousy" (Warner, 1984)
- "Miles and Miles Apart" (Warner, 1984)
- "Kissing For Pleasure" (Warner, 1984)
- "Only for You" (Warner, 1985)
- "Come and Dance" (Warner, 1985)
- "I Wanna Live in Hollywood" (Warner, 1986)
- "Whisper Your Secret" (1987, Epic)
Members
- Bernard Binns
- Bert Askes
- John Mason
- Andre van den Heever
- Piet Koen
- Franco de Nuzzo
- Nick Matzukis
- Macjek Scheibel
- Paul Hughes
- Martin Ledger
- Alistair Broadhead
- Carole Welsh
- John McKeen
- Pete Delahaye
- Rob Lax
- SailorC
References
- ↑ Amuzine CD of the Week Archives. (Wayback Machine cache.) Accessed 25 January 2010.
- ↑ Interview with Bernard Binns. Accessed 11 May 2007.
- 1 2 Chivers, G; Jasiukowicz, T (1994). History of Contemporary Music of South Africa Part 1. Toga Publishing. p. 53. ISBN 0-620-18121-4.
- ↑ Backbites. The Independent, 13 May 1995.
- ↑ Nils van der Linden, "An Outsider Looking In". iafrica.com, 18 September 2007.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.