40
years ago this month, in November of 1981, Chris & Cosey officially
stepped out of the Throbbing Gristle shadows and began their career as
the dynamic duo of electronic music.
It wasn't long after Chris
Carter joined Genesis P-Orridge, Cosey Fanni Tutti & Peter
Christopherson to form Throbbing Gristle that sparks began to fly
between him and his future life and creative partner. By the time TG
began to spiral down towards their termination, Chris & Cosey had
already started working on material that would end up on their first
post TG album. Heartbeat would come as a celebration of their new
freedom and the beginning of their life together as they became a family
with the addition of their soon to be born child, pictured in an
ultrasound on the cover and commemorated by the title. It's an album
about birth and new life and is bursting with a sense of liberation,
enthusiasm and optimism about facing the future. While it still hints
at some of the darkness that was the hallmark of TG, there's much more
of a sense of beauty and wonder about it all as they were in the flush
of their romance and finally being able to live openly and create freely
within their own domain. Signing to Rough Trade records, the duo were
able to focus on the music without having to deal with the
administrative issues of running an independent label, though they'd
eventually get back to doing that soon enough.
For me,
Heartbeat is a critical release within the arena of electronic music as
it offers clear signposts towards styles and approaches which would
become foundational for the future of the genre, particularly as the 80s
ran out the clock in its final years. What makes this album so
important is that it was so far ahead of the curve and ended up becoming
a touchstone years later as producers inspired by the first waves of
the techno & acid house movements began to look for ideas as to
where to take that music as they strove to innovate and evolve. Many
people quickly began to realize that Chris & Cosey had already
plotted out the paths of where to go, nearly a full decade beforehand.
As such, the album has retained a certain vitality and timelessness as
it was so effective in opening the floodgates for the potential of
electronic music for generations to come.
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