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One of Canada's first Synthpop groups, Rational
Youth was formed in Montreal in the summer of 1981 by Tracy
Howe and Bill Vorn. Tracy had been a member of various
top local New Wave bands such as The Normals, Heaven
Seventeen and Men Without Hats; and Bill had been
a member of the all-synth band "U". Both Tracy
and Bill idolised Kraftwerk
and when the German synth gods released "Computer World",
the two Montrealers were inspired to start their own all-electronic
group, which they named Rational Youth. Within months of their
formation, they released their first single, 'Coboloid Race
c/w I Want To See The Light', on the independent YUL
label.
Writing "Cold
War Night Life". Tracy with Moog Source and Logan StringMelody;
Bill with Roland SH5, Vocoder SVC-350, Space Echo 201 and original
Casiotone. In the background is the nervecentre: Roland MC4 MicroComposer,
TR-808, System 100 and System 700.
In the spring of 1982, they released the
album 'Cold War Night Life', which included the hits 'Saturdays
In Silesia', 'City Of Night', and the European cult
fave 'Dancing On The Berlin Wall'. Bill and Tracy had been
joined by a third member, synthesist Kevin
Komoda, during the recording sessions for 'CWNL'. 'Cold
War Night Life' was Canada's first-ever full-length synthpop
release and the biggest- selling Canadian independent album of
the 1980's. The album was also released throughout Europe to
considerable success (on both sides of the Iron Curtain). Bill
Vorn left Rational Youth at the end of 1982 to resume communications
studies at the University of Quebec, and to conduct research
and development within the discipline of interactive robotics.
Olympic Park,
Montreal, 1982: Tracy Howe, Bill Vorn and Kevin Komoda.
After
Bill's departure, Tracy and Kevin carried on with the addition
of Denis Duran and Angel Calvo, and toured extensively across
Canada. In the spring of 1983, the group signed with Capitol
Records and released the mini-album 'Rational Youth'.
This record met with some success in Canada, but the chemistry
which had existed between Tracy, Bill and Kevin in Rational Youth's
original conception was missing in the new configuration and
this line-up disbanded at the end of 1983.
In 1984, Capitol Records asked Tracy to record a
new album with Dee Long, of the legendary Klaatu, as co- producer.
This project would become the album 'Heredity', which
was released in March of 1985. The decision to release this album
under the name Rational Youth was Capitol's, although Tracy concurred
at the time, because he had never wanted to become a "solo
artist". 'Heredity' was an eclectic and freewheeling
collection, which, although something of a deviation from the
classic Rational Youth analogue synthpop style (especially in
its use of guitars, etc.), was released to great critical acclaim
in Canada, and yielded the hit 'No More And No Less',
as well as the singles 'Call Me', and 'Bang On'.
In the end, however, it would have been better to
have released 'Heredity' as a solo album. Releasing it as a Rational
Youth album had the effect, ironically enough, of creating an
image of RY as simply a flag of convenience for Tracy as a solo
artist - which is precisely what he had wanted to avoid. The
album also created a new and different audience for Rational
Youth, but also, understandably, alienated some of their core
fans in Canada. After the release of 'Heredity', Tracy
took a band out on the road and toured throughout 1985 and into
early 1986.
In February of 1986, out of restlessness, and boredom
with the music industry, Tracy decided to put Rational Youth
on hold, indefinitely. The simple truth was that unless it remained
true to the concept that Tracy and Bill had originally given
birth to, there was no point in Rational Youth continuing.
Thanks to the efforts of fans through the Internet
in Europe and North America, Cold War Night Life was re-issued
on CD in 1997 through EMI Canada and October Records in Sweden,
and the original Rational Youth duo of Tracy Howe and Bill Vorn
got together for an official live reunion concert at the seventh
annual Virtual X-mas festival in Lund, Sweden on the 13th of
December, 1997.
In 1997, Tracy
and Bill got back together for a reunion concert in Sweden.
Bill has continued to this day in his quest to marry
music, art, and technology. The interactive
robotic installations that he does have achieved international
acclaim.
With the success of the reunion show in Sweden,
and a general renewed public interest in Rational Youth, Tracy
had hoped that Bill would join him in resuming the band's recording
and performance activities. Unfortunately, the time constraints
associated with Bill's academic and electronic art endeavours
would not permit this, so with Bill's blessing and support, Tracy
recruited a new Rational Youth line-up in Toronto from among
that city's underground electronic music scene.
Jean-Claude Cutz (A.K.A. Pupka Frey), had released three albums and appeared
on numerous compilations under the name DIN
and was also a former member of Digital Poodle and Kinder Atom.
He was an accomplished synthesist, composer and producer, as
well as being an exciting live performer. Tracy enjoyed with
J-C a musical partnership every bit as dynamic and creative as
the original one with Bill Vorn.

J-C joined up with Tracy midway through 1998, along
with Toronto synthesist Dave Rout,
and the new-look Rational Youth made its debut at the Tivoli
Festival in Helsingborg, Sweden in August of that year. Dave
has since moved on to other
projects, but in his time with the band he made a valuable
contribution to Rational Youth, both on stage and in the studio.
In the meantime, Rational Youth had established
a relationship with October
Records in Sweden. October label chief Dennis
Berggren had been responsible for re-releasing Rational Youth's
classic 1982 album Cold War Night Life in Europe in 1998.
Dennis encouraged RY to record new material and a single, "Everything
Is Vapour", was released in June of 1999. The first
new Rational Youth album in 14 years, "To The Goddess
Electricity", was released at the end of 1999 to critical
acclaim. Rational Youth toured throughout Scandinavia several
times over the next two years, and played their final concert
at the Tinitus Festival in Stockholm on 3 November, 2001.

In 2011, Tracy Howe,
Bill Vorn and Kevin Komoda reunited and Rational Youth released EPs of
remixes and new versions of Dancing On The Berlin Wall, City of Night
and Coboloid Race, once again on the YUL Records label.
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