Heaven 17 celebrate 40 years with Nov/Dec 2020 tour

news: Tuesday 15th October 2019


Heaven 17 at University of East Anglia (U.E.A.), Norwich on Mon 12th Nov 2018

Heaven 17 are to perform their much-loved greatest hits, classic tracks and highlights from the last 40 years across the UK throughout November and December 2020. 

Martyn Ware said: "All of us at H17 HQ are thrilled to announce our forthcoming 40th anniversary celebration tour. Don't miss it!"

Tickets go on sale at 10am on Friday 18th October available from here.

The dates are:- 
Fri 20 Nov 2020 - Sheffield O2 Academy
Sat 21 Nov 2020 - London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Fri 27 Nov 2020 - Bournemouth O2 Academy
Sat 28 Nov 2020 - Cardiff Tramshed
Fri 04 Dec 2020 - Bristol O2 Academy
Sat 05 Dec 2020 - Norwich The Nick Rayns LCR, UEA
Fri 11 Dec 2020 - Liverpool O2 Academy
Sat 12 Dec 2020 - Glasgow O2 Academy
Fri 18 Dec 2020 - Manchester Albert Hall
Sat 19 Dec 2020 - Birmingham O2 Institute

Hailing from Sheffield, Synth Pop Masters Heaven 17 are one of the most important British post-punk bands. Taking their name from the Anthony Burgess novel A Clockwork Orange, Heaven 17 grew out of the experimental production outfit the British Electric Foundation, itself an offshoot of the electro-pop outfit Human League. In 1981 Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh left the Human League, recruited vocalist Glenn Gregory and Heaven 17 was born. A critically acclaimed album 'Penthouse and Pavement' followed the same year.

Heaven 17's 2nd album 'The Luxury Gap' in 1983 was the moment when everything just clicked into place to overwhelming effect. It became an undoubtable pop masterpiece.

Heaven 17 convinced their sceptical record company that 'Temptation' had to be the next single. A duet between Glenn Gregory and Carol Kenyon, this song of lust, brilliantly framed by a musical structure stormed the charts and remains a momentous classic to this day.

Subsequent years included albums 'Pleasure One', 'Teddy Bear, Duke & Psycho' before a hiatus ensued until 1996 where they burst back onto the airwaves with huge dance smash 'Hands Up To Heaven'. Now a collective between Ware and Gregory with synth player Berenice Scott and soul singers Kelly Barnes and Rachel Mosleh very much part of the live dynamic, Heaven 17's sly, post-modern critique of modern society has never sounded so resonant, nor been so necessary.

published: 15/10/2019 14:14



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