This group has been put together for fans of Gary Numan and visitors of the Numanme site, to discuses all things Numan sell/trade share stories and images
from all aspects of Numan's career.
Numanme Radio Podcast will be playing you some of the best Classic Alternative, New Wave, Dark Wave, Synth-Pop, and Punk. Also, a staple diet of Gary Numan/Tubeway Army without question. Shows will be updated here when they become available.
The gallery contains Gary Numan-related photographs. They range from the Tubeway Army days to the present day. Feel free to browse and if you would like to add any of your images please get in touch.
A1. Interval 1 1.13
A2. Soul Protection 3.36
A3. Confession 4.17
A4. My World Storm 3.43
A5. Dream Killer 4.22
A6. Dark Sunday 4.02
B1. Outland 4.05
B2. Heart 4.06
B3. Interval 2 0.19
B4. From Russia Infected 4.30
B5. Interval 3 0.39
B6. Devotion 4.13
B7. Whisper 4.20
How old:
This LP is old!
Release Date:
March 18th 1991
Format:
LP
Record Label:
IRS Records
Catalogue No:
EIRSA-1039
Price Guide:
£10.00
Country:
United Kingdom
Additional info:
Deleted
Highest Chart Position:
39
Credits:
Gary Numan (Vocals, Keyboards, Drums/Percussion programming,
Samples, Acoustic Guitar, Fretless Bass, Bass samples)
Mike Smith (Keyboards, Toms, Guitar sample, Percussion programming,
Slide Guitar, Brass, Bongoes, Sax samples, Stick samples)
Keith Beauvais (Guitar)
Cathi Ogden (Vocals)
Nick Beggs (Stick, Bass)
Dick Morrissey (Saxophone)
Tim Whitehead (Saxophone)
RRussell Bell (Guitar)
Paul Harvey (Rhythm/Slide Guitar)
Written, produced, engineered, mixed, and recorded by Gary Numan
Recorded at Outland Studio
U.S. mastering by Stephan Marcussen and Ron Rutledge at Precision
Two and a half years after Metal Rhythm, in spring 1991, IRS released their second Gary Numan studio album, Outland. The LP followed a familiar commercial pattern, charting at number 39 in the UK but rapidly tumbling out of peoples memories
once the hardcore had bought it. Overseas there were glimpses of promise, especially in America where it sold over 20,000 copies, but IRS were in organisational turmoil at the time and they effectively imploded in 1991 taking Numan's career with them. He spent the next two years trying to recover lost ground.
To be fair, Outland is a strange, off-beat record and hardly the stuff of a promotional departments dreams. It's main thrust comes from complex, deftly programmed rhythms which owe a debt to the
pioneering work of the American production team Jam and Lewis. Numan's albums The Pleasure Principle, Dance and Metal Rhythm had already demonstrated his innovative use of percussion, heralding hip hop breakbeats, trip hop's slow motions and 90's industrial funk. On Outland the backing tracks hiccup with electronic beats as the artist mixes sci fi dance with black R&B pop.
Text by Steve Malins. (From the Outland sleeve notes)