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.
01. Nu Control
02. The Day I Die
03. Bionic
04. Demons
05. S.O.S.
06. No Way Back
07. Paris In The Twentieth Century
08. Anima
09. Crawl (Featuring Gary Numan)
10. Society Of The Spectacle
11. The Moth (Featuring A Place To Bury Strangers)
After forming back in 2006, South Central have gone on to remix tracks for the likes of The Klaxons and The Whip. ‘Society of the Spectacle’ is an album full of their own material with a few brilliant collaborations with the likes of Gary Numan and A Place to Bury Strangers.
The album is a great electronic adventure with synthesisers galore, just what you’d come to expect from a group who have been played by the likes of Annie Mac and Pete Tong. They’ve even toured with Pendulum on their UK tour and Rage Against The Machine.
It’s not all dance music though, this second original offering combines alternative and electronica crossing the musical threshold just like Pendulum and Does It Offend You Yeah? have. ‘No Way Back’ and ‘S.O.S’, do this perfectly, mixing screeching guitars in with a bouncing melody.
The two collaborations on ‘Society of the Spectacle’ are great additions to the album. Gary Numan fits flawlessly into haunting track ‘Crawl’, his vocals polishing the song off. ‘The Moth’, which features A Place to Bury Strangers also goes along a darker route but wouldn’t be out of place in an indie club.
South Central have done a brilliant job at bringing together such different genres of music and not making them sound out of place. There’s a bit of dub step, rock and indie, so something for everyone’s taste.