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Duran Duran (1981 album)

Duran Duran
Duran1st.jpg
Studio album by Duran Duran
Released 15 June 1981
25 April 1983 (U.S. reissue)
Recorded December 1980
Studio Red Bus Studios, Abbey Road Studios, Utopia Studio and Chipping Norton Recording Studios
Genre
Length 39:42
Label EMI/Capitol
Producer Colin Thurston
Duran Duran chronology
Capitol Diffusion '79 - 80
(1980)
Duran Duran
(1981)
Rio
(1982)
Singles from Duran Duran
  1. "Planet Earth"
    Released: 2 February 1981
  2. "Careless Memories"
    Released: 20 April 1981
  3. "Girls on Film"
    Released: 13 July 1981
  4. "Anyone Out There"
    Released: 1981 (Brazil only promo)
  5. "Sound of Thunder"
    Released: 1981 (UK only promo)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars

Duran Duran is the debut album by the English new wave/synthpop band Duran Duran, released worldwide on EMI Records on 15 June 1981.

The album reached No. 3 on the United Kingdom charts and remained in the UK Top 100 for 117 weeks, achieving platinum status by December 1982. The initial United States release was unsuccessful, but the album was reissued there in 1983 following the success of the band's second album, Rio. This time it reached No. 10 on the US Billboard 200, and remained on that chart for 87 weeks. Duran Duran was certified platinum (a shipment of one million units) by the RIAA in June 1985.

The band wrote and recorded demos for the album at AIR Studios in 1980, while one of their main influences, the band Japan, was recording the Gentlemen Take Polaroids album just down the hall.

The album was formally recorded in December 1980 at various recording studios in London (as well as Chipping Norton Studios) with record producer Colin Thurston, shortly after Duran Duran signed their record deal with EMI. In interviews, the band has recalled the struggle to continue recording after hearing of the murder of John Lennon on 8 December.

Music videos for "Planet Earth" and "Careless Memories" were also filmed in December.

The first pressing of 30,000 copies of the Japanese version (Toshiba/EMI EMS-91019) came with a colour poster. There is a notation on the obi strip that mentions this. Later issues of the album have the notation on the obi removed and contain only a lyric insert and a sheet with a bio in Japanese, some photos and some instructions on how to do the 'new romantic' dance like in the "Planet Earth" video.


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