Those are all New Romantics which is yet a later wave. (Though New Romantics are properly a sub-genre of New Wave.)
Not the Eurythmics, and Adam Ant disavows the label (unconvincingly, to my mind), but yes, there's a lot of New Romantic in my New Wave.
I recorded Biyi an album of 80s New Wave; artists on it were:
The Buggles
Split Enz
Devo
Robert Palmer
Adam and the Ants
Ultravox
Duran Duran
The Human League
Kim Wilde
The Stranglers
Madness
ABC
A Flock Of Seagulls
Eurythmics
Spandau Ballet
Frankie Goes to Hollywood
Thompson Twins
Nik Kershaw
Being specifically 80s, obviously it's going to be a bit further from the genre's origins. Nonetheless, i'm noticing that I barely associate New Wave with the US at all. (I'd say unfairly, except that this is more about personal taste than a comprehensive survey. Still, that's quite a bias.)
Apparently I like New Wave! Or New Romantics!
I hate the term prog, though. It sounds unfinished aloud, and in print I always read it as prong
and Adam Ant disavows the label
Tough shit! Musicians don't get to decide what buckets we put them in! That's my job.
Also, Siouxsie? Goth! Bauhaus? Goth! Sisters of Mercy? Guess what? UBER GOTH! Tough shit you goth-denying doofus. Your name is fucking Andrew
Eldritch,
(real name in 4th form: Andy Taylor) so quit whining about how your music is misunderstood and miscategorized. And then you park goth icon, Patricia Morrison, next to you with the biggest hair in Christendom and you're going to say you're not Goth?
Anyway, Adam Ant practically defines New Romanticism with his piratey/highwayman get-ups. What's more Romantic than puffy pirate shirts?
The American wing of New Wave was generally the poppier/dancier end of the CBGBs bands (specifically Talking Heads and Blondie, but not just). Then there were folks like Patti Smith and Television who weren't really Punk or only occasinally Punk sound-wise, but not really New Wave either.
There were bands doing similar things popping up around the country at that time as well (The Cars out of Boston, for instance).
real name in 4th form: Andy Taylor
He should clearly join Duran Duran.
Then there were folks like Patti Smith and Television who weren't really Punk or only occasinally Punk sound-wise
Maybe looking through today's narrow-vision punk glasses they weren't, but at the time? Definitely Punk!
Maybe looking through today's narrow-vision punk glasses they weren't, but at the time? Definitely Punk!
As Verlaine himself said, "In the beginning of Punk every band was it's own strange little idea."
The idea that punk could be something homogenous or defined by The Ramones would've seemed ridiculous.
Someone once told me he considered Punk to consist of the Sex Pistols and other British bands involved in the UK punk scene in '76 and '77. And that was it.