Chris Cross: 1952-2024 [part 2]

The popular Ultravox 80s lineup [L-R]: Midge Ure, Warren Cann, Chris Cross, Billy Currie

The band went into 1983 with a new album and sound, with famed Beatles producer Geiorge Martin helming “Quartet.” With the clarity that Martin and engineer Geoff Emerick strove for, coupled with the first generation of digital synths and their commensurate glassy, airy sound, “Quartet” was hobbled with a featherlight production sound and a distinct lack of the oomph that their albums had previously had in spades. The songs were fine, but the production let them down. If not for the gravitas of Cross’ bass guitar in the mix, the album might well have floated off of the turntable!

midge ure, chris cross, maxwell langdown - the bloodied sword cover art

Cross was also keeping busy with his creative cohort, Midge Ure. The two also released an album with poet Maxwell Langdown that year [after a long gestation] called “The Bloodied Sword.” It was an album where Ure and Cross performed all of the music, with the exception of percussion on a few tracks by Midge’s ex-Slik bandmate Kenny Hyslop. And then there was also the soundtrack to the original UK Max Headroom” film and a Levis ad [“Rivets”] and that was all of the Chris Cross extra-curricular activity from Ultravox that I could name.

1983 also featured the live EP from Ultravox called “Monument” which was the soundtrack to a video which was five songs live. Surprisingly modest for the band that never shied away from making a big impact to have made a live EP instead of a full album; possibly of the double live variety. The songs were from their “Quartet” tour and featured their most impressive live arrangement of “The Voice” which ended with a stunning percussive movement where each member was slamming rhythms in various tempos [creating a complex polyrhythm] on a Simmons pad. I nearly burst into flames when I first saw that on MTV one Sunday night! 41 years later and I still forget to breathe when watching it.

ultravox monument

The band had enormous success since breaking through with the all-time classic number two song on the British charts: “Vienna” in early 1981. It was year after year of album/tour/album. 1984 was the time that it peaked with lineup’s fourth album, “Lament.” The band produced themselves and pulled in numerous directions with dance-based sampling [“White China”], the return to Rock with the Big Music of the era [“One Small Day”], as well as predicting the Celtic leanings of Midge Ure’s future solo career. [“Man Of Two Worlds”] The big hit was number three UK single for “Dancing With Tears In My Eyes.” Their top 5 peak after “Vienna.”

ultravox the collection

1984 ended with the band consolidating their success with their best selling triple-platinum greatest hits album called “The Collection.” It reached number 2 on the UK album chart and featured a new single on it, “Love’s Great Adventure.” By 1984 the former New Romantic influencers had scruffy long hair and had ditched the vintage clothing and jodhpurs. The video for “Love’s Great Adventure” captured Chris’ long locks for posterity. It was hard to imagine where the band would travel next.

Chris Cross wasn’t just sporting the long hair for his bushman character in the “Love’s Great Adventure” clip

Alas, Ultravox underwent a sea change starting at the end of 1984 when Midge Ure became enmeshed in the Band Aid project as the partner with Bob Geldof for the “Do They Know It’s Christmas” single and ultimately sparking the Live Aid project in 1985. Where this lineup of Ultravox played for the final time on Saturday, July 15 at Wembley Stadium. As Ure was pulled into this world, it was natural for Ultravox to get back burner status. Followed by Midge Ure’s first solo album, the band were on hiatus for a long period. When they attempted to restart the engines in 1986, the balance was lost. Ending with the band cutting drummer Warren Cann free after hearing that he was more interested in maybe playing guitar than drums. The three other members enlisted Mark Brezezicki to play drums on their 1986 album “U-Vox” and the result was a band clearly past its sell-by date. Following a tour of the UK and Europe in late ’86, the band quietly ceased activity with nary a press release.

Following the fadeout of Ultravox by 1987, the remaining members of Ultravox went their separate ways. Midge Ure had made a big splash with his first solo album, but that energy ebbed quickly with subsequent albums to move him out of the spotlight. Warren Cann played drums with Mecano for a little while then moved to Los Angeles to try to start an acting career that all I can find evidence of is the 1988 horror comedy “The American Scream.” Billy Currie began his solo career with a series of solo album beginning with the excellent “Transportation” and going down various nooks and crannies over the years. Chris Cross defied all expectations by retreating to his degree in psychology and having a career as a psychotherapist. Something band life probably gave him infinite insights to.

Then for the next 21 years one didn’t hear a word from Chris Cross, apart from the occasional interview in the pages of the official Ultravox fanzine, “Extreme Voice.” The only musical contribution I can ferret out was the co-writing of a song [“Is It Loud Enough?”] for Brian Kennedy’s 1990 debut album, “The Great War Of Words.” It was then radio silence from Chris Cross until that fateful day in 2008 when Ultravox heard the call to regroup at the advice from their management!

Morrison-O’Donnell Management correctly felt that 2008 might be a great time for Ultravox to reform for commercial reason having nothing to do with the financial crisis of the era I’m sure. But 21 years later there was a lot of honestly pent-up demand to see the band. Some of their fans from the iPod era may have never been born when the group were still active onstage. The group tried touring to find that there was plenty of demand for UK and European tours for a few years. The band finally released the big, splashy double live CD + DVD for the “Return To Eden” tour and it showed the band in fine fettle.

Chris Cross having fun on the Return To Eden tour

It actually sounded better than any previous live recordings owing to the power Midge Ure now had after years of plying his trade. Seeing the band sweep away all of the water that had collected under the bridge a generation later was fun, and the band sure seemed to be having a great time inhabiting their legacy onstage. The next year, the band issued an elaborate gatefold red vinyl 10″/CD EP [“Moments In Eden”] of four new songs on their next tour’s set list and that was just a stunning package that was in no way priced according to value. Then came the perhaps inevitable reformed band studio album, “Brilliant.” Which fell afoul of my tastes perhaps even moreso than the shaky “U-Vox” album had been 22 years earlier. Leading me to sit out the inevitable “2012 Live” 2xCD that was issued on the tour behind that album.

ultravox return to eden ultravox moments in eden ultravox brilliant ultravox 2012 tour

I should have made the effort to travel overseas for the “Return To Eden” tour. Ultravox were a hugely favorite band for me but the travel costs cowed me at the time. So I missed the chance to experience Ultravox in the same way that around the same time I also missed John Foxx playing an amazing career retrospective show the London Roundhouse, as well as the unbelievable in retrospect Simple Minds “5×5” shows that are all to my eternal regret that I did not even try to attend. Speaking of Simple Minds, they afforded Ultravox their last time onstage in the role of opening act for Simple Minds 2013 UK tour. At the time I had seen Simple Minds give the best concert I’d ever seen in their brief tour of The States but oh, to have seen my two favorite Rock bands on the same bill. What was I thinking not to have at least looked into attending?

And now the line in the sand is drawn on Ultravox. An era has ended, and a member of one of my formative favorite bands has died, and at the relatively young age of 71. The first time such a thing has happened was with the death of Mick Karn of JAPAN in the earliest days of this hoary blog. But with Karn, his cancer diagnosis was public record and his ending was less of a shock. The 2016 deaths of David Bowie and Prince were shocking but they were Rock Stars with all that entailed. Creative powerhouses that helped to define many eras of music. Not really band members as such, and therefore, different from Chris.

With the loss of Chris Cross, the mighty machine that was Ultravox is now tabled as the band was greater than the sum of its [substantial] parts. The drive and ambitious playing of the members through both eras of the group placed them in a select group of musician’s musicians who were in turn an influence on dozens of other favorite bands in the late 70s and early 80s. They took inspiration from Roxy Music but allowed for many other threads of disparate influence such as Krautrock and even Reggae to form their own hybrid strain of modern music that took everything great that the 70s had to offer and made of it their own potent cocktail of high-tech rock music that stood apart from the by then standard Rock clichés of the 60s that had become positively calcified by the 70s.

Nothing has been announced, so the cause of death is not known. As Chris Allen had lived a relatively private life apart from Ultravox, this isn’t surprising and is all the more appropriate. But his passing marks not just the end but the beginning of an era as I can expect to see crucial musicians who informed my world of music fandom take their final bows in the upcoming years. The tag cloud on PPM will have many more obituaries joining the posts. This is inevitable. While I usually have a mosaic of every release by the artist I’m discussing at the end of any obituary posting, this time it would take me a very long time to round up what I’m expecting to be an incomplete picture as my hardly complete Discogs account states I have ~190 releases with Cross accounted for. Our best condolences to his band members, friends, and family during their time of loss.

-30-

About postpunkmonk

graphic design | software UI design | remastering vinyl • record collector • satire • non-fiction
This entry was posted in Core Collection, Designed By Peter Saville, New Romantic, obituary and tagged , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

5 Responses to Chris Cross: 1952-2024 [part 2]

  1. negative1ne says:

    hi mr monk,

    great writeup, not really much to add,

    but i always enjoy your visual montage of all the releases.

    i never had much of the foxx ultravox era, so its neat seeing

    all those included too.

    later

    || || | | || | |

    ne gative 1

    Like

  2. AndyB says:

    An excellent piece Monk. Of all the artists that have died this one has hit me the most. This was the first band I fell in love with. That love has remained for forty three years. Longer for you, I know.

    Sorry for being an anorak but ‘Quartet’ was released in ‘82 although of course that tour and further singles would carry over into the following year.

    Like

    • postpunkmonk says:

      AndyB – I only have one year more on you as a fan. Probably only 4 months as I first heard Ultravox in September of 1980. And even though I bought “Quartet” on import by December ‘82 I tend to remember the US release of it in early ‘83 for some reason.

      Like

  3. djjedredy says:

    A super obituary. Sums up all the salient facts. My first experience was hearing “Sleepwalk” and love affair started from there. Unlike some of my friends I only got to see them live in that period on the U-Vox tour at the Birmingham NEC. Did see them on the re-union tour and remembered how relaxed and smiling Chris was, alternating between bass and synths. He was having a whale of a time. Thanks for your details, need to dig out that copy of “The Bloodied Sword.”

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Duncan Watson says:

    My history with Ultravox here in the UK is reasonably well documented but I summarise it now that the sad death of Chris Cross formally closes off the band.

    Mid 1980 I buy the Sleepwalk single and I am hooked.

    Later in 1980 Passing Strangers is the best song ever and I buy the album too. I ask for tickets to see the band live in December as a birthday gift. Amazingly my parents agree to the request!

    8th December 1980 remembered by many as the day John Lennon was shot but fondly remembered by me for seeing Ultravox live for the first time ever, at the Edinburgh Odeon. Vienna was yet to be released as the single which catapulted the band to legendary status.

    I subsequently saw them live a further 10 times, namely –

    26th September 1981 Edinburgh Odeon, Rage in Eden tour

    14th November 1982 Dundee Caird Hall, Quartet tour

    17th November 1982 Edinburgh Playhouse, Quartet tour

    16th May 1984 Apollo Glasgow, Set Movements tour for Lament

    2nd November 1986 Edinburgh Playhouse, “The Pink Album” tour, erased from my memory

    11th May 2009 Clyde Auditorium Glasgow, the triumphant reunion tour

    27th September 2012 Hammersmith Apollo London, the Brilliant tour, where Midge was scarily pied onstage by a so-called fan

    7th October 2012 Clyde Auditorium Glasgow, the Brilliant tour

    8th October 2012 The Sage Gateshead, the Brilliant tour and the last time I saw them headline

    27th November 2013 SSE Hydro Glasgow, the very last time and were special guests to Simple Minds.

    At the Gateshead gig, the band were clearly more relaxed so made a few mistakes but Chris Cross was having an utter whale of a time!

    That Simple Minds concert was filmed for the Celebrate (Live At The SSE Hydro Glasgow) DVD release and I always thought it was strange that they did not film the Ultravox set too while the cameras were there.

    I never saw the Billy Currie incarnation of the band live. Indeed, I did not know about them until after they too had fallen apart but Ultravox were always my favourite band and Chris Cross leaves behind an absolute wealth of great music.

    Your comment remains true; Ultravox always were greater than the sum of the parts. They were a magnificent force in rock.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.