Colour by Numbers
Colour by Numbers is the second studio album by the British new wave band Culture Club, released on 10 October 1983 by Virgin Records. Produced by Steve Levine, who had previously collaborated with the band on their debut album, it blends pop, soul, and new wave elements across ten tracks, including the global hit single "Karma Chameleon". The album propelled Culture Club to international stardom, topping the UK Albums Chart and peaking at number two on the US Billboard 200, where it was blocked from the top spot by Michael Jackson's Thriller.[1][2][3] "Karma Chameleon" became one of the best-selling singles of all time, topping charts in 16 countries, including the UK where it held the number-one position for six weeks, and the US Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks.[4] Singles from the album such as "It's a Miracle", "Miss Me Blind", "Church of the Poison Mind", and "Victims" also achieved significant chart success, with "It's a Miracle" reaching number five in the UK and "Miss Me Blind" hitting number five on the US Billboard Hot 100.[5][2] Colour by Numbers has sold more than 15 million copies worldwide, contributing to Culture Club's reputation as one of the defining acts of 1980s pop music.[6] Critically, the album is praised for its polished production and Boy George's charismatic vocals. Its enduring legacy includes continued recognition as a pop masterpiece of the era.Album information
Overview
Colour by Numbers is the second studio album by the British new wave band Culture Club, released on 10 October 1983 in the UK by Virgin Records and on 13 October 1983 in the US by Epic Records.[7][8][9] Produced by Steve Levine, the album features 10 tracks with a total runtime of 38:18.[7][8] The album was propelled by the global hit single "Karma Chameleon," which topped the charts in 16 countries.[10] Colour by Numbers achieved significant commercial success, selling over 10 million copies worldwide and marking the peak of the band's popularity.[11] Described as a sophisticated evolution from their debut album Kissing to Be Clever, it blends elements of pop, soul, and new wave.[5][12]Artwork
The album cover for Colour by Numbers prominently features a close-up portrait of frontman Boy George in a vibrant, androgynous pose, dressed in a colorful knitted hat, bold makeup, and layered clothing that blends masculine and feminine elements, symbolizing the album's theme of bold, structured vibrancy through its playful yet deliberate use of color and form.[13] The design integrates Boy George's image with pastel curvilinear forms against a dark, globe-like background, creating a bust-like composition with subtle rotational motifs that evoke movement and fluidity.[13] Photography for the cover was handled by Jamie Morgan, while the overall design and art direction were led by Malcolm Garrett under the production of Assorted iMaGes, a London-based studio known for its innovative graphic work, which emphasized themes of personal identity and flamboyant expression through symbolic details like overlaid gender icons in red, gold, and green—colors echoing Rastafarian influences tied to the album's hit single "Karma Chameleon."[14][13] The inner sleeve expands on this aesthetic with additional black-and-white and monotone photographs of the band members, including lyrics and credits printed in a clean, typographic layout that maintains the album's cohesive visual palette, while promotional imagery drawn from the same sessions incorporates eclectic 1980s-inspired elements such as pop art collages and multicultural motifs to broaden the band's flamboyant appeal.[7][13] These visual components played a key role in the album's marketing strategy, reinforcing Culture Club's signature gender-bending and inclusive identity by centering Boy George's androgynous persona as a symbol of diversity and self-expression in 1980s pop culture.[13][12]Creation
Writing
The songwriting for Colour by Numbers was led by Boy George (George O'Dowd), who penned all the lyrics, drawing heavily from his personal life, particularly the turbulent relationship with bandmate and drummer Jon Moss.[5] The music was a collaborative effort among the core band members—Mikey Craig on bass, Roy Hay on guitar and keyboards, and Jon Moss on drums—emphasizing internal creative control with limited external input.[5] Although keyboardist Phil Pickett, a session musician, received co-writing credits on several tracks including "Karma Chameleon" and "It's a Miracle," the album's core material remained firmly rooted in the band's dynamics.[15] Composition took place in early 1983, following the success of Culture Club's debut album Kissing to Be Clever, with some songs like "It's a Miracle" and "Mister Man" originating during Boy George's November 1982 trip to the United States.[5] The melodic structures were influenced by 1970s pop and soul artists, incorporating elements from Gilbert O'Sullivan's jaunty style in tracks such as "It's a Miracle" and Stevie Wonder's upbeat rhythms in "Church of the Poison Mind," alongside broader Motown soul influences that shaped the album's punchy, rhythm-driven sound.[15][3] Boy George later reflected in his autobiography Take It Like a Man that the output consisted of "simple pop songs with blatant messages to the boy I loved," underscoring how his emotional pain seeped into the writing process.[5] Rehearsal sessions were fraught with band tensions, including creative clashes and frustrations over Boy George's dominant spotlight, yet they yielded breakthroughs amid the conflicts.[5] A prime example is "Karma Chameleon," which Boy George wrote as a demo while vacationing in Egypt; the band initially dismissed it as too country-like during rehearsals, but he insisted on its inclusion, threatening to leave if it was cut, leading to refinements that transformed it into the album's centerpiece.[16] These pre-production efforts set the stage for the subsequent recording phase.Recording
The recording of Colour by Numbers took place primarily in mid-1983 at Red Bus Recording Studios in London, with additional engineering sessions at CBS Studios in the same city, spanning several weeks from January to May.[17][18] The process built on the band's prior collaboration with producer Steve Levine, who returned to helm the sessions and focused on capturing the group's live energy through basic tracks recorded as a unit, followed by targeted overdubs to enhance the arrangements without overpolishing the performances.[5] Levine's approach prioritized analog tape recording on multitrack machines, which contributed to the album's warm, organic sonic character amid the era's emerging digital influences like synthesizers and drum machines.[3][19] Key session contributions included keyboards, synthesizers, and horn arrangements by Phil Pickett, as well as backing vocals from Helen Terry, notably on "Karma Chameleon," which added depth to the tracks' soulful layers.[20][15] Engineering duties were handled by Gordon Milne and Simon Humphrey at Red Bus Studios, with Mike Ross overseeing string sessions at CBS Studios, ensuring precise capture of the band's instrumentation and guest elements.[17] Levine himself contributed to the engineering, particularly in integrating innovative tools like the then-new Yamaha DX7 synthesizer on the title track for its Rhodes-like tones.[19] The sessions faced challenges, including band tensions during rehearsals—marked by arguments and physical outbursts—that tested dynamics but ultimately fueled the creative output.[5] Boy George's lead vocals, often recorded in unconventional spaces like corridors to harness natural reverb and immediacy, demanded multiple takes to achieve the desired emotional delivery.[18] These elements combined to yield a polished yet vibrant sound, balancing the band's pop-soul core with subtle production flair for broad accessibility.[3]Composition
Musical style
Colour by Numbers is primarily a new wave album infused with blue-eyed soul, pop, gospel, reggae, and jazz elements, marking a sophisticated evolution in Culture Club's sound that balanced eclectic influences with radio-friendly polish.[5] The album's style features upbeat rhythms and infectious synth hooks, drawing from Motown grooves while retaining a distinctly British new wave edge, as evident in tracks like the punchy, soul-infused "Church of the Poison Mind."[3] This fusion creates a vibrant, MTV-era aesthetic, with dynamic shifts between dance-oriented numbers and torch song ballads, such as the grandstanding piano-driven "Victims."[5] Instrumentation centers on the core band's contributions—Mikey Craig's prominent bass lines, Roy Hay's guitar and keyboard work, Jon Moss's driving drums, and Boy George's layered, soulful vocals—augmented by additional elements like Phil Pickett's keyboards, Helen Terry's gospel-tinged backing vocals, and brass accents from saxophonist Steve Grainger.[7] Keyboards and synthesizers, including the innovative Fairlight sampling instrument and drum machines, add a modern electronic sheen, while acoustic touches like piano and harmonica provide warmth; for instance, Judd Lander's harmonica solo on "Karma Chameleon" introduces a melodic country-tinged hook amid its reggae-inflected rhythm.[3] Horn sections and brass flourishes further enhance the album's lively, horn-driven grooves, evoking 1980s pop's colorful orchestration.[7] Produced by Steve Levine, the album's sonic palette is meticulously crafted for a "glossy" finish that blends organic soulfulness with cutting-edge 1980s technology, resulting in an eclectic yet cohesive 10-track runtime where songs average 3-4 minutes of concise, hook-laden structures.[5] Levine's approach, acting as a de facto fifth member, integrates these diverse styles—from the lighter, jazz-fusion melodicism of tracks like "It's a Miracle" to the white-boy soul and dance pulses throughout—into a polished production that underscores the band's maturation.[3][12]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Colour by Numbers were predominantly written by Boy George, who infused the songs with witty, metaphorical language to explore personal and emotional complexities. Drawing from his own experiences, particularly turbulent relationships, George's writing style is confessional and poetic, often masking deeper pain beneath pop accessibility.[5][3] Central themes revolve around love, betrayal, and identity, presented through narratives of romantic disillusionment, hypocrisy, and escapism. In "Victims," a haunting ballad co-written with the band, George depicts the powerlessness of infatuation and emotional betrayal, with lines like "I don't wanna be a victim of / Those who maim and cheat" capturing the vulnerability of unbalanced love.[5][3] "Karma Chameleon" addresses hypocrisy and the fear of inauthenticity, using the chameleon metaphor to symbolize shifting personas in relationships; Boy George explained it as "the terrible fear of alienation that people have, the fear of standing up for one thing," reflecting consequences of self-deception.[3] Meanwhile, "Miss Me Blind" delves into escapism and blind devotion amid deception, portraying a lover's denial with phrases like "You know how to make me take it / So I don't want to know," highlighting self-delusion in romance.[21] "Church of the Poison Mind" further examines toxic dynamics, evoking manipulative partnerships through soul-inflected pleas.[3] Subtle nods to queerness emerge through George's personal lens, as many lyrics serve as "blatant messages to the boy I loved," alluding to his hidden relationship with drummer Jon Moss amid 1980s societal pressures.[5] Multicultural influences subtly underscore identity themes, aligning with the band's eclectic style that blends global sounds to challenge rigid norms.[22] The title track "Colour by Numbers" employs color imagery to explore themes of love, choice, and fate, using phrases like "The colours that we chose / Came warning of the danger" to reflect on personal decisions. Influenced by 1970s singer-songwriters, this metaphorical approach adds layers, portraying the album as a "rainbow" of emotions that mirrors the title's artistic intent.[23][5][3]Release and promotion
Release history
Colour by Numbers was initially released in the United Kingdom on 10 October 1983 by Virgin Records in vinyl LP (catalogue number V 2285), cassette (TCV 2285), and 8-track formats. The standard initial pressing featured black vinyl, accompanied by a lyric booklet showcasing the album's colorful artwork. A limited picture disc edition (VP 2285 PD) was also issued in the UK during the original run. In the United States, the album was released on 10 October 1983 through Epic Records (catalogue number QE 39107), available in the same vinyl LP, cassette (QET 39107), and 8-track formats. The US pressing similarly included a lyric insert with artwork, pressed at facilities like Pitman. Internationally, distribution was handled by EMI for Europe and CBS (parent of Epic) for North America, with no digital formats available until the CD reissue in 1984. Regional variations included the Japanese edition on Victor (VIL-6072), which featured an obi strip and bonus lyric insert.Singles
The album Colour by Numbers produced five singles, beginning with "Church of the Poison Mind" on 1 April 1983 in the UK and October 1983 in the US, which featured a duet with backing vocalist Helen Terry and reached number 2 on the UK Singles Chart and number 10 on the US Billboard Hot 100. "Karma Chameleon" followed on 5 September 1983 in the UK and 3 December 1983 in the US, topping the UK Singles Chart for six weeks, the US Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks, and the charts in 16 countries worldwide. "Victims" was released on 28 November 1983, peaking at number 3 in the UK; it was not released as a single in the US. "It's a Miracle" came out on 12 March 1984 in the UK and May 1984 in the US, achieving number 4 in the UK and number 13 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Finally, "Miss Me Blind," released only in North America on 14 February 1984, hit number 5 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Each single was supported by vibrant music videos that captured the era's colorful aesthetic and helped propel MTV airplay. "Karma Chameleon," directed by Peter Sinclair, depicted Boy George and the band on a Mississippi riverboat with period costumes and diverse performers, emphasizing themes of change and harmony. "Church of the Poison Mind," helmed by Chris Gabrin, showcased the group in a theatrical church setting with Terry's prominent vocals. "Victims" was filmed by Godley & Creme in a stark, emotional narrative focusing on interpersonal drama, while "It's a Miracle" by Steve Barron featured surreal, celebratory imagery of the band in exotic locales. "Miss Me Blind," directed by Zelda Barron, portrayed a lively, flirtatious storyline with the group in dynamic, urban scenes. The singles' B-sides often included non-album tracks and remixes to extend appeal, such as "Man Shake" backing "Church of the Poison Mind," "That's the Way (I'm Only Trying to Help You)" with "Karma Chameleon," and "Colour by Numbers" paired with "Victims." Promotion emphasized radio rotation on stations like BBC Radio 1 and US Top 40 outlets, alongside TV performances on shows such as Top of the Pops and The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, which amplified their crossover success. "Karma Chameleon" received Platinum certifications in countries including Canada (2× Platinum, 200,000 units), the UK (Platinum, 1 million units), and the US (Platinum, 1 million units), significantly boosting the album's visibility and sales through its massive airplay and video rotation.Commercial performance
Chart performance
Colour by Numbers achieved significant commercial success upon its release, topping charts in multiple countries and demonstrating Culture Club's global appeal during the early 1980s new wave era. The album's chart performance was bolstered by the crossover success of lead single "Karma Chameleon," which drove weekly fluctuations aligned with its releases, contributing to sustained presence on album charts worldwide.[3][5] In the United Kingdom, the album debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart in October 1983, holding the top position for five weeks and remaining on the chart for a total of 56 weeks.[1] In the United States, it peaked at number two on the Billboard 200 for six consecutive weeks—blocked by Michael Jackson's Thriller—and charted for 59 weeks overall.[24][25] The album also reached number one in Australia for seven weeks on the Kent Music Report, accumulating 46 weeks on the chart, and topped the Canadian RPM Albums Chart.[26][6][27] Internationally, Colour by Numbers topped charts in Japan, New Zealand, and Sweden, while reaching number two in Norway and number three in the Netherlands. It peaked at number six in Germany and number four in Switzerland, with no notable underperformance in major markets, underscoring its broad appeal.[5][27]| Country | Peak Position | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Australia (Kent Music Report) | 1 | australian-charts.com |
| Canada (RPM) | 1 | bestsellingalbums.org |
| Japan (Oricon) | 1 | boygeorgefever.com |
| New Zealand | 1 | jazzrocksoul.com |
| Sweden | 1 | swedishcharts.com |
| United Kingdom | 1 | officialcharts.com |
| United States (Billboard 200) | 2 | billboard.com via justbearwithme.blog |
| Norway | 2 | jazzrocksoul.com |
| Netherlands | 3 | dutchcharts.nl |
| Germany | 6 | germancharts.de |
| Switzerland | 4 | hitparade.ch |
Certifications and sales
Colour by Numbers achieved significant commercial success, selling over 10 million copies worldwide by the end of 1984, with lifetime estimates reaching up to 16 million units according to Universal Music Group.[6] The album's sales were propelled by the massive success of its lead single "Karma Chameleon", which boosted overall certifications through heightened consumer demand.[28] The album received numerous certifications from major industry bodies, reflecting its strong performance across key markets. In the United States, it was certified 4× Platinum by the RIAA for shipments of 4 million units.[28] In the United Kingdom, the BPI awarded it 3× Platinum status for 900,000 units sold.[28] Canada granted Diamond certification by Music Canada (formerly CRIA) for 1 million units, marking Culture Club as the first group to achieve this milestone for an album in the country.[29] Other notable certifications include 7× Platinum in Australia (490,000 units) by ARIA.[6]| Country | Certifying Body | Certification | Units Sold/Shipped |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | ARIA | 7× Platinum | 490,000 |
| Canada | Music Canada | Diamond | 1,000,000 |
| United Kingdom | BPI | 3× Platinum | 900,000 |
| United States | RIAA | 4× Platinum | 4,000,000 |
Reception
Critical reception
Upon its release in 1983, Colour by Numbers was met with strong praise from critics for its polished production, infectious hooks, and blend of blue-eyed soul with pop elements. Rolling Stone lauded the album as a triumph that "secures lead singer Boy George's place as a blue-eyed soul balladeer in the first rank," emphasizing its tuneful accessibility and emotional depth.[3] UK publications highlighted Boy George's undeniable charisma and the album's sophisticated maturation from Culture Club's debut. Critics appreciated the seamless integration of gospel, reggae, and jazz influences, viewing it as a sophomore success amid the era's synth-pop surge.[5] In the US, reviewers commended the new wave sheen and commercial polish that made the record irresistibly catchy.[30] Retrospective assessments have solidified its reputation as one of the most fully realized pop records of the 1980s. In 2024, a remastered vinyl reissue was released at Abbey Road Studios, underscoring its lasting significance.[3][28]Accolades
Colour by Numbers and its singles earned several notable awards in the years following its release. At the 26th Annual Grammy Awards in 1984, Culture Club won Best New Artist, acknowledging the album's role in their rise to prominence.[31] The band also secured the Brit Award for Best British Group that year.[3] The lead single "Karma Chameleon" received particular recognition, winning the Brit Award for Best British Single and the Ivor Novello Awards for Best Pop Song and Best Selling A-Side in 1984.[3][16] In retrospective rankings, the album placed at number 96 on Rolling Stone's list of the 100 Best Albums of the 1980s, published in 1989.[32] Colour by Numbers was included in the 2005 edition of 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, edited by Robert Dimery. Marking its 40th anniversary in 2023, the album was highlighted by Albumism as a cornerstone of 1980s pop, underscoring its lasting significance.[12]Credits
Track listing
All tracks are written by Boy George, Jon Moss, Mikey Craig, and Roy Hay, except "Karma Chameleon" and "It's a Miracle", which are also co-written by Phil Pickett.[7]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Karma Chameleon" | 4:12 |
| 2. | "It's a Miracle" | 3:25 |
| 3. | "Black Money" | 5:19 |
| 4. | "Changing Every Day" | 3:17 |
| 5. | "That's the Way (I'm Only Trying to Help You)" | 2:45 |
| 6. | "Church of the Poison Mind" | 3:31 |
| 7. | "Miss Me Blind" | 4:30 |
| 8. | "Mister Man" | 3:36 |
| 9. | "Stormkeeper" | 2:47 |
| 10. | "Victims" | 4:54 |