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.
Deleted All the chapters in this book are named after Numan song
titles.
Chapters
My Shadow In Vain
Unknown And Hostile
In A Glasshouse
Machine And Soul
Strange Charm
A Game Called Echo
Are ‘Friends’ Electric ?
Soul Protection
I Die : You Die
Dark Mountain
All the chapters in this book are named after Numan song titles.
Chapters
My Shadow In Vain
Unknown And Hostile
In A Glasshouse
Machine And Soul
Strange Charm
A Game Called Echo
Are ‘Friends’ Electric ?
Soul Protection
I Die : You Die
Dark Mountain
One of the biggest advocates of song tides as chapter headings is prolific Who author Gary Russell, who has a particular habit of theming each book's chapter titles around songs by one particular band. In his first novel, Legacy, Russell chose Gary Numan. For Placebo Effect, 1980s
Goth perpetrators Siouxie and the Banshees took the honours. This continues right up to his latest novel, Instruments of Darkness, which nicks its chapter titles from The Art of Noise. "There's often something in the song which suggests it as a chapter tide," Russell explains, "not necessarily a lyric, but something will create a mood."
But Russell's use of song titles doesn't end at this level; he also uses them while he brainstorms his books' storylines. "For instance," he says, "in Divided Loyalties [Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, this time] and Instruments of Darkness, from the list of songs available to me, I picked titles that implied a progression through a story. Therefore, the order I put the titles in very much detailed the flow of the story."