Tag: David A Stewart

A Beginner’s Guide To EURYTHMICS

Photo by Lewis Ziolek

Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart formed EURYTHMICS having left THE TOURISTS with whom they had two hits, a cover of Dusty Springfield’s ‘I Only Want To Be With You’ ‘So Good To Be Back Home Again’.

Romantically involved at the time, there had been creative frustration in THE TOURISTS as the main songwriter was guitarist Peet Coombes. But when THE TOURISTS split in 1980, so did Lennox and Stewart. However, they opted to continue working together. In line with their chosen name, EURYTHMICS reflected how the duo felt about being more European than exclusively British. Looking at first to Germany, although the Conny Plank produced debut album ‘In the Garden’ was not a success, the duo persevered.

With the advent of affordable synthesizers and home recording technology, Stewart had been taping ideas on a Portastudio of experiments with an EDP Wasp connected to a Caterpillar master keyboard and its Spider sequencer; it pointed to a new electronic direction for EURYTHMICS. To aid their cause, the duo secured a bank loan of £5000 for equipment including a TEAC 88 8 track tape recorder, Soundcraft Series 2 16 channel mixing desk for what was to become The Church Studios in London’s Crouch End.

Their breakthrough came in 1983 with ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)’, the title of track of their second album. A stark commentary on exploitation within the music industry, it ironically became a huge international hit. Among the instruments used were the Roland SH‑101, an Oberheim OB‑X and a Movement Mk1 drum computer; with a combination of analogue and digital percussion sounds plus a separate monitor to view the programmed drum patterns, the machine made a starring appearance in the iconic video. Meanwhile, Lennox premiered her striking androgynous orange haired persona.

By their third album ‘Touch’, EURYTHMICS had acquired a Roland Juno 60, Octave Plateau Voyetra 8 and Oberheim DMX while their studio now had a second‑hand 24‑track Soundcraft tape machine at its disposal. The lead single ‘Who’s That Girl?’ saw Lennox pushing boundaries in the perception of gender for its accompanying video. The ending saw her kissing herself in male and female roles while Stewart was depicted escorting a number of female pop celebrities including Cheryl Baker, Jay Aston, Kiki Dee, Hazel O’Connor, Kate Garner, future wife Siobhan Fahey and BANANARAMA members Sara Dallin, Keren Woodward and Jacquie O’Sullivan; but in another twist, there was an appearance from the gender bending starlet Marilyn.

But following their soundtrack to the film ‘1984’, EURYTHMICS moved away from being an electronic duo into a more conventional band format using more drums, brass and guitar with a revolving door of guest musicians on 1985’s ‘Be Yourself Tonight’. Inevitably the worldwide success and personal tensions took their toll and EURYTHMICS quietly split in 1990.

Lennox and Stewart reunited for the ‘Peace’ album in 1999 although the subsequent concert tour was spoiled by far too many acoustic versions of their hits. Aside from two songs included on the ‘Ultimate Collection’ in 2005, there has been no new EURYTHMICS music since. However in 2022, they performed together at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

While Lennox now concentrates on her activism and makes only occasional live appearances in support of good causes, Stewart undertook the EURYTHMICS Songbook tour in 2023 with Vanessa Amorosi, Rahh and his daughter Kaya Stewart taking turns on lead vocals.

Aside from their solo careers, during EURYTHMICS’ original tenure, Stewart was an in-demand producer and songwriting collaborator. Meanwhile Lennox worked with DAF’s Robert Görl on his first solo album ‘Night Full Of Tension’, helping with lyrics and contributing vocals as well as duetting with Al Green on a Stewart produced cover of ‘Put A Little Love In Your Heart’ for the 1988 film ‘Scrooged’. This Beginner’s Guide looks back at 20 tracks from the wider portfolio of the EURYTHMICS axis including productions, collaborations and co-writes with a restriction of one track per album.


THE TOURISTS So Good To Be Back Home (1980)

Written by Peet Coombes, the energetic and optimistic ‘So Good To Be Back Home’ proved that THE TOURISTS were not merely a new wave covers band and could have a hit with their own material. Annie Lennox now found grouped in with other charismatic front women like Debbie Harry, Chrissie Hynde and Hazel O’Connor but within the band itself, there was discontent and a split while Lennox and Stewart were no longer a couple.

Available on THE TOURISTS album ‘Greatest Hits’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.discogs.com/artist/291650-The-Tourists


EURYTHMICS Take Me To Your Heart (1981)

The debut EURYTHMICS album had the legendary Conny Plank producing while guest musicians included his fellow Germans Holger Czukay, Jaki Liebezeit, Robert Görl and Markus Stockhausen. While Lennox and Stewart were in transition with ‘Belinda’ sounding like THE TOURISTS, the KRAFTWERK influenced ‘Take Me To Your Heart’ pointed to a new synthier direction.

Available on EURYTHMICS album ‘In The Garden’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.eurythmics.com/


EURYTHMICS The Walk (1982)

With YAZOO setting the template for the soulful synthpop duo, EURYTHMICS saw a direction which could fit their new creative ethos. Overshadowed by the success of ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)’ and ‘Love Is A Stranger’, ‘The Walk’ was the moody forgotten single that was released prior. It was also issued as a proto-house interpretation retitled ‘Let’s Just Close Our Eyes’ for the 12” B-side of ‘Love Is A Stranger’.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.facebook.com/eurythmics/


EURYTHMICS Here Comes The Rain Again (1983)

The third EURYTHMICS album ‘Touch’ had been swiftly recorded and mixed in 3 weeks at The Church but the acquisition of a 24 track recorder allowed for more sophisticated sonic possibilities. One shining example was the divine opener ‘Here Comes The Rain Again’. Although essentially still a synthpop song, it boasted a string arrangement by future film composer Michael Kamen performed by the British Philharmonic Orchestra.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘Touch’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.instagram.com/eurythmicsmusic/


ROBERT GÖRL featuring ANNIE LENNOX Darling Don’t Leave Me (1984)

Annie Lennox had met Robert Görl when he played drums on ‘Belinda’ from ‘In The Garden’. After DAF split, his first solo long player ‘Night Full Of Tension’ featured Lennox’s vocal contributions on several tracks including a lead vocal on ‘Charlie Cat’. But the album’s highlight was probably ‘Darling Don’t Leave Me’, a passionate but fun duet that was also a wonderfully wiggly synthpop pleasure co-produced by Mike Hedges.

Available on the ROBERT GÖRL album ‘Night Full Of Tension’ via Mute Records

https://www.instagram.com/robertgoerl/


EURYTHMICS Sexcrime (1984)

Virgin Films had commissioned EURYTHMICS to compose a soundtrack for their dramatisation of the dystopian George Orwell novel ‘1984’. However, director Michael Radford was not a fan and arranged his own orchestral score. One of the songs from a mostly instrumental work, ‘Sexcrime’ was a doomy dance number making use of stuttering voice samples and vocoder. Despite being a Top5 UK single, it was dropped from the film.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘1984 (For the Love of Big Brother)’ via Virgin Records

https://www.discogs.com/artist/13911-Eurythmics


CHRIS N COSEY AND… Sweet Surprise II (1985)

By 1985, EURYTHMICS had entered their soul rock phase but they found time for a one-off collaboration with alternative synth couple Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti of THROBBING GRISTLE fame. Darkly swung at an almost funereal pace, the artful vocals from Lennox and Tutti on ‘Sweet Surprise II’ were mostly ad-libbed and played on their distinctive styles while Stewart sprayed blues guitar over Carter’s sparkling electronics.

Available on the CHRIS N COSEY AND… single ‘Sweet Surprise’ via https://cti.greedbag.com/buy/sweet-surprise-12/

http://chrisandcosey.com/


EURYTHMICS It’s Alright (1985)

Although ‘Be Yourself Tonight’ was notable for ‘There Must Be An Angel’ featuring Stevie Wonder on harmonica and the R&B stomp of ‘Sisters Are Doin’ It For Themselves’ with Aretha Franklin, EURYTHMICS had not completely left the electronic sound with which they found fame on ‘It’s Alright (Baby’s Coming Back)’. Despite this, the topline recalled the introductory fairground riff from Smokey Robinson’s ‘Tears Of A Clown’ which was co-written by Stevie Wonder.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘Be Yourself Tonight’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.facebook.com/davestewart/


FEARGAL SHARKEY A Good Heart (1985)

A No1 for THE UNDERTONES’ one-time lead vocalist, ‘A Good Heart’ was written by LONE JUSTICE’s Maria McKee about her relationship with musician Benmont Tench. Produced by Stewart, he embellished the track with his characteristic aesthetic using a number of EURYTHMICS sidemen. Perhaps not by coincidence, Fergal Sharkey followed this with the Tench-written ‘You Little Thief’ which was allegedly about McKee!

Available on the FEARGAL SHARKEY album ‘Feargal Sharkey’ via Virgin Records

https://x.com/Feargal_Sharkey


EURYTHMICS When Tomorrow Comes (1986)

Recorded in Paris and near Cologne, ‘Revenge’ continued further into an AOR rock direction as EURYTHMICS used a smaller pool of musicians including Clem Burke on drums, Patrick Seymour on keyboards; the latter co-wrote ‘When Tomorrow Comes’, the first single which embraced a more band-oriented style verging on Bruce Springsteen, complete with a Clarence Clemons styled sax break from Jimmy Zavala.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘Revenge’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.instagram.com/davestewarteurythmics/


ALISON MOYET Is This Love? (1986)

Alison Moyet was working with Jimmy Iovine and it was suggested that she co-wrote with Stewart. He came up with a melodic idea that then she wrote words to. The end result was ‘Is This Love?’; however he wanted to be credited under a pseudonym Jean Guiot. Released at the same time as ‘Thorn In My Side’, while both hit the UK Top5, it was ‘Is This Love’ that did better reaching No3!

Available on the ALISON MOYET album ‘Raindancing’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.alisonmoyetmusic.com/


THE LOVER SPEAKS I Close My Eyes & Count To Ten (1987)

Comprising of David Freeman and Joseph Hughes, THE LOVER SPEAKS were signed to Stewart’s publishing company Anxious. In support of their Jimmy Iovine produced debut album, they opened for EURYTHMICS on their ‘Revenge’ tour where a standout song was ‘No More I Love You’s’. Stewart produced a standalone cover of ‘I Close My Eyes & Count To Ten’ which played to the duo’s Scott Walker aspirations despite his reservations.

Available on THE LOVER SPEAKS album ‘The Lover Speaks’ via Cherry Pop

https://www.cherryred.co.uk/the-lover-speaks-expanded-edition


EURYTHMICS You Have Placed A Chill In My Heart (1987)

‘Savage’ saw EURYTHMICS return to a starker electronic sound after the mainstream MTV friendly blow out. Driven by a drum machine, synth and Synclavier programming, ‘You Have Placed A Chill In My Heart’ saw Lennox reflect on the drive to leave a toxic relationship where affection was not reciprocated. However the B-side was an acoustic version and pointed to how EURYTHMICS would later perform many of their hits on the ‘Peace’ tour.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘Savage’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.instagram.com/officialannielennox


EURYTHMICS Don’t Ask Me Why (1989)

Despite the ‘We Too Are One’ parent album title, a rift had developed between Lennox and Stewart; its heartbreaking second single ‘Don’t Ask Me Why’ signalled poignantly in song that this first phase of their working relationship was over. With echoes of ‘Here Comes The Rain Again’, the emotive resignation was summed up by closing refrains of “I don’t love you anymore…” – EURYTHMICS were over…for now.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘We Too Are One’ via Sony BMG Music

https://www.davestewartent.com/


DAVID A STEWART featuring CANDY DULFER Lily Was Here (1989)

Saxophonist Candy Dulfer had been championed by Madonna and Prince; this slice of smooth jazz elevator music for the Dutch movie ‘De Kassière’ (known in English as ‘Lily Was Here’) was recorded with Stewart as a one-take instrumental jam. Beginning with a call-and-response guitar and sax section before a slinky improvised solo from Dulfer, it was a surprise UK Top10 hit although the track had already been a No1 in The Netherlands.

Available on the soundtrack album ‘Lily Was Here’ via Anxious / RCA

https://candydulfer.nl/


SHAKESPEARS SISTER Stay (1991)

Co-written by Stewart (again as Jean Guiot), with his then-wife Siobhan Fahey and Marcella Detroit for SHAKESPEARS SISTER, ‘Stay’ was inspired by the 1953 Sci-Fi film ‘Cat-Women Of The Moon’. He had suggested writing a ballad featuring Detroit on lead vocals and saw her end the song in whistle register sparring against Fahey’s gothic deadpan, capturing a battle of two mysterious worlds that went to No1.

Available on the SHAKESPEARS SISTER album ‘Hormonally Yours’ via London Records

http://www.shakespearssisterofficial.com/


ANNIE LENNOX Precious (1992)

Following the informal dissolution of EURYTHMICS, Lennox took some time away from the music industry, during which she gave birth to her eldest daughter. Now writing alone for her debut solo record, the Stephen Lipson produced ‘Precious’ was a funky song featuring a biting bass groove and key change passionately celebrating the joys of motherhood. The parent album ‘Diva’ sold more than any of EURYTHMICS’ studio albums.

Available on the ANNIE LENNOX album ‘The Annie Lennox Collection’ via Sony Music

https://www.annielennox.com/


VEGAS Walk Into The Wind (1993)

VEGAS was the surprise collaboration between Stewart and Terry Hall of THE SPECIALS, FUN BOY THREE and THE COLOURFIELD. The highlight of their only album was the cinematic electro-reggae of ‘Walk Into The Wind’. “You have to learn to love by loving” sang Hall in this cynical love song that also featured a vocal cameo from Siobhan Fahey. Haunting and beautiful, this was Stewart’s song best outside of EURYTHMICS.

Available on the VEGAS album ‘Possessed’ via RCA

https://www.discogs.com/artist/1343740-Vegas-8


ANNIE LENNOX No More I Love You’s (1995)

Originally by THE LOVER SPEAKS who supported EURYTHMICS in 1986, Lennox felt ‘No More I Love You’s’ “should have touched the consciousness of the nation” and deserved better than its No58 chart position. So she wanted to give this poetic breakup song another chance. With slightly altered lyrics, it was the lead single from her covers album ‘Medusa’ which also featured THE BLUE NILE’s ‘The Downtown Lights’.

Available on the ANNIE LENNOX album ‘Medusa’ via Sony Music

https://www.facebook.com/annielennox/


EURYTHMICS I’ve Got A Life (2005)

To date, the final EURYTHMICS single, ‘I’ve Got A Life’ was something of a reflective “return to roots” check for Lennox and Stewart as a building electronic soul number with uplifting lyrics of empowerment in the face of middle age. There was even a video featuring Lennox and Stewart revisiting their dark suited ‘Sweet Dreams’ image of 1983 while the pair also appeared in front of a towering Moog modular stack.

Available on the EURYTHMICS album ‘Ultimate Collection’ via RCA

https://bsky.app/profile/eurythmics.bsky.social


Text by Chi Ming Lai
17th May 2025

The Walk: The Legacy of EURYTHMICS

Photo by Lewis Ziolek

Between April and October this year, sees the vinyl reissues of eight EURYTHMICS albums ‘In The Garden’, ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)’, ‘Touch’, ‘Be Yourself Tonight’, ‘Revenge’, ‘We Too Are One’, ‘Savage’ and ‘Peace’ and gives a welcome chance to look back retrospectively over the duo’s musical output.

Although it didn’t trouble the charts, the debut 1981 album ‘In The Garden’ provided a necessary bridging point between Annie Lennox and David A Stewart’s output as New Wave act THE TOURISTS and their newly convened status as a duo.

Co-produced by the legendary Conny Plank in his Cologne studio and featuring BLONDIE drummer Clem Burke, Robert Görl from DAF, and CAN’s Holger Czukay and Jaki Liebezeit, the album swings between the guitar-driven post-punk sound of ‘English Summer’ and the more rocky ‘Belinda’ which would foreshadow some the band’s more rockist leanings latterly in their career.

Due to Plank’s top notch production and Lennox’s effortlessly beautiful vocals throughout, the album hasn’t dated too badly and if never listened to before certainly doesn’t hint at the stellar jump with their subsequent offering ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)’.

Recorded in their newly fitted out 8 track home studio in Chalk Farm London purchased using a £5,000 bank loan, ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)’ would have come as a complete curveball if as a fan you’d latched onto the more pastoral guitar-based sound of ‘In The Garden’; almost purely electronic in conception and with the backbeat of Stewart’s Movement Drum Computer (which puts in a cameo appearance in the iconic ‘Sweet Dreams’ promo video).

Also significant for the album was the use of Dave Stewart’s EDP Wasp synth which (according to Synth Guru Paul Wiffen) was often recorded using a microphone placed over the in-built speaker in order to capture the sound of the resonating body of the synth’s case alongside its source sound.

With YAZOO’s debut ‘Upstairs at Eric’s’ opening the public’s perception to cold electronics with an accompaniment of soulful vocals, the timing of ‘Sweet Dreams’ couldn’t have been better. There are obvious echoes of Clarke and Moyet in tracks such as ‘Wrap it Up’, but the addition of Stewart’s guitar and the bigger multi-layered vocal production meant that they don’t come across as mere pastiches.

Musically one of the things that becomes apparent on ‘Sweet Dreams’ is Stewart’s knack at creating some truly wonderful synth basslines, often using a Roland SH09. From ‘I Could Give You (A Mirror)’ to the ‘The Walk’, these perfectly counterpointed Lennox’s glacial vocals and set a template for what was to follow with album number three ‘Touch’.

‘Touch’ is often overlooked when it comes to people’s go-to classic electronic albums; this could possibly be down to the huge success of the Calypso-themed ‘Right By Your Side’ which at the end of the day really wasn’t representative of the album as a whole. This is a shame, because ‘Touch’ is arguably the band’s finest hour, tracks such as the singles ‘Who’s That Girl?’ and ‘Here Comes The Rain Again’ are matched by album cuts ‘Regrets’ and ‘No Fear, No Hate, No Pain (No Broken Hearts).

‘The First Cut’ echoes YAZOO’s ‘Sweet Thing’ but brings in some live guitar and fretless/slapped bass to the party; whilst the epic 7 and a half minute closing ‘Paint A Rumour’ takes the listener on a spellbinding musical journey incorporating blippy Kraftwerkian electro pop, dub brass and BLANCMANGE-like Middle Eastern synth elements along the way. Unfortunately the band were never truly this electronic again, with the remix/mini-LP ‘Touch Dance’ eventually giving way to 1985’s ‘Be Yourself Tonight’…….

The next two albums ‘Be Yourself Tonight’ and ‘Revenge’ continued to give the band some huge chart hits; ‘There Must Be An Angel’ was the band’s only UK No1 single from the former, but tracks which had the potential to echo EURYTHMICS earlier electronic work (including the Linn Drum-driven ‘I Love You Like A Ball & Chain’) seemed to become an excuse for Stewart to wig-out with a show-off guitar solo.

Songs such as ‘Thorn in My Side’ started to showcase EURYTHMICS steady mutation (and some would say decline) into a US radio-friendly guitar act with most of their electronic elements gradually being exorcised from the bands’ production. In some ways EURYTHMICS followed a similar career trajectory to SIMPLE MINDS with stadium rock leanings starting to filter into their recorded output and before you knew it, songs appeared to be written specifically for large arenas.

With the next couple of albums there were still a few glimmers of experimentation, THE ART OF NOISE-aping, Fairlight-driven ‘Beethoven (I Love To Listen)’ from ‘Savage’ was an unexpected single choice, but stalled at number 25 in the UK charts.

The highlight of 1989’s ‘We Too Are One’ (with its striking cover photo by Jean Baptiste Mondino) was the melancholic break-up single ‘Don’t Ask Me Why’ which in many ways echoed ‘Here Comes The Rain Again’, especially with its use of pizzicato strings.

After a ten year hiatus, ‘Peace’ saw Lennox and Stewart reconvene with the understated ‘I Saved the World Today’ giving them some chart success, only narrowly missing the UK top 10. With its almost PORTISHEAD retro-style textures, it went some way in distancing the band from its more bombastic productions.

By overviewing the band’s output, the listener could cynically surmise that EURYTHMICS jumped on the Synth Britannia bandwagon; riding on YAZOO’s coat tails by adopting an electronic aesthetic and then slowly revealing themselves as the rock band that they actually were all along (underneath all of the production surface). That would however do a huge disservice to their early work, which includes some of the VERY best electronic pop tracks from that era.

Interestingly, Dave Stewart confirmed the spiritual link with YAZOO by eventually going on to work with Alison Moyet, co-writing / co-producing ‘Is This Love?’ under the pseudonym Jean Guiot (used to avoid problems with his music publishers).

The mid-period and latter albums (although in many places giving the band deserved huge commercial success) do however chart EURYTHMICS slow transformation into an entirely different musical beast altogether. For those that bemoan the way DEPECHE MODE now deliver their songs live, should take some solace in that Lennox and Stewart committed far worse musical crimes to some of their iconic synth pop hits than Gahan and co are doing now…

Jean-Baptiste Mondino

So in terms of influence, what is there left to say about EURYTHMICS legacy? Their nearest contemporaries now would be GOLDFRAPP and PURITY RING; acts that use that male synth / female vocal dynamic.

Completists could possibly complain that the soundtrack to the motion picture ‘1984 (For The Love Of Big Brother)’ and ‘Touch Dance’ albums should have made the set up to a round 10, but for most, ‘Sweet Dreams’ and ‘Touch’ still remain the essential albums to own, with ‘In The Garden’ being seen as more of an interesting curio in the band’s back catalogue.


‘In The Garden’, ‘Sweet Dreams’, ‘Touch’, ‘Be Yourself Tonight’, ‘Revenge’, ‘Savage’, ‘We Too Are One’ and ‘Peace’ are reissued by Sony Music in three stages through 2018

http://www.eurythmics.com

https://www.facebook.com/eurythmics/


Text by Paul Boddy
16th April 2018