Gary Numan

by Dan MacIntosh

These days, Electronic acts like Owl City and MGMT regularly top the charts without repercussion, but when Gary Numan released his pioneering synth-pop album The Pleasure Principle, he was savaged in the British Press for making what many critics felt was fraudulent music.

More than 30 years later, Numan has won accolades from Smashing Pumpkins, Nine Inch Nails, Marilyn Manson and many others who cite him as an influence, even if he's considered a one-hit-wonder in America for "Cars."

Numan has a mild form of Asperger's Syndrome, and has said of his diagnosis, "I realized there was a reason for the way I see the world, which was a relief. I'm more comfortable around machines than people." Many with Asperger's exhibit extraordinary talent, as this alternate worldview can result in unusual creativity.
Dan MacIntosh (Songfacts): When you were recording The Pleasure Principle, did you sense something special?

Gary Numan: Not particularly. I felt really proud to be part of the electronic thing, in general. You know, it did feel as if it was at the very front end of something new and exciting. The albums that were being made by the electronic people felt as if they were important records, because it felt like an important time - as if this is a new door opening to what music had to offer. And I felt really proud to be just a small part of that. So when I was making Pleasure Principle I didn't think much more than that. You know, this is just a very small piece of a period in time, but some new things happened there, and it opened doors, and it moved music forward just a little bit. It felt as if music had stagnated for a while; it had been very much variations of a similar theme: guitar, bass, drums, that kind of thing. And then when the electronic thing came along it felt as if a new chapter had been added to music. And with Pleasure Principle, I felt as if I was one small part of that.

I didn't have any inkling that the album was going to be important in any way. It's kind of nice, especially in more recent years, people have started to talk about it in a very positive way - as being one of the key albums of that particular period: the late '70s, early '80s. It's a very cool thing for me to read that sort of thing. But at the time, no. There were plenty of people around that I thought were doing some really good stuff, and I always thought I was playing catch-up, to be honest.

Songfacts: In the States, you're thought of by some as a one-hit wonder for "Cars." Does that frustrate you?

Numan: (laughs) In a way it does. But you have to be realistic; better to have had one than none. On the other hand, it gives you that drive to keep on going, I suppose. I don't know, I mean, if even that's true. Because I do it because I love it. I think if having hit singles and that level of success is your reason for making music in the first place, then I would find that situation very frustrating if I only had one hit. But the truth is, I do it almost as a hobby. I've just been lucky that I've been able to earn a living from it for such a long time. Because if I didn't earn a living from it, I would still make exactly the same records, and write exactly the same songs. Even if the only ones that heard it were my mom and my dog. Success to me is like the cherry on top of the cake. I would do it anyway. I don't get that sense of frustration some other people might get, because I love doing it. The main reason I'm doing it now, at my age (52), is it really is as much a hobby to me as it is a profession. I just really enjoy it. So any success that comes along is very welcome, but it's not the reason I do it.

If an album goes out and it doesn't sell in large numbers, or in America it doesn't sell at all (laughs), I'm not devastated by that. I'm not sitting back thinking it's all a waste of time, because I just enjoyed making it in the first place. And luckily for me there's been other countries - the U.K. obviously - where things have gone differently and much better. And it's enabled me to keep on doing it, to keep on earning a living from it. So there is a mix of frustration, because it's an amazing country to be successful in. On the other hand, I don't feel as if my life has been diminished by not having an ongoing success there.

Songfacts: Guitar is your primary instrument, and yet you're known as a synth-pop pioneer. Are people surprised when they find out that you're really more of a guitar guy at heart?

Numan: Yeah, I think so. Most people think of me as synthesizing, electronic bass and so on. But I started out in a punk band. I didn't know anything about electronic music in 1977. I put my first proper band together, which was a 3-piece punk band, and we went out playing guitar, bass and drums. It was only going into a studio to make what should have been my first punk album, I stumbled across a synthesizer that was laying about in a corner, and had a go of it and loved it, and kind of changed there and then from being guitar based to being electronic based. But apart from Pleasure Principle, strangely enough, the guitar has been in every album I've ever made, and yet the only instrument that I've still got that I've had since I was a kid is my guitar. It's the same guitar I've had since I was about 17.

Songfacts: No kidding.

Numan: Everything else, every synthesizer that I've ever bought has been and gone - they're almost like hammers and nails to me. They're tools to make noises, to make albums. I don't have any great love or affection for any particular synthesizer in the way that I do my guitar. Now, whether that's the nature of the guitar, and it's that much more physical, I'm really not sure. I get really excited about keyboards, and when a new one comes in and I start to integrate new sounds, I love it, and I'm very passionate about it. But when that album is done, when that machine fills up, when I feel I've got the most out of it, then I just get rid of it, and I have no affection for it whatsoever. But the thought I would ever get rid of my guitar is as unlikely as selling my mother - it would never happen. I'll take it to my grave, probably. I just feel a connection with it I don't feel with the synthesizers, with any keyboard, really.

Songfacts: A lot of people compared The Pleasure Principle to some of the music that Kraftwerk was making at that time. Was that a group that really excited you when you first heard them?

Numan: It did a bit. But I never wanted to be like that. Kraftwerk has been purely electronic. I don't know if they've ever had a real instrument in any of their albums, and I didn't want that. I really loved electronic music, and I thought it was really cool, but I also loved guitar based drum bands - that's what I grew up with. I love the guitar, so I wanted to add an electronic element to a conventional lineup. My first two albums were guitar, bass, drums. Some of the songs on my second album, Replicas, don't have keyboards. So I didn't go the technology route wholeheartedly, the way Kraftwerk had done. I considered it to be a layer. I added to what we already had, and I wanted to merge that. There's plenty of things about guitar players, and bass players, and songs I really love that I didn't particularly want to get rid of. The only time I did get rid of guitars was on Pleasure Principle, and that was in fact a reaction to the press. I got a huge amount of hostility from the British press, particularly, when I first became successful. And Pleasure Principle was the first album I made after that success happened. I became successful in the early part of '79 and Pleasure Principle came out in the end of '79, in the U.K., anyway. And there was a lot of talk about electronic music being cold and weak and all that sort of stuff. So I made Pleasure Principle to try to prove a point, that you could make a contemporary album that didn't have guitar in it, but still had enough power and would stand up well. That's the only reason that album didn't have guitar in it. But apart from that one album they've all had guitars - that was the blueprint.

Songfacts: I think it's interesting that you say that you wanted to prove a point, that you could make electronic music that had some sort of warmth to it. Certainly, if your album didn't prove it, albums by the Human League and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark definitely proved that point. Do you feel vindicated now?

Numan: Not really. As times evolved, my feelings about that have mellowed a lot. I understand now that when that music came along there were people that just genuinely didn't like it. It was just one of those things. It was quite a new sort of music, and there were people that just didn't get it the first time around. Strangely enough, in this country at least, the public kind of got it before the media did. I remember my second offering before Pleasure Principle (Are 'Friends' Electric?), and that was #1 here for I think 4 weeks. And it was on its third week at #1 that radio even started to playlist it, you know, there was a tremendous kind of resistance to it, people thought it was quirky here today, gone tomorrow. And at the time I felt like I was waving my flag, fighting for a cause. But now I look back on it, and I think very differently. So I'm just glad that it's evolved the way it has. I'm glad that the stuff I did in those days gets some recognition. I'm glad that the whole electronic thing found its feet and became a totally established part of music in general, and has been now for a good couple of decades or so. I think there's better music around because of it. The technology itself has come more than leaps and bounds. It's made a dramatic contribution to music in general, and I'm just proud that I played a small part in that.

Songfacts: Some of the bands that I mentioned you had an influence on, have you had any chance to really talk to them, and have they told you what an impact your music has had on their evolution?

Numan: Yeah, a fair bit. I imagine you get to talk to lots of people and so on, but myself, I read interviews other people have done and they'll mention me, and I had no idea that I'd been a part of it. And that's really, really cool. There was a brilliant documentary here some months back called Synth Britannia, and there were lots of people on that talking about how the whole electronic thing exploded over here. And there were people being interviewed on there that would talk about me, and I just had no idea that I'd had that big an effect on them, and how they saw it. It was really interesting, it was actually very positive. There wasn't a great deal of negative jealousy or weirdness going on at all. It's nice to find out after some time that there are a range of people that have been affected by what you've done, or interested in what you've done. It's actually far wider than you thought. I remember the first time I started to hear about it was a way back when Marilyn Manson did a cover of one of my songs called "Down In a Park," and then I found out that Trent Reznor was into it, and the Foo Fighters had done a cover, and it just went on and on. It's been a most amazing thing, really, to keep hearing about the people that are doing cover versions. I was trolling around the other day for something totally unrelated and I came across a Youtube of Courtney Love's band, Hole, doing "Cars." I just thought, "Yeah." And there's a lot of that. It's very cool, and I don't take it for granted at all. I'm so totally blown away with a big grin on my face every time I hear that someone's done something like that. So it's not as if I'm kind of arrogantly expecting it. Quite the opposite.

And then, the thing that I'm proud of is this spread of different sorts of music that seem to have been able to take something from what I've done, from hip-hop to metal and pretty much everything in between. For an album, I'm just sitting in a seat trying to make something that I think is about the second or third best to most other things that were around at the time, just trying to catch up, really, and just have a part in it, it's very gratifying to see that it's had such an effect.

Songfacts: Have you ever been asked to use the song "Cars" in any kind of an automobile advertisement? And if so, how did you react to that?

Numan: Yeah, I'm up for that, actually. I think any use of it at all. I think Nissan used it in a campaign for America quite a long time ago now. And someone told me that General Motors did a 60-second ad for it, which is actually a rip-off of another ad, but really, really funny, during the commercial break of the Super Bowl about 10 years ago. It would be great if it happened again, though.

Songfacts: What was it like touring for the re-issue of The Pleasure Principle?

Numan: Last year it was the 30th anniversary of the album going to #1 in the U.K., so we decided to do a tour just playing the songs on the album, to celebrate it, really. And then because of that the record company that owned the record decided to get involved. It's a really good thing they got involved, and they promoted the album and we did the tour, and it was a good experience, really. I'm not a big fan of doing retro things, but when it's such an important anniversary, and when an album's been around for that long, it seemed a worthwhile thing to do. And it was actually a lot more fun than I thought it was going to be. I didn't think I'd enjoy it that much, because I don't like playing lots and lots of old songs. But because on The Pleasure Principle I play keyboards in every song - and I don't usually play that much live, I normally just do the singing - I felt more involved than I have for a while. Yeah, I'm still not a big fan of retro things, but it was a good experience.

We spoke with Gary on August 26, 2010
More Songwriter Interviews

Comments: 14

  • Ladybudd from The Weald, Kent, Garden Of EnglandI've always loved Gary Human and Cars was my 1st song (I was Born/raised in the US until move to UK in 2008), but chose to explore his other music. As a guitar player/lover myself, his comments re his love for his guitar, has the same one since a teen, is so bittersweet. As whilst I've had many guitars when a teen and learning, my heart was stolen, utterly, completely by my first REAL 12 string, a simple Martin acoustic. Whilst I had 6st Yamaha, Gibson, etc, and a roses/hummingbird as my 1st 12st, that Martin grabbed my soul. Fast forward 15+yrs later from the day it was stolen, I still grieve for it. Subsequent replacements, other brands, Seagull, Taylor, all lovely but do not 'feel' right, difficult and/or completely unable to play them; and whilst I believed it to be just a sentimental attachment, the moment I held, played a friend's near identical Martin 12st acoustic, it grabbed me just as hard, and deeply as my own stolen beloved Martin, and when it hit me, knowing it actually was a physical 'fit' and the perfect sound of a particular brand/make, it nearly broke me. Tearful, devastated to know that only a miracle will ever allow me to replace it with another simple, no frills Martin 12 string acoustic, as circumstances could never be as such that I could afford it. Disabled, housebound, PTSD, it is honest to admit that music is my joy and solace in life, I would not be alive without it, that (and my guitar playing until it's theft) has saved my life/soul several times through my life whilst in the darkest depths of depression. In also noting myself & daughter are also on the spectrum, Gary has for years, and continues always to inspire me with hope; as his expressions of such a pure love for music and especially his guitar, not only proves to others that autistic people ARE capable of very deep emotion, it's just that we express it differently. To hear his words in this beautiful, humble, joyful, yet quiet, deeply emotional interview has touched me this very day, just when I needed it most. Whenever feeling acutely the loss of my beloved Martin 12 compounds a dark dog day, I have a Cognitive therapy trick I use, specifically for when I am on "exit international" webpage looking at newest/accessible suicide methods. I force myself to stop, pause, open a new tab, switch to doing a music search, either to listen to a song or to read song facts; and always without fail, within a few minutes, I am able to close out the "Exit" page completely. Today was one of those days. Whilst the bitterness, hurt and loss of ones beloved best friend, I truly have to believe that karma will take care of any retribution, because revenge/hate are evil emotions, and I dont need it on top of my already fragile psyche. If I could meet even only a couple of my fave artists, Gary is in my top 2;) Often my 1st, as my 2nd faves rotate, depending on my mood, but Gary never, ever moves out of the top 2;) If he ever read comments with articles, I would hope he would read this, if only for him to know that whilst he inspires famous musicians, he also has a special place in the hearts of millions of the little people too. Today, he has made his space in my heart a bit bigger, as he does every time I am graced with his music and more so, his words of emotion, expressing what some of us find too difficult to share or articulate. The depth of his love that he describes for his guitar, is by far the most profound thing I've read in my 50+ years, as such a mutually felt emotion that I've finally recognised in another person, to know that there is actually someone else in the world who feels as I do, is comforting enough to soothe a troubled soul. If there is ever really an afterlife, karma will share with me a Martin 12 and a cuppa with Gary;) Indeed, even today with so many lovely tea-shops in the Weald, if any thing or anyone could get me out of this house, I suspect that would be it;) Warmest of regards to those who created, support & share on "Song Facts", as you make a much bigger difference than you know; cheers and warm karma hugs to all, R Elizabeth Budd aka Ladybudd XXX
  • Tim Barrett- Krock from OahuWonder if Gary ever got to fly a Spitfire? Love his music as well!
  • Dana from Woodbury, MnCertainly an underrated figure in the history of popular music. Like Numan, I also have Asperger's, so interacting with individuals can be a challenge, so I end up having to channel my inner Johnny Carson so to speak.
  • Matt L from UtahGary Webb (Numan) was one of the first musicians i liked-i was in 4th grade, and i'd listen to the radio with my finger on the 'record' button on my dad's cassette player on his stereo, waiting for my favorite songs to come on, and hit 'record' to make compilation tapes. LOVED LOVED LOVED Cars-my favorite song. Still love his stuff, the old and the new.
  • Staberdearth from Bethlehem, Pa, UsaGary Numan is only described as a one hit wonder for those who do not venture beyond the restraining and confining list of the Pop 40. Surely not a limited group that I would want to be my judge, jury, and executioner in the realm of musical genius!
  • Andrew from Nixa, Missouri"It Must Have Been Years" is one of the greatest rock songs ever.
  • Lance from Texas (originally)I was huge into Numan when Pleasure Principal first came out, that whole scene, had his pins on my leather jacket and played his Tubeway Army albums -- all vinyl, so odd to remember! Tried to see him play live in Dallas when I Assassin came out but got carded at the door and wasn't 19 yet.
  • Brian from HoustonThere was a reference to gary on "the regular show" on the cake episode
  • Psgifford from California Via EnglandBeen a fan since 1979- and Gary was my first ever proper concert (saw Darts in 1978 but they surely cannot count!) Looking forward to his Los Angeles shows. My favourite musician of all time.
  • Wend Feltham from PortsmouthNuman is a musical and lyrical genius, i've been a fan for 31 years and he never disappoints!
  • Jim from Billerica, MaI always Loved "Down in a Park". I still listen to it to this day and it still gives me the chills, it is creepy in all the best ways. I swear they got the idea for "Terminator" from this song.
  • RoxymuzicLovin Gary Numan - I'm a new fan, tho, and adore Jagged so much and all the stuff he's done with Ade Fenton. Jagged got me thru some tough times and I'll always love that. I've come to appreciate his older stuff, as well as Pure and Hybrid, and am very excited to see him in SF this November. Go Numan, you rock!!
  • David from Loas AngelesNuman is one of the most underateted musicans in the world!
  • Lina from St. LouisDespite being a one-hit wonder in America, Gary Numan really is a good artist. I love the songs "Cars" and "Are Friends Electric?" Really good songs. It's funny how Gary is actually a guitar guy, judging by the Pleasure Principle, you'd think he was all about synthesizers. It's cool though. Gary Numan also inspired me to want to play synthesizer, I just think they're cool and I like the sound. But yeah, I guess guitar is my first choice also.
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Desmond Child

Desmond ChildSongwriter Interviews

One of the most successful songwriters in the business, Desmond co-wrote "Livin' La Vida Loca," "Dude (Looks Like A Lady)" and "Livin' On A Prayer."

Country Song Titles

Country Song TitlesFact or Fiction

Country songs with titles so bizarre they can't possibly be real... or can they?

Bob Dylan Lyric Quiz

Bob Dylan Lyric QuizMusic Quiz

Think you know your Bob Dylan lyrics? Take this quiz to find out.

Terry Jacks ("Seasons in the Sun")

Terry Jacks ("Seasons in the Sun")Songwriter Interviews

Inspired by his dear friend, "Seasons in the Sun" paid for Terry's boat, which led him away from music and into a battle with Canadian paper mills.

Ian Gillan of Deep Purple

Ian Gillan of Deep PurpleSongwriter Interviews

Deep Purple frontman Ian Gillan explains the "few red lights" in "Smoke On The Water" and talks about songs from their 2020 album Whoosh!

Tony Joe White

Tony Joe WhiteSongwriter Interviews

The writer of "Rainy Night in Georgia" and "Polk Salad Annie" explains how he cooks up his Louisiana swamp rock.