Are "Friends" Electric?
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"Are 'Friends' Electric?" is a 1979 song by the English new wave band Tubeway Army. Taken from their album Replicas, it was released as a single in May 1979 and reached number one in the UK Singles Chart, staying there for four weeks.<ref name="uk"/> It was written and produced by Gary Numan, the band's frontman and lead vocalist. It was also the band's last single before breaking up.
Music and production
"Are 'Friends' Electric?" was originally written on an old out-of-tune pub piano. It was initially two different songs that were combined. Numan recorded it on a Polymoog synthesizer with conventional bass and drums.<ref name="How we made">Template:Cite news</ref>
The song features three different sections: a recurring verse with a synth riff in C and B flat, a recurring section with spoken word over slow arpeggiated seventh chords, and an instrumental break in F. The instrumentation is quite minimal: a conventional drum and bass guitar backing track, some additional heavily flanged guitar (particularly in the instrumental break), subdued vocals and, most prominently, Minimoog and Polymoog synthesisers. These synth parts include portamento background lines.
Numan stumbled upon synthesisers by accident. While intending to record a punk album, he noticed a Minimoog synthesiser that had been left in the studio.<ref name="How we made" /><ref>BBC documentary: Synth Britannia.</ref>
In a 2014 interview with The Guardian, Numan commented on the song's lyrics:<ref name="How we made" />
Release
"Are 'Friends' Electric?" was released as a limited-edition picture disc of 20,000 copies in May 1979.<ref>Gary Numan (R)evolution: The Autobiography Hachette 2020, chapter six: 1979</ref> The B-side of the single was a more rock-oriented number, "We Are So Fragile", which was performed on Numan's 1979 "Touring Principle" series of concerts and appears on the album Living Ornaments '79.
The single entered the lower reaches of the UK Singles Chart at a modest No. 71, steadily climbing to No. 1 at the end of June and remaining at that position for four consecutive weeks.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Reception
Despite being over five minutes long and possessing, in the words of its composer, "no recognisable hook-line whatsoever",<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> the single topped the UK charts in mid-1979. Whilst the track's distinctive sound stood out at the time, sales also benefited from the record company's use of a picture disc and Numan's striking, "robotic" performance on the TV shows The Old Grey Whistle Test and Top of the Pops.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Writing for Smash Hits in 1979, Cliff White described the song as "a dark, threatening wall of synthesised sound" which "throbbed ominously behind a gloomy song of paranoia and loneliness".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> White went on to say it was "gripping stuff, but cheerful it isn't".
The song has retrospectively been described as "an atmospheric, almost frigid-sounding monologue spliced over creepy after-dark synthesizers" that "had not a hook or chorus in sight".<ref>Peter Buckley (ed.) The Rough Guide to Rock, Rough Guides 2003</ref>
Live versions
"Are 'Friends' Electric?" has been a mainstay of Numan's concerts since its release and appears on all ten of his official live recordings to date. A semi-acoustic version appeared on the 2006 Jagged tour set list.
Track listing
Personnel
Tubeway Army
- Gary Numan – Minimoog and Polymoog synthesizers, guitar, vocals
- Paul Gardiner – bass guitar
- Jess Lidyard – drums
Production
- Gary Numan – production
Charts
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Weekly charts
| Chart (1979) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australia (Kent Music Report)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="aus79">Template:Cite web</ref> | 12 |
| US Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles (Billboard)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 5 |
Year-end charts
| Chart (1979) | Position |
|---|---|
| Australia (Kent Music Report)<ref name="aus79"/> | 85 |
| UK Singles (OCC)<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> | 7 |
Certifications
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Cover versions and sampling
The song was sampled by Richard X in a song titled We Don't Give a Damn About Our Friends as a mashup with vocals from Adina Howard's Freak like Me, which the Sugababes then recorded under the latter title and achieved a number one UK hit in 2002. Numan considered this cover to be better than his original.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>).