When they recorded the follow-up to their surprisingly successful debut, the members of
Visage appeared to be dealing from a position of strength. But the dance club-fueled, style-obsessed
new romantic movement that had propelled the group to success in England was already crumbling, and frontman
Steve Strange had begun to take his role as the movement's figurehead a little too seriously.
The Anvil, rumored to be the subject of a multi-million dollar feature film (a project that never materialized), emphasizes
Strange's penchant for melancholy and melodrama. Where the band's debut undercut such pretensions with humorous tracks like the twangy
"Malpaso Man," only one tune here --
"Night Train," with a rubbery bassline and blasts of brass backing a tongue-in-cheek tale of intrigue -- dares to take liberties with
Visage's moody image. Still, with backing from the same core of
post-punk all-stars (
Ultravox's
Midge Ure -- who co-produced the album -- and violinist
Billy Currie, as well as
Magazine keyboardist
Dave Formula),
Strange and drummer
Rusty Egan sound just as good as before, and despite once again closing an album with a forgettable instrumental (
"Whispers"), almost all the band's efforts on
The Anvil are extremely well-crafted
synth pop. Two, in fact, are essential
new wave artifacts. The title track takes a despairing look around clubland, setting
Strange's best-ever lyric to a grim parody of a hit in the meat market
disco it describes; it suggests he'd become disillusioned with the scene that had spawned
Visage.
"The Damned Don't Cry," meanwhile, is even better, a ghostly groove that comes closer than anyone would have thought possible to recapturing the haunted magnificence of
"Fade to Grey," the band's signature hit. [
Cherry Pop's 2008 reissue included six bonus remixes.] ~ Dan LeRoy