Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

DURAN DURAN LIVES WELL

THE BAND’S MUSIC HAS BEEN CALLED OLD SINCE THE LATE ’80S, BUT THAT’S NOT GOING TO STOP THEM

- BY ROB TANNENBAUM

IF YOU HAD only five minutes and four seconds to show someone what the 1980s were like, all you’d have to do is cue up Duran Duran’s “Rio” music video, a Technicolo­r blast of cheekbones and excess.

The British pop group filmed it in 1982 on the island of Antigua, where they rented a 70-foot yacht and, wearing pastel silk suits, posed coolly while passing over the Caribbean sea.

A new television channel called MTV latched on to this video and made it a centerpiec­e of its programmin­g. The band members spent only three or four hours onboard, but the image was so powerful that people began to think a typical day for Duran Duran involved a yacht and a model in body paint. They were labeled a “video band,” which carried the connotatio­n of being a fleeting success. “It was quite annoying for a while, that we were pigeonhole­d like that,” Le Bon says.

Next year will be 40 years since the “Rio” video, and Duran Duran is still around. Unlike a lot of supposed 1980s bands, they had hits well into the ’90s (in the U.S.) and the 2000s (in the U.K.). There’ve been plenty of changes to the lineup of Le Bon, keyboardis­t Nick Rhodes and the three unrelated Taylors (bassist John, guitarist Andy and drummer Roger), but they’ve never broken up. They’ve made great albums, terrible albums (1995’s “Thank You” included ill-advised versions of Bob Dylan and Public Enemy songs), and a snappy and snazzy new album, “Future Past,” their 15th.

In recent years, Duran has amply integrated guest musicians and producers into albums, and the credits on “Future Past” include Giorgio Moroder, Graham Coxon of Blur, Mark Ronson, Tove Lo, British rapper Ivorian Doll and Japanese pop group Chai.

The lineup that recorded “Hungry Like the Wolf,” “Girls on Film,” “Save a Prayer,” “Union of the Snake,” “The Reflex” and “A View to a Kill,” each a huge hit, reassemble­d in the early 2000s. Guitarist Andy left for a second time in 2006, and the absence of his power chords has left room for a renewed focus on electronic sounds.

Le Bon, who will turn 63 on Oct. 27, and John Taylor, 61, called from a hotel room (a luxury suite, most likely) in Austin, where the band was coheadlini­ng the Austin City Limits Festival. Talk turned quickly to Le Bon’s unusual approach to lyrics, COVID-19, David Bowie, plastic trousers and Eurovision.

Disco great Giorgio Moroder produced two of your new songs, “Beautiful Lies” and “Tonight United.” When I interviewe­d him a few years ago, he said disdainful­ly, “Life is too short to work with bands.” Why were you the exception? Taylor:

(laughs) I can understand where he’s coming from. You have to have a strong stomach to work with a band. But we were very deferentia­l with him. He’s one of the artists we respect the most.

John, do you need to know what a song is about when you’re recording a bass part?

Simon sometimes has what one could call an oblique approach to writing lyrics.

Le Bon: (laughs) I’ll be back in a few moments.

I’ve listened to “Hammerhead” a few times, and I have no idea what that song is about. Le Bon: Really?

Taylor: Just think Marvel Universe and a sort of vengeful wife.

Le Bon: From China.

Taylor: It’s very cartoon-like, very manga. Look, I don’t think I appreciate­d a lot of the work Simon was doing in the ’80s. “The Reflex” is an extraordin­ary lyric and one of the most — what was the word you used? Esoteric?

Oblique. Taylor:

One of the most oblique lyrics to ever reach No. 1. You’d be hard-pressed to get away with a lyric like that today.

“Future Past” is a very emotionall­y deep album. There’s not a lot of faff. Most of the lyrics were written before we went into lockdown. Many of the songs are about emotional crises, or long-term intimacy issues. When we came back after lockdown, I felt that those lyrics, particular­ly “Invisible,” spoke to the moment, because the last 18 months have really been about intimacy politics.

Le Bon: Well said for a man wearing a pair of duvets on his feet.

In July, the band had an event in New York canceled because of COVID concerns. Have you had COVID?

Le Bon: I have. Taylor: So have I.

Le Bon: And we were vaccinated as well, right at the very beginning.

Are you feeling healthy? Le Bon:

I recovered very quickly.

Taylor: Long COVID is quite a paranoid notion, isn’t it? Every time something doesn’t quite feel right, this little bubble goes, “Is it long COVID?”

Le Bon: “Oh, I don’t feel like going to work today.”

Both at once: Long COVID!

You have such an easy rapport. Is there a topic you disagree about? Le Bon:

Maybe we don’t want to answer that. Taylor: Maybe we do. Le Bon: There you go.

Simon, you don’t tweet very often, but you went on a spree in May during the Eurovision competitio­n. What do you love about Eurovision? Le Bon:

Oh, it’s hilarious, and occasional­ly you get really good songs on it. One of the funniest things is the English obsession with “doing well” at Eurovision. I think this year they were definitely punishing us for Brexit. I got excited about Twitter for a while and then I just felt that I had more important things to do with my creativity. I use it now to promote my radio show on SiriusXM [called “Whooosh!”].

What do you love about doing the show? Le Bon:

It awoke my interest in new music. I came down to breakfast one morning and my daughter Tallulah was listening to BBC Radio 6, which is a sort of alternativ­e music digital service. I’m like, “I’m gonna put Radio 4 on.” Radio 4 is mostly politics and issues. And she said, “Dad, you call yourself a musician? You don’t even like music, especially new music.”

Using Spotify and SoundCloud and Bandcamp, I started to find so much incredible music. Artists like LA Priest, J. Bernardt, Arlo Parks. I came across Chai, and we put them on the song “More Joy.” I got into London rap, and that’s the reason Ivorian Doll is on “Hammerhead,” to have that really street-y sounding voice.

Simon, you’re not an original member of the band.

Taylor: And we remind him of that fact every day.

Le Bon: It keeps me awake at night!

John has made fun of you for wearing pink leopard-print pants when you auditioned to be the new singer. Turnabout’s fair play, what was he wearing?

Le Bon: The picture I have is leather trousers — Taylor: Plastic!

Le Bon: Plastic trousers, and a cool jacket, which I thought had big shoulder pads, but then I found out it’s just the way he walks. And he had very good hair, I thought.

He still does. I also want to ask about finding your voice. Simon, when singers begin, they’re more or less imitating a person, and then they figure out how to find their own singing voice. What did you sound Le Bon:

like at first? I imitated David Bowie, Peter Gabriel and I wanted to sound a bit like Patti Smith as well.

As soon as we started writing our own songs, the songs gave me the voice. When “Planet Earth” was finished and my voice was in the mix, I could hear the power and the emotion in it. And that was me singing, that wasn’t me pretending to be David Bowie.

Taylor: Onstage, we’re sometimes amused by the sincerity with which we play our early hits. Simon will do a phrase: “Look now! Look all around!” And we all laugh.

Annie Zaleski has a new book about your second album, “Rio.” She describes the press coverage at the start of your career was “skeptical, dismissive and occasional­ly quite mean.” Does that ring true? Taylor:

I assumed we were going to be an NME [New Musical Express, a weekly music paper] favorite, because that was my bible. That’s where we got our style tips and our attitude.But the NME was entering a sort of nihilistic phase.

Le Bon: Do you remember that [NME] review that started with the headline: “A ripple in a stagnant pool”?

Taylor: (laughs) We’ll never forget that. Not that these things matter to us, but I remember the last line of that review too. “Duran Duran are going to be huge, and they don’t deserve any of it.”

Le Bon: I love that.

Taylor: In the second half of the ’80s, people would say, “Are you still playing ‘Girls on Film’ on stage? My God, it’s so old.” And we’d be thinking, “Is it?”

You both seem very comfortabl­e with your position in the world of music. Maybe there was a time when you had a chip on your shoulder, but the feeling I get is, you know you’ve won the long game. Taylor:

Right now, we’re in hotel rooms that face flashing billboards saying “The Stones! The Stones! The Stones!” They’re coming to play Austin in a couple of weeks. They’re a polestar, to some degree, for bands like ours. People were saying to them in 1970, “You guys are still going?”

There are so many different factors that go into having longevity as a band. What’s the psychologi­cal dynamic that has kept Duran Duran together? Le Bon:

We’ve hammered into each other the fact that we make better music together than as individual­s. We’ve rammed that nail well and truly right through each other’s skulls. And it’s true, by the way.

Taylor: The best moment in my life is when the lights go down and our intro music comes on.

Le Bon: So your next question is, well, how long are you going to keep going? And I’m going to say, we don’t f— know. We’ll keep going while it’s still fun.

It seems the reason the band isn’t going to stop is similar to the reason the band had success.

Taylor: And what is that?

Bloody-mindedness. Le Bon: Ha! I like that.

 ?? Stephanie Pistel ?? SET to release its 15th album, Duran Duran is made up of, from left, Nick Rhodes, John Taylor, Simon Le Bon and Roger Taylor.
Stephanie Pistel SET to release its 15th album, Duran Duran is made up of, from left, Nick Rhodes, John Taylor, Simon Le Bon and Roger Taylor.

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