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Tuesday, 24 September 2013

DEAR ENEMY



Dear Enemy began life as a covers band called Stonewall. They started playing original songs and changed their name to Dear Enemy towards the end of 1980. The name came from a Ginger Meggs comic strip - the hero receives letters from his rival which are always addressed to 'Dear Enemy'. The bands original lineup was vocalist Ron Martini, guitarists Chris Langford and Les Barker (ex-Benders), piano player Peter Holden, bass player John Joyce and drummer Ian Morrison. In early 1983, Martin Fisher (keyboards) and Peter Leslie (bass), both ex-Little Heroes, replaced Peter Holden and bass player at the time Nevio Aresca.

The band had a strong following on the live circuit throughout 1981 and 1982, often playing four times a week. In 1983 they signed a recording contract with the American label EMI/Capitol and recorded their debut album 'Ransom Note' in the United States under the guidance of producer Peter McIan (Men at Work, Mondo Rock) - in fact the band were signed with the condition that Peter McIan oversee the recording sessions. The impressive album generated three quality singles, the first of which "Computer One" (which was written in America by Langford and Fisher) proved to be Dear Enemy’s one and only major hit, peaking at #5 on the Australian charts in late 1983. The follow-up single "The Good Life" stalled at #39 a few months later, whilst the slide continued with the third single "Kids On The Street" failing to chart. 'Ransom Note' sold more than 25,000 units and reached #15 on the national album charts.

Dear Enemy released a new single a few months later with "New Hero", which featured on the soundtrack to the Australian motion picture Street Hero. The single however only reached #93 on the charts. A couple of lineup changes, with Joey Amenta (ex-Taste) replacing Barker in April 1985, and two more flop singles, "Stay" and "You're Right, You're Right", followed over the next four years before Dear Enemy’s system crashed and they called it a day at the end of 1988. Dear Enemy did record tracks for a second album during this period but due to contract and legal problems the album didn’t see the light of day. Ron Martini also released a CD entitled 'Big Night Out' in 1996 with backing band The Missiles Of Love. In 2000 EMI released a CD 'Best of Dear Enemy (Ransom Note and Beyond)' which was a compilation of all the band's releases, this was followed in 2004 by a Best of, which was basically 'Ransom Note' and the inclusion of the single "New Hero".

Members

Ron Martini (vocals), Les Barker (guitar), Chris Langford (guitar, harmonica),
Peter Holden (keyboards), John Joyce (bass), Nevio Aresca (bass), Ian Morrison (drums),
Martin Fisher (keyboards), Peter Leslie (bass), Joey Amenta (guitar), Jerry Leigh (drums),
Broc O'Connor (guitar)





SINGLES
Computer One

31 OCT '83#5
The Good Life

5 MAR '84#39
New Hero

17 SEP '84#93
Stay

29 SEP '86#61





References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dear_Enemy_%28band%29

http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/


1 comment:

  1. keen 2 get cd after loving "computer one" i was disappointed they recklessly abandoned their new wave sound for a generic pub sound.

    ReplyDelete