Thursday, June 8, 2017

A birthday look back at Nick Rhodes' side projects

A happy 55th birthday to Nick Rhodes!

Nick Rhodes is notorious for staying busy on breaks from Duran Duran. The British band's co-founder and keyboardist fills his downtime with producer gigs and side projects, including Arcadia, TV Mania, and the Devils.

The long-shelved TV Mania saw the light of day in 2013. TV Mania became prolific on Twitter, posting several tweets per day, including such nuggets as: "Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."

Fans speculated whether Rhodes, who doesn't have a known Twitter or Facebook account, was tweeting for TV Mania.

Said @TVManiaMusic: "Ssh. There is more than one TV Mania."

Before TV Mania, Rhodes' biggest project outside Duran Duran undoubtedly was Arcadia, the platinum-selling group he formed with Duran vocalist Simon Le Bon and drummer Roger Taylor. Arcadia's only album, "So Red the Rose" (1985), boasted such guest musicians as Sting, David Gilmour, and Grace Jones.

As far back as 1983, Rhodes was working as a producer. He co-produced Kajagoogoo's hit "Too Shy" and had discovered the band as well.

Almost two decades later, he joined forces with the Dandy Warhols, producing most of the Portland, Oregon, band's album "Welcome to the Monkey House" (2003) and helping bulk up the alt-rock group's synthesizer arsenal.

Also during the time that Rhodes and the rest of the Fab Five were regrouping for reunion album "Astronaut," the keyboardist teamed up with original Duran singer Stephen Duffy for side project the Devils. The album "Dark Circles" featured re-recordings of original Duran songs as well as hauntingly beautiful tracks looking back on earlier days, like "Newhaven-Dieppe."

TV Mania was the brainchild of Rhodes and former Duran guitarist Warren Cuccurullo. Its album, "Bored with Prozac and The Internet?" looked decidedly toward the future, or at least a view of the future as envisioned in the mid-1990s: a culture obsessed with reality television and the Internet.

More recently, Rhodes produced the Bloom Twins and has been in the studio of late with bassist John Taylor and a host of performers working on the TSP (Top Secret Project), rumored to be the Duran musical. Stay tuned.

Adapted from original post from February 2013

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