Billy Idol -
Along with Duran Duran, Billy Idol was one the first pop/rock artists to achieve massive success in the early '80s due to a then brand-new U.S. television network, MTV. Mixing his bad-boy good looks with an appealing blend of pop hooks, punk attitude, and a dance beats, Idol quickly rocketed to stardom, before hard living derailed his career and almost proved fatal. Born William Michael Albert Broad on November 30, 1955, in Middlesex, England, the youngster relocated with his family for a brief spell to New York, before returning back to England. After a stint at Sussex University only last a year, Broad found himself as part of a group of teen punk rockers who befriended and followed the Sex Pistols, known as "the Bromley Contingent" (a member of this colorful group of characters was Siouxsie Sioux, eventual leader of Siouxsie & the Banshees).
It wasn't long before
Broad realized that he too could be the frontman of a punk band, and assumed the name
Billy Idol shortly thereafter. After a stint playing guitar in a group called
Chelsea didn't pan out (interestingly, the group featured future
Clash guitarist
Mick Jones and future
Damned guitarist
Brian James),
Idol put down the guitar and picked up the mic, and recruited bassist
Tony James, drummer
John Towe, and guitarist Bob Andrews, forming
Generation X in 1976. Named after a 1960s paperback book, the band signed a recording contract with Chrysalis shortly thereafter (
Towe was replaced with new skinsman
Mark Laff) -- resulting in such releases as 1978's self-titled debut, 1979's
Valley of the Dolls, and 1981's
Kiss Me Deadly -- before splitting up.
Disappointed with
Generation X's demise,
Idol relocated to New York City, where he pursued a career as a solo artist. Hooking up with
Kiss manager Bill Aucoin,
Idol issued the 1981 EP
Don't Stop (comprised of a cover of
Tommy James' '60s hit "Mony Mony" and a pair of remixed
Generation X tracks), which helped the singer score another record deal with his former band's label, Chrysalis.
Idol found the perfect collaborator and partner in guitarist/
Johnny Thunders look-alike
Steve Stevens, and issued a self-titled debut in July of 1982. A pair of eye-catching videos for the tracks "White Wedding" and "Dancing With Myself" (the latter a remake of a
Generation X composition) scored major air time on MTV, with both clips focusing in on
Idol's spiky, peroxide blonde hair and
Elvis-like sneer. The debut eventually obtained gold certification, and set the stage perfectly for
Idol's big commercial breakthrough, 1984's
Rebel Yell.
Rebel Yell became the singer's best-selling album of his career (eventually going double platinum), spawning such big-time MTV/radio hits as the album's anthemic title track, "Eyes Without a Face," and "Flesh for Fantasy," establishing
Idol as an arena headliner stateside. But with massive success came its many distractions, which prevented
Idol from issuing a new studio album until three years after
Rebel Yell. 1987's
Whiplash Smile was another size-able hit on the strength of such hits as "To Be a Lover" and "Sweet Sixteen," but failed to live up to the lofty expectations set by his previous releases.
Stevens jumped ship shortly thereafter to launch his own band,
Steve Stevens' Atomic Playboys (and eventually was a member of
Mötley Crüe singer
Vince Neil's solo band), leaving
Idol to fend for himself.
An eight-track best-of set,
Vital Idol, was issued later the same year, spawning one of the year's most heavily played MTV videos -- a live version of the previously recorded cover of "Mony Mony" -- which helped keep
Idol in the spotlight.
Idol spent the next few years working on his fourth studio release, but reappeared in the summer of 1989 as part of an all-star rendition of
the Who's
Tommy, with
Idol playing the role of the sadistic character Cousin Kevin. Around the time of
Idol's next release, 1990's
Charmed Life, the singer was involved in a serious motorcycle accident (in which he almost lost his leg), forcing the singer to walk with a cane for a period of time; the video for the album's lead-off single, "Cradle of Love," featured the singer filmed from the waist up. The ploy worked, as the single (which was also used as the theme song in the failed
Andrew "Dice" Clay movie, Ford Fairlane) was another smash hit, making
Charmed Life the fourth
Idol album in a row to achieve at least reach platinum sales.
Expectedly, several years passed before the release of
Idol's next album, during which time he tried his hand at acting with a bit part in
Oliver Stone's motion picture The Doors. By the time 1993's
Cyberpunk surfaced,
Idol had dropped his spiky peroxide hairstyle in place of dreadlocks, and experimented with techno beats. The move proved to be an unwise one, as the album tanked and sank from the charts. At the same time,
Idol was knee deep in drug addiction, resulting in another close brush with death when he overdosed and had to be treated in a Los Angeles hospital in 1994. Not much was heard from
Idol until 1998, when he made a cameo appearance (as himself) in the hit
Adam Sandler/Drew Barrymore comedy The Wedding Singer, which resulted in renewed interest.
Idol teamed up once again with
Stevens, was the subject of a VH1: Behind the Music special (as well as a Storytellers episode for the channel, which was ultimately issued as a CD), and issued a more extensive
Greatest Hits set in 2001; the latter of which sold 500,000 copies in the U.S. alone. Next up was his first studio album since
Cyberpunk, Devil's Playground, released on Sanctuary in 2005.
http://www.allmusic.com/artist/billy-idol-mn0000070800