emerged out of the British punk explosion but, from the outset, maintained a distance from that scene and resisted easy categorization. While punk rapidly became a caricature of itself,
's musical identity -- focused on experimentation and process -- was constantly metamorphosing. Their first three albums alone attest to a startling evolution as the band repeatedly reinvented itself between 1977 and 1979. That capacity for self-reinvention, coupled with a willingness to stop recording indefinitely when ideas weren't forthcoming, has been crucial to
By the time of punk, British art schools had long been a hotbed of musical activity, spawning some of the nation's most innovative rock acts from the '60s onward. Like many punk contemporaries,
Wire had roots in the art school tradition. At Watford Art College in 1976, guitarists
Colin Newman and
George Gill formed
Overload with audiovisual technician
Bruce Gilbert (also on guitar). Subsequently, the three recruited bassist
Graham Lewis and drummer
Robert Gotobed (aka
Robert Grey), and the first
Wire lineup was in place.
Wire began playing dates in London and, having ousted
Gill, started from scratch, writing new material and taking a more pared-down, experimental approach. A gig at the Roxy in early 1977 proved auspicious.
Wire met EMI's
Mike Thorne, who was recording groups for a live punk album,
The Roxy, London WC2.
Thorne included two
Wire tracks and was then instrumental in bringing the band to EMI in September. By then, with
Newman writing most of the music, they were eager to record before they lost interest in material, abandoned it, and moved on; a pattern that would define the group.
Produced by
Thorne, 1977's amphetamine-paced
Pink Flag found
Wire taking punk to extremes while also keeping an ironic distance from it by introducing elements of tension and abstraction.
Pink Flag's 21 highly original tracks (each averaging just over a minute and a half) compressed and twisted rock into often jagged, taut shapes. The album met with critical acclaim and a follow-up was recorded in spring 1978.
Chairs Missing was a radical departure. Although the phrase "early
Pink Floyd" was uttered dismissively in some quarters, it was well-received. With
Thorne playing keyboards and producing, this was a more complex, multi-dimensional record that supplemented
Pink Flag's harsh minimalism with dense, occasionally unsettling atmospherics.
Wire albums usually feature one near-perfect pop song and
Chairs Missing's "Outdoor Miner" almost became a hit, until it was scuppered by a payola scandal at EMI.
This was an enormously creative phase. Songs were being written and jettisoned at a considerable rate and the band was gigging relentlessly. In summer 1978,
Wire played in the U.S. for the first time and, in March 1979, toured Europe with
Roxy Music. Although
Chairs Missing had been released only months before, live sets included a significant amount of material that would appear on
154. Indeed,
Wire often tended to bewilder live audiences by playing new, unrecorded tracks rather than the numbers people expected to hear.
If
Chairs Missing saw
Wire exploring the possibilities offered by the recording studio, on
154 they took fuller advantage of that environment. With
Lewis emerging as a vocalist alongside
Newman, the result was an expansive, textured album with a more pronounced melodic orientation.
154 was
Wire's most accomplished statement to date and the group seemed poised for success. The opposite happened.
Wire's relationship with EMI unraveled and they were soon label-less. In February 1980 at London's Electric Ballroom, the band played an infamously chaotic show (captured on
Document and Eyewitness) that was more like performance art than a rock performance. A five-year hiatus ensued.
Following a period of intense activity away from
Wire, the members regrouped in 1985, referring to their new incarnation as a "beat combo" -- a no-nonsense, stripped-down unit. The 1986 "comeback" EP,
Snakedrill, begat "Drill," a track built on a paradigmatic
Wire rhythm, which bridged the gap between the group's past and its present. "Drill" would stand as an evolving metaphor for the band's shifting identity. It mutated through multiple versions, changing from performance to performance. (In 1991,
Wire would release
The Drill, an album composed entirely of versions of the track.)
The bandmembers' solo endeavors during the early '80s proved crucial to
Wire's new direction: the avant-pop sensibility developed by
Newman on his albums and the experimental inclinations of
Lewis and
Gilbert were channeled into the nascent digital context in which the band was now working.
The Ideal Copy (1987), the first full-length example of
Wire's new approach to the processes of composition and recording with sequencing technology, found the group's smart, state-of-the-art grooves skirting the dancefloor. While first-generation fans were glad to have
Wire back, their new sound drew a new audience in the U.S. and an American tour followed. They continued in an electronically oriented direction with the more homogeneous
A Bell Is a Cup...Until It Is Struck(1988), whose combination of hypnotic, melodic patterns and impenetrable yet catchy lyrics made for surreal, brainy pop.
Wire had already made one of rock's more unorthodox live records but they further deconstructed the cliché of the "live album" for 1989's
It's Beginning to & Back Again. Performance recordings were stripped down in the studio, sometimes to a drumbeat or a baseline, which was then used as the starting point for rebuilding the track.
Wire continued to experiment with ways of letting studio technologies affect their creative process on
Manscape (1990), which forayed deeper into computer-based electronics and programming. Drummer
Robert Gotobed was less enthusiastic about changing his role in the developing digital version of
Wire and left the band just before a 1990 tour. Dropping the "e" from the group's name,
Gilbert,
Lewis, and
Newman carried on as
Wir, releasing
The First Letter. In 1991, another hiatus began and the three returned to their diverse solo ventures.
In the '80s, American bands like
R.E.M. and
Big Black had covered
Wire songs. By the mid-'90s,
Wire's influence started to manifest itself among a younger generation of Britpop artists, most notoriously
Elastica, whose appropriation of
Pink Flag's "Three Girl Rhumba" resulted in a settlement between the groups' respective music publishing companies. Having briefly resurfaced with
Robert Gotobed in 1996 for a performance of "Drill" to celebrate
Bruce Gilbert's 50th birthday,
Wire remained silent until 1999, when they began rehearsing again. In 2000, the band played live in the U.K. (including an event at London's Royal Festival Hall) and completed a U.S. tour; unpredictable as ever,
Wire performed almost exclusively old numbers.
Although reworkings of older tracks taped during 1999 rehearsals appeared on
The Third Day (2000),
Wire soon initiated their next phase. Completely new material appeared in the form of 2002's
Read & Burn 01, the first in a projected series of releases to be developed at
Newman's Swim studios. While the fast, loud menace of
Read & Burn 01 harked back to
Pink Flag,
Wire sounded more like they were stomping all over their roots than nostalgically returning to them. A second
Read & Burn was out by the end of the year;
Send, a full-length containing brand new songs and
Read & Burn material, was released in May of 2003. Three years later, a number of
Wire's early albums were re-released; in 2007, the group's seminal
Pink Flag album hit shelves once again, as well as a third
Read & Burn EP.
Object 47, an album of new material, was released in 2008 and was the band's first release without
Gilbert. Red Barked Tree came in early 2011, tailed by a live recording of songs, primarily from that album, titled Black Session: Paris.
–
Wilson Neate, Rovi