The British synth-pop group scored their biggest hit through Christmas and the new year
“Don’t You Want Me” is also notable as the first song to feature the Linn LM-1 drum machine to hit number one in both the U.K. and the U.S. Beyond the technology, the playful vocal exchange between male lead vocalist Phil Oakey and Susan Ann Sulley, one of the group’s two female vocalists (the other female vocalist, Joanne Catherall also happened to be Oakey’s girlfriend) helped the song standout. Oakey had initially conceived the song as a male solo but inspired by A Star Is Born, he opted to make it a duet. The lyrics mirroring the truth (“Working as a waitress in a cocktail bar”) instantly struck a chord with audiences who lapped up the storytelling sing-along tale of the conflicting young lovers.Male/female couples’ duets have always worked. From Sonny & Cher’s “I Got You Babe” to Jay-Z & Beyonce’s “Crazy In Love” to Shawn Mendes & Camila Cabello’s “Senorita” — they’ve all shot to Number One but seldom have bandmates used the trick. While usually the lyrical content is more romantic mush than banter — the genius of “Don’t You Want Me” was that it got all people singing, dancing and moving. Of course, it’s also fun to realize that Sulley sang on the track, not Catherall, despite the song being about her.The success of the single came as a genuine surprise to Oakey, who never expected the single to crossover Stateside and end up becoming a huge Number One record for the band. Oakey had no intention of making it big globally, but “Don’t You Want Me” rewrote the books. The song and style inspired a great many bands in the Eighties, particularly the likes of Pet Shop Boys, Erasure and Information Society.Dare, the mother album from which “Don’t You Want Me” released has been labeled by many music historians as instrumental in laying the foundation for the entire synth-pop sound.While the synth and drum machines may have got an upgrade over the years, the band’s style remains a mainstay even today. In fact, these days, the sound Oakey and company mastered 40 years ago is basically everywhere again on Top 40. From Ed Sheeran’s “Overpass GraffitI” to The Weeknd’s entire new album Dawn FM, there is a little bit of The Human League in all of it. And yes, we continue to want it!
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