Fad Gadget
Francis John Tovey (8 September 1956 – 3 April 2002), better known by his stage name Fad Gadget, was a British electronic musician and vocalist recognized for his pioneering work in avant-garde and industrial music during the late 1970s and 1980s.[1][2] Born in East London to a family with a shellfish business, Tovey adopted the Fad Gadget moniker to evoke novelty gadgets while critiquing consumer culture through provocative lyrics and performances.[2] He became the inaugural signing to Mute Records, founded by Daniel Miller, releasing his debut single "Back to Nature" in 1979, which featured rudimentary electronic instrumentation and marked an early milestone in the label's ascent alongside acts like Depeche Mode.[3][4] Tovey's discography under Fad Gadget includes key albums such as Fireside Favourites (1980), Incontinent (1981), Under the Flag (1982), and Gag (1984), blending synth-pop, post-punk, and experimental elements with themes of alienation, technology, and social decay.[4][5] Notable singles like "Collapsing New People" and "Saturday Night Special" showcased his satirical edge and innovative use of synthesizers, influencing the electronic music landscape.[4] In the mid-1980s, he transitioned to recording as Frank Tovey, adopting a more acoustic singer-songwriter style on albums like Snakes & Ladders (1986) and Civilian (1988), reflecting a deliberate shift away from electronic experimentation.[3][6] Despite achieving cult status rather than mainstream success, Fad Gadget's contributions solidified Mute Records' reputation for cutting-edge electronic output, and his live shows—often involving physical stunts and self-harm—embodied a raw, confrontational aesthetic emblematic of post-punk's fringes.[2][7] Tovey, who had endured heart issues since childhood, died suddenly of a heart attack at his London home in 2002 at age 45, shortly after a European tour, leaving behind a wife and two children.[1][7][3]Early Life
Childhood and Family Background
Francis John Tovey, later known as Fad Gadget, was born on 8 September 1956 in London's East End to working-class parents. His father, Frank Tovey Sr., worked as a porter at Billingsgate Fish Market and operated a shellfish shop on Roman Road in Bow, reflecting the manual labor economy typical of the area.[2][8] The East End provided a formative environment marked by post-World War II reconstruction, as the district had endured extensive bombing during the Blitz, leading to ongoing housing shortages and industrial grit amid Britain's shift from wartime austerity to the social and economic upheavals of the 1960s and 1970s. Tovey's family background embodied this context, with his father's trade tied to the region's fishing and market traditions, though details on other family members or specific dynamics remain sparse in available records. From childhood, Tovey suffered chronic heart problems that would affect him lifelong, potentially linked to congenital factors in a era when medical interventions for such conditions were limited.[1] His early years in this urban, working-class setting exposed him to the sounds of emerging rock influences via radio broadcasts, setting the stage for later developments without direct familial musical pursuits documented.[9]Education and Pre-Musical Interests
Tovey enrolled at St. Martin's School of Art in London in 1974, marking his entry into formal artistic training after secondary education.[10][11] He progressed the following year to Leeds Polytechnic, where he pursued studies in fine arts, visual arts, mime, and performance art, ultimately completing a degree in the field.[11][1] These programs emphasized experimental and interdisciplinary approaches, including mime techniques influenced by practitioner Lindsey Kemp.[12] Upon finishing full-time education in the mid-1970s, Tovey engaged in various day jobs to support himself, while sustaining interests in non-musical creative forms such as performance and visual experimentation.[13] His hands-on involvement in mime and performance art involved staging solo shows characterized by dark, underlit presentations incorporating nudity and sexual themes, reflecting a commitment to provocative, empirical exploration of human behavior and expression.[14][12] These pursuits demonstrated an early affinity for mechanical and gadget-like elements in art, derived from practical assembly and manipulation of props and environments, though unconnected to professional music at the time.[13]Musical Career
Signing to Mute Records and Debut
Frank Tovey, performing under the stage name Fad Gadget, sent a demo tape containing the track "Back to Nature" to Daniel Miller, founder of the newly established Mute Records, in 1978. Impressed by the material, Miller signed Tovey as Fad Gadget to Mute in 1979, making him the label's inaugural artist ahead of subsequent signings like Depeche Mode.[15][3] The debut single, "Back to Nature" backed with "The Box," was released in October 1979 on Mute (catalog MUTE 002). Recorded at RMS Studios in London using rudimentary equipment including a drum machine and synthesizer, the single showcased Tovey's solo performance approach with minimal instrumentation, capturing an abrasive, proto-industrial electronic aesthetic. It received limited airplay and distribution through independent channels but failed to enter mainstream charts, reflecting Mute's nascent status as an underground label.[16][17] Fad Gadget's debut album, Fireside Favourites, followed in November 1980 (Mute STUMM 3), recorded at Blackwing Studios in London with production assistance from Daniel Miller. The LP expanded on the single's raw setup, incorporating synthesizers, electronic drums, and sequencing primarily handled by Tovey, with Miller contributing on tracks like "Coitus Interruptus" via additional electronic percussion and synthesizer. Key tracks included "Pedestrian" (3:22), "State of the Nation" (3:45), "Salt Lake City Sunday" (2:12), "Fireside Favourite" (3:16), "Newsreel" (3:00), "Insecticide" (3:08), "The Box" (4:43), and "Ricky's Hand" (4:06), blending satirical lyrics with stark, machine-driven rhythms. Like the single, the album achieved no notable commercial chart positions, circulating mainly within post-punk and electronic music circles.[18][19]Key Albums and Singles (1980-1984)
Fad Gadget's debut album, Fireside Favourites, was released on October 21, 1980, by Mute Records, featuring tracks recorded primarily by Frank Tovey using synthesizers and rudimentary electronics in his home setup. The album showcased early industrial elements with songs like "Fireside Favourite" and "The Box," emphasizing Tovey's self-produced gadgetry for percussion and effects. Limited commercial data exists, but it aligned with Mute's niche distribution strategy targeting post-punk audiences rather than mainstream charts.[5] In 1981, the single "Make Room" backed with "Lady Shave" was issued by Mute, marking a shift toward sharper social commentary through abrasive synth rhythms and Tovey's deadpan vocals. This preceded the follow-up album Incontinent, released that year, which expanded on Fireside Favourites with denser layering of analog synthesizers and tape loops, though specific production credits remain tied to Tovey's solo efforts at Blackwing Studios.[5] Sales remained modest, confined to independent outlets without notable chart entry.[5] Under the Flag, released on September 1, 1982, was co-produced by Tovey and John Fryer at Blackwing Studios, incorporating more structured instrumentation including drum machines and guest contributions on bass and guitar for tracks like "For Whom the Bells Toll."[20] The album's sound evolved toward rhythmic, flag-waving anthems with industrial edges, distributed via Mute's growing network but achieving no significant commercial breakthrough.[21] Accompanying singles such as "Collapsing New People" highlighted pop-infused hooks amid Tovey's custom electronic builds.[5] The final Fad Gadget album, Gag, emerged on February 1, 1984, produced by Gareth Jones and recorded at Hansa Tonstudios in Berlin with overdubs at Blackwing, blending synth-pop accessibility with post-punk grit in songs like "Ideal World" and "One Man's Meat."[22] Instrumentation featured expanded use of sequencers and samplers, reflecting a causal progression from earlier raw electronics to polished production, though Mute's focus on cult appeal limited broader sales metrics.[23] Singles from this period, including "Collapsing New People," underscored the era's output but did not propel chart success, consistent with Fad Gadget's empirical niche trajectory.[5]Later Work and Transition to Frank Tovey (1985-2001)
Following the 1984 album Gag, Frank Tovey retired the Fad Gadget stage name to pursue material he described as "completely different" from prior electronic work.[24] His debut release under his own name, Snakes and Ladders in 1986, shifted toward acoustic arrangements with industrial elements, comprising 15 tracks including "The Cutting Edge" and "Shot in the Dark."[25] Subsequent albums Civilian (1988) and Tyranny and the Hired Hand (1989) continued this hybrid approach, incorporating folk influences alongside sparse electronics, though output slowed thereafter with only sporadic singles and the 1991 album Grand Union.[26] In 2001, Tovey revived the Fad Gadget persona for the compilation Fad Gadget By Frank Tovey, which included re-recorded tracks like "Under the Flag II" and supported a European support slot on Depeche Mode's Exciter Tour, marking his first live performances in over a decade.[3][27] These appearances, spanning dates from August to October 2001, featured sets drawing from early Mute-era material such as "State of the Nation" and "Ricky's Hand."[28] The revival highlighted a return to electronic roots amid declining solo activity under his real name.[29]Live Performances and Stage Persona
Fad Gadget's early live performances in the late 1970s and early 1980s emphasized a raw, confrontational stage persona, often solo or with minimal backing, utilizing self-assembled electronic devices and physical props to embody his industrial and post-punk influences. These shows featured erratic movements, improvised vocals, and occasional self-harm elements, such as minor cuts or symbolic gestures, which amplified the visceral impact of tracks like "Ricky's Hand" and "Collapsing New People." Contemporary accounts describe the chaotic energy as disorienting for audiences accustomed to conventional rock setups, with Tovey channeling a manic, gadget-wielding everyman critiquing modern alienation through [performance art](/page/performance art).[27][2] A notable example occurred on February 28, 1984, at Manchester's Haçienda nightclub, where Fad Gadget delivered a 15-song set including "State of the Nation," "Love Parasite," and "Back to Nature," captivating a crowd amid the venue's burgeoning alternative scene. The performance, captured on video, showcased his command of synthesizers and rhythmic intensity, eliciting strong audience engagement through its blend of danceable electronics and provocative delivery. Earlier support slots, such as opening for the Monochrome Set in October 1979 at London's Notre Dame Hall, highlighted his solo format's novelty, blending freestyle elements with gadgetry that foreshadowed broader industrial experimentation.[30][14] Collaborations intensified the theatrical destruction; in January 1984 at London's ICA, Fad Gadget joined Einstürzende Neubauten for a "Concerto for Voice and Machinery," contributing om-like mantras amid drills, jackhammers, and smashed pianos, though chainsaw use and ensuing riots were primarily band-driven, creating a haze of smoke and debris that overwhelmed spectators for 21 minutes until power was severed. Such events underscored his affinity for hardware-fueled anarchy, distinct from studio minimalism.[31] By the mid-1980s, as Tovey shifted to his real name, live outings evolved toward subdued, acoustic-leaning formats with drum machines and guitar, evident in 1985's "Luxury" renditions and 1991 Pyros shows at venues like Brussels' VK, prioritizing lyrical delivery over stunts. The 2001 Fad Gadget revival, including the April 15 Elecktrofest set at London's Mean Fiddler supporting Depeche Mode—reciprocating their 1980 opening for him—reinvigorated the persona with renewed vigor, though health constraints tempered extremes, drawing mixed generational crowds appreciative of the primitivist edge.[32][33][34]Musical Style and Themes
Influences and Technical Innovations
Tovey's early musical development drew from rock performers including Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, and Marc Bolan, whose performative intensity informed his high school band formation and later stage antics.[1] Transitioning to electronics, he operated within the late-1970s UK scene alongside industrial acts like Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire, adopting their punk-derived DIY principles of raw experimentation using accessible tools rather than studio polish.[3] This context emphasized causal sound manipulation over melodic convention, aligning with broader post-punk rejection of traditional instrumentation in favor of mechanical repetition. His aptitude for technical modification, honed through self-taught electronics tinkering, enabled custom adaptations such as rewiring a Grundig tape recorder with added switches to layer and collage sounds, predating commercial digital samplers.[13] Tovey routinely integrated synthesizers like the ARP 2600 and Korg models with unconventional percussion derived from household items—drills, electric razors, furniture, and metal scraps—to generate abrasive, industrial rhythms that contrasted synthetic tones.[13][27] These techniques yielded minimalistic structures, as on Under the Flag (1982), where the Roland MC-4 MicroComposer sequenced flat, machine-like patterns without organic variation, influencing subsequent electronic genres through empirical trial of noise as rhythmic foundation.[13] Collaborations highlighted further innovations; for "Collapsing New People" on Gag (1984), Einstürzende Neubauten supplied tuned metal percussion, amplifying Tovey's use of found-object strikes to evoke mechanical decay over programmed drums like the Korg Minipops.[13] Compared to contemporaries, his setup—featuring Roland SH-2, Juno-60, and modified Crumar Compac piano routed through fuzz pedals—prioritized hybrid analog noise over pure waveform synthesis, as in early singles where tape loops simulated proto-sampling effects absent in more melodic acts like the Human League.[13] This approach, grounded in iterative hardware tests rather than software abstraction, positioned Fad Gadget as a causal bridge to EBM's harder-edged minimalism.[2]Lyrical Content and Social Critique
Fad Gadget's lyrics often dissected the dehumanizing impact of machinery and industrialization on human behavior, emphasizing how technological progress fostered alienation rather than advancement. In tracks like "Saturday Night Special" from the 1981 album Incontinent, he employed sarcasm to critique societal tolerance for violence enabled by modern tools, with lines stating, "Every man should have the right to own a gun / Every man should have the right to shoot someone," underscoring a causal link between accessible weaponry and normalized aggression without idealizing pre-industrial simplicity.[35] Similarly, "Back to Nature," his 1979 debut single, portrayed environmental degradation as an inevitable byproduct of unchecked human expansion, framing nature's destruction through a dystopian lens that prioritized empirical consequences over sentimental regression to agrarian pasts.[36] Anti-consumerist themes permeated his work, revealing overlooked realist critiques of hedonistic excess and superficiality in industrialized societies. Songs such as "Collapsing New People" lampooned the erosion of authentic human connections amid material abundance, depicting individuals as hollow products of consumer culture who prioritize image over substance, a foresight into digital-age narcissism without romanticizing lost traditions.[37] This approach avoided left-leaning environmentalism's frequent nostalgia, instead grounding observations in the tangible trade-offs of progress—such as community disengagement in "State of the Nation," where lyrics decry passive spectatorship in urban decay.[38] His deadpan delivery amplified wry anti-hedonism, mocking pursuits like media-fueled escapism in "The Box," which equated television consumption to self-imposed isolation. While prescient in anticipating technology's role in commodifying personal experiences—evident in lyrics exploiting birth and death for entertainment value—critics noted the repetitive bleakness sometimes overshadowed nuanced delivery, rendering social diagnoses more prophetic in intent than varied in expression.[37] Tovey's realism privileged causal chains, like industrialization's direct erosion of agency, over ideological prescriptions, yielding lyrics that confronted modernity's costs head-on.[39]Personal Life and Death
Relationships and Family
Tovey married Barbara Frost, a photographer and occasional musical collaborator, after knowing her for six years and cohabiting for four, as detailed in a 1981 interview conducted shortly after their wedding. The union prompted minimal disruption to their routine, yielding practical gifts such as a fridge and freezer, and they maintained a household in a Fulham flat in London alongside a cat named Lilly.[24] Domestic duties, including those performed by Tovey such as washing up, frequently sparked creative ideas for his work, underscoring a grounded family environment amid his professional commitments.[24] The couple had two children: daughter Morgan Tovey-Frost and son Joseph Tovey-Frost. Morgan Tovey-Frost directed and produced the 2006 documentary Fad Gadget by Frank Tovey, which features interviews and archival material on her father's career.[40][41]Health Issues Leading to Death
Frank Tovey suffered from chronic heart problems originating in childhood, which persisted throughout his life.[42] [1] These longstanding cardiac issues formed the basis of his health challenges, though no specific medical interventions or progressive deterioration were publicly detailed in contemporaneous reports.[9] In early 2002, shortly after completing a European tour supporting Depeche Mode as Fad Gadget—the first significant performances under that moniker since the mid-1980s—Tovey died suddenly of heart failure on 3 April at his home in London.[7] He was 45 years old.[43] Official accounts attribute the fatal event directly to his preexisting heart condition, with no autopsy findings or additional contributing factors such as acute illness reported in reliable sources.Reception and Criticisms
Critical and Commercial Response
Fad Gadget received praise from critics for his innovative approach to electronic music, particularly his avoidance of derivative influences prevalent in the genre. New Musical Express (NME) highlighted his originality, noting that "unlike other electro-buffs, Fad came out of nowhere, did not have a thing for Bowie or robots and thus his records have dated less than some."[44] Reviews often commended the sharp, sardonic edge of his work, with outlets like Freq describing him as a "sadly neglected" figure capable of rivaling more commercial acts in "smart electronic pop."[45] However, some critiques pointed to the abrasive and chaotic elements of his sound and delivery, which limited broader appeal; for instance, characterizations of his output as "filthy, dangerous, and chaotic" underscored a tension between pioneering experimentation and mainstream accessibility.[37] Commercially, Fad Gadget achieved minimal success on the UK charts, reflecting his niche positioning within Mute Records' roster. None of his singles reached the Top 40, with "Collapsing New People" peaking at number 85 over four weeks in 1982, and "One Man's Meat" at number 92 for one week in 1983.[46] His albums failed to chart entirely, contributing to overall underperformance despite the label's growing profile through acts like Yazoo. This contrasted with a dedicated cult following that valued his prescient critiques and technical boldness, though it did not translate to widespread sales or radio play.[4] The perceived abrasiveness of his themes and stage antics further constrained commercial viability, positioning him as an influential but marginal figure in early electronic music.[2]Specific Controversies and Debates
One notable point of contention surrounding Fad Gadget's work arose with the 1983 single "Collapsing New People," interpreted by some critics and fans as a satirical critique of the emerging goth subculture, which formed a significant portion of Mute Records' audience. The lyrics mock stereotypical goth aesthetics—"dressed in black from your feet to your neck"—and behaviors, portraying participants as performative hypocrites who decry societal collapse while embodying superficial trends, leading to accusations that Tovey was elitistly "biting the hand that feeds" by alienating his core fanbase.[47][48] Defenders, however, argue the track exemplifies Tovey's commitment to unsparing social realism, using humor to expose cultural posturing rather than personal malice, with its upbeat synth arrangement underscoring the irony rather than endorsing conformity.[49] Tovey's lyrics more broadly sparked debates over their pervasive cynicism, with some contemporaries viewing the bleak portrayals of consumerism, industrialization, and human folly—such as in tracks like "The Sheep Look Up"—as nihilistic or anti-progressive, potentially discouraging constructive societal change by emphasizing inevitable decay.[50] Others, including later analysts, praise this approach as prescient and causal in its realism, anticipating environmental degradation and mass conformity in ways that proved enduringly relevant, as evidenced by retrospective assessments tying his themes to ongoing critiques of technological overreach.[37] Debates over Fad Gadget's underappreciation often pit commercial metrics against artistic merit, with proponents noting his limited chart success—e.g., "Collapsing New People" peaking at No. 5 on independent charts in January 1984—against the innovative synthesis of post-punk experimentation and folk-inflected critique that influenced peers like Depeche Mode, yet yielded no mainstream breakthroughs due to his resistance to polished production.[51] Critics arguing for overlooked genius highlight how Tovey's uncompromising stage antics and thematic depth prioritized integrity over accessibility, fostering a cult following but sidelining broader recognition in an era favoring synth-pop accessibility.[52][2]Legacy
Influence on Subsequent Artists and Genres
Fad Gadget's pioneering integration of synthesizers, tape loops, and performance art in the late 1970s and early 1980s exerted a direct influence on Depeche Mode, the second act signed to Mute Records by founder Daniel Miller after Fad Gadget's debut single "Back to Nature" in 1979. Depeche Mode supported Fad Gadget on tour dates, including performances in 1980 and 1981, where early exposure shaped their electronic sound; band members later acknowledged this connection in retrospective accounts, with Frank Tovey (Fad Gadget) reciprocating by opening for Depeche Mode on their 2001 Exciter Tour across Europe.[2][3] In the industrial music sphere, Fad Gadget's raw, gadget-driven electronics and critique-laden performances prefigured elements adopted by Nine Inch Nails and Skinny Puppy, as noted in music analyses tracing the genre's evolution from post-punk experimentation to aggressive synth-heavy production. Trent Reznor's early work on Mute-associated projects echoed Fad Gadget's mechanical rhythms and thematic dissonance, though shared label networks amplified rather than solely caused this transmission. Covers by EBM practitioners, such as Leaether Strip's 2013 rendition of "Back to Nature" and 2023 version of "Life on the Line," demonstrate ongoing emulation within electronic body music circuits.[53][54][55] Fad Gadget's output bridged post-punk's angularity with proto-synthpop and industrial fringes, contributing to EBM and techno precursors alongside contemporaries like Cabaret Voltaire, whose tape manipulation paralleled his but lacked his pop-inflected hooks. This causal link manifests in sampled motifs—e.g., "Back to Nature" elements in Fatboy Slim's 2004 tracks—and tributes from acts like Liars, underscoring his role in evolving gadgetry from novelty to genre foundation without supplanting broader influences like Kraftwerk. Empirical traces include Projekt203's 2022 cover of "Ricky's Hand," affirming sustained impact on niche electronic lineages.[2][56][57]Posthumous Recognition and Recent Developments
Following Tovey's death in 2002, a 2006 documentary titled Fad Gadget by Frank Tovey, directed by his son Morgan Tovey Frost and Alex Proyas, chronicled his life, career, and performances, featuring interviews with collaborators like Daniel Miller of Mute Records, Depeche Mode members, Paul Morley, and Anton Corbijn, alongside rare footage and unreleased tracks.[41][58] The release, accompanied by a double DVD compilation of videos, preserved visual documentation of his work but did not achieve mainstream distribution, reflecting his enduring but specialized appeal.[29] Reissues in the 2010s sustained interest among electronic music enthusiasts, including a 2019 edition of the Best Of Fad Gadget compilation, originally curated by Tovey in 2001, which highlighted 18 key tracks from his Mute Records era.[27] Tribute projects further evidenced posthumous niche recognition, such as the 2017-initiated Under What Flag: A Tribute to Fad Gadget, a collection of covers by underground dark electronic artists organized by DJ Seraphim (Chris Halstead) and later issued physically by Cleopatra Records, covering iconic songs to acknowledge Tovey's influence without broadening to popular audiences.[59][60] In 2025, the 43rd anniversary of Tovey's 1982 debut album Under the Flag prompted commemorative online mentions in specialized media, underscoring persistent but limited revival efforts amid his cult status as an electro-industrial pioneer.[39][62] These developments, including sporadic tributes and archival releases, have increased archival accessibility via platforms like YouTube and Bandcamp, yet Fad Gadget's profile remains confined to dedicated fanbases rather than achieving wider rediscovery.[63][64]Discography
Studio Albums
Fad Gadget's debut studio album, Fireside Favourites, was released on 7 November 1980 by Mute Records.[18] Recorded at Blackwing Studios in London, it contains 9 tracks and was produced by Fad Gadget alongside John Fryer and Eric Radcliffe.[18][65] The second album, Incontinent, followed on 18 March 1981, also via Mute Records. It comprises 9 tracks, continuing the electronic and post-punk style established on the debut.[66][67] Under the Flag, the third studio release, came out on 1 September 1982 through Mute Records.[39] Featuring 10 tracks, it was recorded amid Tovey's experiences with fatherhood, incorporating thematic elements of family and societal pressure.[20][68] The final Fad Gadget album, Gag, appeared on 1 February 1984 on Mute Records.[22] Recorded primarily at Hansa Tonstudios in Berlin in November 1983 with overdubs at Blackwing Studios, it includes 9 tracks and marked the conclusion of the project.[69][70] After retiring the Fad Gadget name, Frank Tovey issued solo studio albums, beginning with Snakes & Ladders in 1986.[71] Subsequent releases included Civilian in 1988 and Tyranny and the Hired Hand in 1989, both shifting toward folk-influenced and acoustic styles while retaining electronic elements.[72]Singles and EPs
Fad Gadget released a series of singles on Mute Records from 1979 to 1984, typically in 7-inch vinyl format with occasional 12-inch versions featuring extended remixes or additional tracks. These standalone releases emphasized minimalist electronic production and often served as precursors to album material, though some B-sides remained non-album exclusives. None achieved significant commercial success until the mid-1980s, with only two entering the UK Singles Chart.- "Back to Nature" / "The Box" (October 1979): The debut single, issued as Mute's second release overall, featured a stark synth-driven track critiquing modern detachment from nature, backed by the claustrophobic "The Box." Available in 7-inch format; a 12-inch version followed in 1980 with remixes. Did not chart.[73]
- "Ricky's Hand" / "Handshake" (14 March 1980): A non-album single with jagged rhythms and themes of urban alienation; "Handshake" served as B-side. Released in 7-inch; no chart entry.[74]
- "Make Room" / "Lady Shave" (March 1981): Double A-side format, with "Make Room" addressing overpopulation and "Lady Shave" delivering satirical commentary on consumerism via razor advertisement parody. 7-inch primary release; did not chart.[75]
- "Collapsing New People" / "Spoil the Child" (January 1984): From the Gag era, the A-side satirized yuppie culture with upbeat synth-pop; 7-inch and 12-inch editions included a "London Mix" remix. Peaked at number 85 on the UK Singles Chart, with 4 weeks in the listing.[76]
- "One Man's Meat" (1984): Final Fad Gadget single, exploring dietary and ethical contrasts; limited details on B-sides, primarily 7-inch and 12-inch formats. Reached number 92 on the UK Singles Chart for 1 week.[77]