We Are Glass

"We Are Glass"
Single by Gary Numan
from the album Telekon (reissue)
B-side"Trois Gymnopedies (First Movement)"
Released16 May 1980[1]
RecordedRock City Studios, Shepperton, 1980
Genre
Length4:46
LabelBeggars Banquet
BEG 35
Producer(s)Gary Numan
Gary Numan singles chronology
"Complex"
(1979)
"We Are Glass"
(1980)
"I Die: You Die"
(1980)

"We Are Glass" is a song by the British singer Gary Numan. It was released as a single in May 1980 and reached number five on the UK Singles Chart.

The song was Numan’s first release since his 1979 album, The Pleasure Principle, which had been notable in part for its complete absence of guitars. Though the album was a major commercial success, Numan decided that "getting rid of guitars had been a mistake" [2] and brought them back into the studio for his next project. The recording also featured viola, piano, and a newly expanded array of electronic keyboards, including ARP Pro Soloist and Roland Jupiter-4, to augment the Moog synthesizers of previous releases.

Originally released on single only, "We Are Glass" reached number 5 in the UK charts in May 1980.[3] The B-side was one of Numan's few non-original pieces, the first movement of Erik Satie's "Trois Gymnopedies," in an arrangement that added guitar, bass and synthesizer to the original's solo piano part.

"We Are Glass" has appeared on numerous compilation albums, as well as CD reissues of the 1980 album Telekon. The song is a regular feature of Numan's concerts and is included on many of his live albums. EMF covered the song on the Random tribute album in 1997. It was remixed twice for the 1998 collection The Mix.

Track listing

[edit]
  1. "We Are Glass" (Gary Numan) – 4:46
  2. "Trois Gymnopedies (First Movement)" (Erik Satie) – 2:45

Production credits

[edit]
Producers
  • Gary Numan
Musicians

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Music Week" (PDF). p. 28.
  2. ^ Stephen Webbon & Gary Numan (1985). "Complete Gary Numan UK Discography". Record Collector (December 1985, No. 76): p.15
  3. ^ "Gary Numan". Official Charts Company.

References

[edit]
  • Paul Goodwin (2004). Electric Pioneer: An Armchair Guide To Gary Numan