26.12.24

News & New In The Archive

Happy New Year!
Sheep Farming and
Blue Meaning Picture Discs


Two limited edition picture discs of the 1980 Toyah albums
Sheep Faming In Barnet and The Blue Meaning will be released 21.3.2025 to mark each album's 45th anniversary

Pre-order Sheep from Cherry Red HERE
and Blue Meaning HERE



Toyah and Robert
on Love Your Weekend


Listen to TOYAH AND ROBERT on Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh, ITV 23.11.2024 (16 minutes) HERE

Watch the episode here (UK only) HERE




Intergalactic Ranchhouse, Tellurian
and Toyah's Shadow

The Official Toyah fan club Intergalactic Ranchhouse,
Tellurian and Toyah's Shadow fanzines and newsletters
are now online in full for the first time ever!

Take a dive into Toyah history year by year ↓

INTERGALACTIC RANCHHOUSE

1980-1981
1982
1983
1984-86

TELLURIAN

1-10 (1986-1990)
11-20 (1990-1992)
21-31 (1992-1996)

TOYAH'S SHADOW

Issues 1,2,3 (1998-2001)

Read just the interviews and Q&A'S HERE

Read just Toyah's letters in the Intergalactic
Ranchhouses HERE and the Tellurians HERE

Also online in full for the first time ever are
Laura's Toyah Fanzines 1980-81
and Simon and Denise's Toyah Fanzines
1982
1983
1984
 
Love Is The Law 2024

The remastered and expanded 1983 studio album
Love Is The Law was released 8.11.2024

The LP reissue is pressed on translucent red vinyl with a new colour inner bag and a lyric insert. The 2CD+DVD edition features 31 bonus tracks. Amongst the 21 previously unreleased are B-Sides, alternate mixes, rarities, home demos, instrumentals and studio outtakes

The releases are available to order from Cherry Red

For more information and the full track list
visit Official Toyah
Love Is 2024


 
NEW INTERVIEWS

LOVE YOUR WEEKEND, ITV 23.11.2024
TOYAH TALKS LOVE IS THE LAW 2024
TOYAH TALKS THE CHANGELING 2023
BBC THREE COUNTIES RADIO 24.6.2023
ABSOLUTE 80s 22.6.2023
BBC BREAKFAST 21.6.2023
VECTIS RADIO 18.6.2023
BBC RADIO MANCHESTER 31.5.2023
POP, THE HISTORY MAKERS 8.5.2023
MY 80s PLAYLIST, VIRGIN RADIO 5.5.2023
TOYAH TALKS ANTHEM SEPTEMBER 2022
BBC RADIO SCOTLAND THE AFTERNOON SHOW 7.9.2022
XS NOIZE PODCAST 25.8.2022
BBC RADIO 2 BREAKFAST SHOW 16.8.2022
RETROPOP MAGAZINE AUGUST 2022
LOUDER THAN WAR 9.8.2022
HOW TO BE 60 9.8.2022
WOMEN'S HEALTH - BREAKING THE TABOOS 27.7.2022
CHOOSE 80s @ CHILFEST 2.7.2022
METROLAND MAGAZINE @ CHILFEST 2.7.2022
ON RECORD | IN CONVERSATION 12.5.2022
MY TIME CAPSULE 24.1.2022
OK MAGAZINE 22.11.2021
ITV THIS MORNING 8.11.2021
METRO 60 SECONDS 2.11.2021
BBC RADIO SCOTLAND 30.10.2021
BBC RADIO 2 23.10.2021
THE DYSPRAXIC HELP 4U PODCAST 10.10.2021
CELEBRITY BRIDES UNVEILED 2009
E4 THE LATE EDITION 24.3.2005
BBC1 LIFE AND TIMES 2000
CHANNEL 4 TONIGHT WITH JONATHAN ROSS 9.1.1991
SKY TRAX 1985
BBC RADIO ONE  3.10.1983
HARTY, BBC1 8.3.1983
SOUNDCHECK Issue 1, 1983
GET SET FOR SUMMER, BBC1 July 1982
SUOSIKKI, FINLAND December 1981
PARKINSON, BBC1 October 1981
BACK ISSUE FANZINE 1980

Check out all the new stuff on our sister page HERE
TOYAH ON
SKY TRAX
APRIL 1985


PETER POWELL: You're very welcome, Toyah

TOYAH: Hello

PETER: Almost old friends. Born in the same area in the Midlands


TOYAH: Definitely

PETER: You went to a girl's school, didn't you?


TOYAH: I went to a public school, which is a very posh sort of upper class upbringing. I came out of it (puts on a posh nasal accent) talking like this and pretending I was one of the royal family. It was all horrible and I hated it

PETER: Did you get anything out of it at all?

TOYAH: Yeah, I learned to respect every person from every part of society. I don't think class systems matter, really. I was brought up to be a snob, and I was brought up to look down at my nose at people who worked, basically. I felt that was very wrong

I think everyone is equal emotionally, and that's what I learned from the school. It also taught you to go out and marry a rich husband and have lots of babies, and I'm certainly not one of those. I have no intention of ever marrying or ever having babies (Toyah with her dada Beric, below)


PETER: What was your first job?

TOYAH: I used to serve in a kiosk at a very famous department store in Birmingham selling cigarettes. That was to pay for my drama school. I used to go to drama school at the weekends. My parents said to me if I ever wanted to do anything that wasn't something they wanted me to do that I had to pay for it myself. So I had to earn my own keep to go to drama school

PETER: Have you ever been out of work since that first job?

TOYAH: Only once. I went from Birmingham to the National Theater Company and after my contract ran out with them, I was about 19, I was out of work for six months and that was hell. I think to be out of work is the most degrading thing anyone can have if they have the will to work, because work keeps your mind going

I'm a very ambitious person. If you take work away from me, you've taken my life away from me. I was just starved for six months. I starved of everything. Food, culture, the lot. I was felt totally depraved. It was horrible

PETER: There's a cliche which says rock and roll takes over your soul. Do you think that applies to you?

TOYAH: Oh yeah, it's a drug. It's an addiction

PETER: So you're a workaholic, really?

TOYAH: Total workaholic. I just love performing to people, and if the audience is taken away I might as well be put in a nut house in a padded cell, because there's no audience there. It is something that you need. I can only communicate to an audience. I can't communicate very well on a one to one basis. It's a perversion, really. I need an audience there. I need voyeurs there to bring it out of me

PETER: Your first experience of working there was in front of a camera, or at least - certainly in drama anyway, in acting ability


TOYAH: I went to drama school full time after I left the public school. I was spotted there after my first term at drama school. I got a lead role in a play ("Glitter", 1976), ironically about a girl who wanted to appear on Top Of The Pops and sing. So this girl had to break into the Top Of The Pop studio and film herself, and that's what the play was about. I co-wrote the songs for it. That was my first acting role


PETER: You've been fairly controversial, certainly quite outrageous during the early days

TOYAH: I think outrageousness should be linked with humanity. I think when you see people that were outrageous, who are not very nice people, I think that they're wasting their time. I think you can still be outrageous, you can still be controversial, and you can still respect human beings at the same time

When I see people these, these dreadful kind of communist types that slag off anything that isn't communist. I think, God, you're just not worthwhile. You're defeating the issue. The whole point is humanity and keeping the human race alive. Human race is number one. Your views fit in around that

PETER: As important as anything else is to remain free as well

TOYAH: Oh, yeah. I can't bear being trapped and I don't like anything that's regular. I don't like regular times and I don't like sleeping regular hours or eating at regular times. I don't like using knives and forks (Peter laughs) I’ve a pair of hands, I’ll eat with those, thank you very much. I think socially, my laws are very bizarre

I'm quite a quiet person, but when you stick me in a party I go berserk. I'm not very good in restaurants, because I don't like knives and forks and chairs either. I could be a bit loud, but I'd never hurt a human being's emotions. I'd never hurt another person, if I could help it

PETER: One of your anthems is “I Want To Be Free” and this is our first look at Toyah as a singer (the video plays) Quite a little anthem

TOYAH: Haven't seen that for ages. It was wonderful

PETER: Nice to see it again

TOYAH: I was young then. Three years ago, I think it was

PETER: In the early days when you were in rock and roll, sort of ‘76 till ‘79 - those first three years were full of excitement. Because you were in films, you were releasing your first singles, weren't you?

TOYAH:
Yeah, in one year I made about three or four films, which were major movies, and that sort of changed my life. At the same time I had the band going in the punk era, and we weren't really a punk band. We were like a jazz rock band with a very kind of punky image. I spent a lot of time touring England, which was hell for a woman

As soon as you get up North of England, you you're just battling with men all the time. It's very strange. So it was a time of toughening up for me. I lived quite sheltered life in Birmingham and suddenly I was out on the road with a band that were all boys, and I was a woman. I was in punch-ups on stage and everything


PETER: But you actually thrived on that rather macho tough cookie image

TOYAH: Oh, yeah. I think at certain times it was a mask to hide behind. When you're going on stage and people are spitting at you and throwing beer cans at you and things ... I wasn't going to break down. I don't believe in breaking down over something like that. I stood there and took it and humiliated myself to win the audience over

But many a time I was in a punch-up, dived in there and had good old fisticuffs. It was great (laughs). That shocked the boys a bit. My band were quite often diving in after me to pull me out of a fight so they could get on with the show

PETER: You got involved in another fight, which we'll talk about later on, which was for real. In those years “Jubilee”, which was a very cult movie,
part of the punk -


TOYAH:
“Jubilee” was made in the Jubilee year by Derek Jarman. There was Adam Ant, me. I think even Siouxsie and The Banshees appeared in it. It was a very fashionable movie to make and I think it will come into its own in about five years time. People will watch it and go “God!

PETER: That’s right

TOYAH: Bit like the Sex Pistols film ("The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle", 1980)

PETER: You can still see “Jubilee” now in one or two cinemas

TOYAH:
It's all over the place. Especially it shows on the late night circuit

PETER: And “Quadrophenia” as well, which is exciting

TOYAH: Yeah, "Quadrophenia" was a great film for me to do. I met The Who. Keith Moon died just the day before we were due to start shooting, so we didn't actually get to meet him, which is a drag because he was a hero. He was wonderful. But since then I've got to work with (Roger) Daltrey in a film of our own anyway. But “Quadrophenia” was all about the mods and the rockers and that was fabulous

PETER: Another era

TOYAH: Yeah

PETER: Was David Bowie ever a hero of yours?


TOYAH: Yeah. David Bowie I think is one of those people - I never want to meet him, and I never want to know him but his work just hits. The arrow hits dead on the on the bull’s eye whenever I hear his work. It just does something to me. Whenever I've done auditions I've always sung “Life On Mars” and always got the part so it's become a bit of a taboo, really, David Bowie and his music for me. There's a video you're going to show “Ashes To Ashes”

PETER: We can see it whenever you're ready


TOYAH:
To me that it's the ultimate video because it sums up Bowie up there (points to her head). It sums up what I always felt was going on in his head. It was this semi-madness. There's the public figure that is quite straight and quite wonderful and chic, but there's this madness up there too, which I can kind of identify with on certain days (the video plays)


PETER:
Do you find that songs that you listen to or songs you make are very much part of the mood?


TOYAH: My own songs?

PETER: Yeah


TOYAH:
I like to write from failure. I find if I have something in my life that really gets up my nose or annoys me, that's when I write better. I think it's true when people say creativity can come from failure or it can come from a destruction of something. You can come out with a better writing technique. Usually if I'm dead happy and things are going well and I write, the lyrics that come out of me are sort of bland. You could throw them away, you could burn them. No one would care

But if something tragic has happened in your life, the writing that comes from that - you'll find more people will identify with it. “I Want To Be Free” was written off the back of anger, and it was written off this incredible grudge I had towards having to go to school. I feel that, even though it's a poppy song, and a lot of people find the tune naff, it does sum up a lot of what a lot of kids feel

PETER: In 1981 things were really beginning to happen for you. You were having your first hits, you were already being voted as most exciting newcomer, best female vocalist, best rocker, best hairdo (Toyah laughs) So it was all happening in the space of quite a short time. Did you ever have a chance to sit back, look at the mirror and go “Toyah, what have you got yourself into?”

TOYAH:
Yeah, I think at the end of 1981 - when you walk down the street and have kids screaming and crying at you, you kind of sit down. You think, God, this is strange. This is really weird. Because when you get down to the basics I'm more vulnerable and more human than any of that lot, and I'm more childish and I'm probably more dumb than any of that lot. Why the hell are they screaming and crying at me? That sort of confused me a bit. I enjoyed it, but it was confusing

PETER: And you’re also jack of all trades to a certain extent? You were acting, you were in films, you were singing, you were touring. You were doing so much at that stage

TOYAH: Yeah, loved it. The more work, the better (laughs) That's the way it's got to be

PETER: Do you remember “Thunder In The Mountains”?

TOYAH:
Yeah, I remember “Thunder In The Mountains”. I had to ride a chariot, and they were going to have a stunt person ride the chariot for me. I said “no way. I'm going to ride that chariot.” I really enjoyed it

PETER: Do you want to see it again?

TOYAH: Yeah, I'd love to, thank you (the video plays)

PETER: Do you look at these old videos and think, “wow, I've changed!”

TOYAH: Yeah, it's actually that one. When I was a kid there was Flower Pot Men (a kids's programme 1952-53) with (a sunflower called) Little Weed and there's Little Weed going “I’m Little Weed!” and I look like Little Weed in it. So whenever I see it I kind of laugh. I think of this little sunflower


PETER: Again, this sort of macho image of you on a chariot, all that scene


TOYAH:
Yeah, I love all that. I know it's very butch (they both laugh) Got to have these little fantasies every now and then

PETER: When do you think you stopped being a little girl?


TOYAH: When did I stop?

PETER: Yeah

TOYAH: I don't think I have stopped. Because when I'm alone, I'm really quite strange. I like to play hopscotch still and have piggybacks and things when the camera isn't on me. I am still bit immature. I grew up physically over the past few years. I think I've grown up a bit. Not very much, but a bit

PETER: Broken out?

TOYAH: Yeah, the puppy fat’s going a bit. But mentally I don't think I'll ever grow up. I think age is a social disease. I just don't think you have to grow old. I think the body doesn't actually start aging until in your late 50s, so why should you mentally start aging when you're in your 20s?

PETER:
You said you had a fairly sheltered home life. Did you ever go abroad in those early days? You ever go on holidays?


TOYAH: Yeah, I was taken to Majorca but those are kind of strange days. My brother and sister used take this wonderful delight in getting me very drunk on a drink called sangria. I had my first bout of alcohol poisoning when I was nine thanks to my brother and sister. It's was at one of these weird barbecues. They got me very drunk. So my memories of going abroad are quite strange, because of my my brother and sister’s perversities. But otherwise I used to love going abroad

PETER:
Europe's a very big area to cover, and you have been out there a number of times in your career?


TOYAH: Yeah, I've toured and I've done TV appearances and things like that

PETER: A good buzz, generally?

TOYAH: Yeah, it's always been bubbling under. I've never been out there enough to fulfill it, which is a bit of a pain. But I hope to rectify that now. Now that I'm with an international company rather than an independent label I intend to tour more


PETER: Good. One of your favorite bands, same as mine. We do have an awful lot in common - Simple Minds

TOYAH:
Oh God, yeah!

PETER: What's the magic about them?

TOYAH: It’s his (Jim Kerr) voice. It's the video you're about to see now which is “Don't You (Forget About Me)” - it has this repressed energy in it but when I listen to it I'm all bubbling inside even though this song never picks up tempo or anything like that. I like the way (Steve) Lillywhite produces

PETER: Because he used to produce you as well

TOYAH: Yeah, everything's right

PETER:
Let's see it (the video plays) He's just got a total natural charisma, hasn’t he?


TOYAH: It's not trained perfection. It's a natural thing. Because when you listen to him sing it's it's not always in time, or it's not always quite in tune, but it works. And what I like is that live feel. I feel I'm a live performer, and they've kept that live performance on vinyl, which is something I'm striving for. So I always listen to them whenever I'm recording. I always listen to Simple Minds, because they give me a real buzz. It's great

PETER: Hit albums, hit singles over quite a lot of years now and I want to talk about the music side in a moment. But first, just to clarify and clear up the visual side, the acting side of Toyah. You've worked with Sir Lawrence Olivier? (in "The Ebony Tower", 1984)


TOYAH: Ooh, yeah

PETER: Who hopefully is known by millions all around Europe


TOYAH: Katharine Hepburn, too (in "The Corn Is Green", 1979)

PETER: Some of the best actors in the world! Were you out of your depth?

TOYAH:
Oh, yeah. I'm always out of my depth, because I'm still learning about everything. But out of all the people in the world I could have worked with, Katharine Hepburn and Laurence Olivier (below with Toyah and Greta Scacchi) were the most human. They didn't act like stars or anything. They just had this great charisma, and they were very kind people because they kept seeing my imperfections and correcting them, but not kind of putting me down

Katharine Hepburn would, during the scene, have the whole shoot stop, and George Cukor was directing and she says (puts on Katharine’s accent) “Hey George, you know this lady - she ain't on camera well enough” and she'd sort of move me into a different position, so I had the scene. I'd be sort of mainly on camera throughout the scene. She was very giving like that, which is very rare


PETER: Sort of fatherly and motherly passion towards you


TOYAH: Yeah! Totally!

PETER: You held the stage on your own for a considerable length of time in London in a very aggressive stage play, which is called “Trafford Tanzi” (1983) which was all about a wrestler

TOYAH:
It was wonderful!

PETER:
You held the stage all on your tod. Was that an experience?


TOYAH: Oh, God, loved it! I think that, to me, is the greatest part I've ever played. I'm very sad it hasn't been immortalised on film but it was good. It was about a girl who has the hell beaten out of her from day one till the day she marries. I learned how to Thai wrestle, which is like kickboxing and Kung Fu. It's a kind of cross between those

Because I'm so small it didn't look right me fighting a fully grown man. The whole play was structured around this girl fighting all the time. But while she's fighting, she delivers the dialogue. “Hello. How are you today?” Which is wonderful. She's really good and I really enjoyed it. It was fabulous!

PETER: I came to see it and so did many thousands of Toyah fans. They're a very loyal bunch, aren't they?

TOYAH: Yeah, they were there every night. You could hear them outside. They didn't always come in the theater, but they waited outside the stage door for me. I used to go and talk to them in the intervals. “Hi, how are you?” They'd nick restaurant tables and chairs from around the area, and they'd be sitting at the stage door, wining and dining. These kind of punk rockers. It was wonderful!

PETER: The nearest we can get to a visual aspect of that is another of your videos which you want us to play. Wendy Williams

TOYAH: I'm not into all her music, but this video sums up how I'd like to make a video. I mean, this woman's really naughty

PETER: It's cool. “It’s My Life” (the video plays) Aggressive

TOYAH: It’s wonderful!

PETER: Fraction rude as well, perhaps

TOYAH: She's a very raunchy lady and a very hard woman. I'm very different to her in that. I don't think I'm as hard as that, but I just admire her

PETER:
Wendy Williams “It’s My Life”. It's your life. We're almost up to date, actually. 1984 there was another movie which was “Murder: Ultimate Grounds for Divorce”


TOYAH:
With Roger Daltrey. It was really good to get back on acting terms with him, because before he was the producer of “Quadrophenia” and then suddenly we were making a film together, which was really good


PETER: Is 1985 the time now, the era, for you to come back into the music aspect?


TOYAH:
Yeah, I'll be touring Europe and I'm going to be releasing regularly now because I'm with a record company that I feel very confident with. I'm just going to start really concentrating on the music for a good decade. I will fit the acting in every now and then. I want to get touring again and doing all that again

PETER: Taking the cobwebs out of the system?


TOYAH: Yeah, I just feel that I'm at my best performing live. I haven't done enough in Europe, and I haven't done enough all over the world. As you say I've got to get it out of my system, and I'm going to go out and do it. I'm writing solidly now, which is something I was very lazy at in the beginning. I didn't write a lot, and now I write all the time. I love it. I'm just going to keep churning it out until I look old

PETER: Another hit for you. I've got some smashing pictures to show you, by the way, after this, of Toyah. This is “Don’t Fall In Love”, a new release from Toyah (the video plays) Very simple but very effective video

TOYAH: Yeah, I didn't want a video with a too complicated a storyline, because the subject matter of the song was kind of lovey-dovey, and it was mainly about jealousy and the female aggressor. I didn't want the storyline to dictate to the audience too much. I just wanted a performance. So it was quite nice. And we did it with Terence Donovan, who's a very famous photographer. He made me look human

PETER: Let's just show one or two of the photographs he's done

TOYAH: (in a manly voice) He made me look like a woman

PETER: There you go (shows a black and white photo to the camera) That's one of the shots that was done for Toyah. I hope you can see that. Can I ask you to sign those, if you would, and then one of the other guys on Sky Trax will give them away on the program in a competition

TOYAH: Yeah!

PETER: And also we've got three of these. A lovely color one as well (shows a poster) Very proudly, there you go. So if you can sign those as well, we can send those out

TOYAH: Definitely


PETER: Is this year been the time when you've perhaps matured most? This whole new look is a mature woman, isn't it?

TOYAH: Yeah, but it's keeping up with the time. I don't want to live in the past. And especially fashion wise and image wise I don't like looking the same all the time. I just feel 1985 is a year of progression within fashion that we haven't been through in quite some time. The punk elements kind of hung over the past four years

I want to change out of that and move on to another direction. I don't like being dictated to by fashion in that I had a look of zany colored hair, pink hair. That's not how I want to look for the rest of my life and I just keep moving on with the times, really

PETER: Any fears for the future?


TOYAH: Any fears? No, all I care is that Earth remains Earth. Human race remains alive. That's all I care about. There's no fears within my work or my life. That’s all a gamble anyway. But I'm not scared of it. I care for humanity at this moment in time. I can't bear see people blowing each other up

PETER: Well, it's worked for you so far. We're going to play out with Eurythmics which is another -

TOYAH: Annie Lennox is just so brilliant. I mean she's got a brilliant voice, brilliant presence. Her videos are brilliant, and the music's brilliant, so why not play out with her

PETER: Toyah, I’ve never done this before (kisses her one the cheek) I've got to say you're smashing!

TOYAH: Thank you! It's nice to b back

PETER: Good luck. Thank you very much. Bye bye, everyone

TOYAH: Thank you!

Watch the interview on Youtube HERE

3.12.24

TOYAH AND ROBERT ON
LOVE YOUR WEEKEND
WITH ALAN TITCHMARSH
ITV, 23.11.2024


ALAN: Talking of royal sisters you had an encounter with Princess Margaret?

TOYAH: I did. I never expected that I'd be invited to Buckingham Palace, to St James' Palace, but I was recording an album called “Anthem”, which “It’s A Mystery” came off, and I got this invite from St James’ from the Queen Mother - would I go to tea and go and meet her? I remember phoning up my mum and dad and saying “I'm going to St James'. This is incredible

I arrived with the designer Katharine Hamnett, and we were taken into a beautiful salon, and we waited, and out came Princess Margaret and the Queen Mother. Both on separate sofas and they took it in turns to talk to us. I turned out that Princess Margaret wanted to meet a punk rocker (they all laugh) We had a fantastic time!

ALAN: Queen Mother said “I'll get one in!”

TOYAH: Yeah, literally! What I loved about Princess Margaret, because I met her many, many times socially, she was more punk rock than punk rock ever was. She was a free soul, a free spirit. Incredibly witty, very, very clever and really good fun at parties

ALAN: She stayed up quite late at parties as well. What about musical heroes? Who's your musical hero?

TOYAH: Without a shadow of doubt David Bowie. Long time. When I first saw him the effect was life changing. Here you had this man in this spacesuit with makeup on at a time when men couldn't do that. He was groundbreaking. I thought that's what I want to do and want to be. But then he had this incredible body of work from about 1970 right through to 1983

The body of work that he wrote in that period no other artist has matched. Work that just changed the industry so much. Whenever I felt lost or confused, when I was being creative and writing albums I always went back to him. I went back to his incredible creativity and the fluidity with how he was creative, because there was no method that he followed. Everything he did was brand new and fresh and different and just kind of so exciting

(Clips of videos of “It’s A Mystery”, “Thunder In The Mountains” and “ I Want To Be Free” play)

ALAN: Just a few of the low key songs that were the signature dish of Toyah Willcox (laughs) They really did define an era, didn’t they?


TOYAH: This all came out of punk in the late 70s into the early 80s, which became new wave, and that went on to be electropop. So it's a very exciting time in music history

ALAN: Did you feel you were leading or was it sort of going on and you were sometimes keeping up with it?

TOYAH: I felt I was leading about 1978, which sounds a long way away, but from 1978–79 to 1980 I was drawing massive crowds to pubs - because we all played pubs back then. 2000 kids would turn up and shut the town down and that was a remarkable feeling

Then 1981 I was asked to record “It’s A Mystery” and that turned my life around. I became an international name at that point. It was at that point that everything was just a little bit more controlled. So when I look back, I'm so excited about that build up because it was so unpredictable

ALAN: But as you say, such a following. It was the thing. It was almost frenzied, really, wasn't it? Not just your performances, but but that whole period was so intense!

TOYAH: It was very intense. But I have to say, I loved every minute of it (Alan laughs)

ALAN: Well, your most recent experience of hopefully loving every minute of it was on “Strictly Come Dancing” as the “Little Mermaid”

(A clip of Toyah on "Strictly Come Dancing" plays)

ALAN:
It wasn't a long rein Toyah, (she cackles) but you didn't go out in the first week. There you are with Neil Jones strutting your stuff in “Musicals Week”. Astonishing costume. How did you dance with that wig on your head?


TOYAH: The wig wasn't too heavy. They'd hollowed out the center of it. I have to give a big wave to the costume department at Strictly - they are incredible! They have to produce 28 costumes a week. We don't see what we wear, or I didn't see what I was wearing until the day of the show. If that costume isn't working, they take it off you, and they give you something completely different to wear

My favorite bit was the training. We trained seven hours a day. I loved it! I loved the intensity and the focus of it, and then you go to Elstree (studios), and you're just surrounded by noise and makeup and clothes! It's fabulous!


ALAN: It must be tempting at that point to completely forget everything you've ever learned over the last week or whatever

TOYAH: It's quite a pressurized thing. It definitely is quite outstanding in its experience. But I was on with beautiful celebrities. We all really got on incredibly well, and I feel very privileged to have done it

ALAN: Because there’s been quite a bit of controversy about it of late

TOYAH: Of late

ALAN: So you didn't feel in any way threatened at all? You enjoyed the experience?

TOYAH: I've been in this business for 45 years and I have been criticised every day of my life (Alan laughs). So I'm used to it. I'm also used to, as a woman, having to prove myself every day. You just you toughen up to it. I still really believe that it was a fantastic opportunity. Every day opportunities were handed to me and I just worked incredibly hard to make the most of it and I loved every second. It's as simple as that

ALAN: And now you can go and have holiday

TOYAH: Yeah, I've worked with tougher directors. I've worked with George Cukor, who directed Judy Garland in “A Star Is Born”. He shouted every day at not only me, but I was with Katharine Hepburn and they'd shout at each other. I'm used to this. When you're at the top, it's tough. It's so tough

ALAN: As Katharine would know

TOYAH: Yes

ALAN: “The Corn Is Green” with Katharine Hepburn. It's not often you can introduce a guest who's acted with this icon, is it?

(A clip from “The Corn Is Green” plays)

ALAN: To have a part like that with Katharine Hepburn. It wasn't just walk on, walk off - you're having a scene together


TOYAH: We had so many scenes together.

ALAN: Oh! C’mon on! Tell us all about her! She’s such an iconic name!


TOYAH: The first meeting I had with her was at Eaton Square in London and George Cukor opened the door. My agent said “you're going to meet Katharine Hepburn and you're going to read this play with her.” George Cukor opened the door and I just thought he was this gorgeous old American man

He led me into a living room. Katharine Hepburn and I sat on a sofa and she said, “I'm very interested in you. You're a punk rocker” and I said, “well, yeah, I'm also an actress. Been in the National Theater”. At this time I was 19

We spent the whole afternoon, at least three hours, talking about punk rock. Eventually I read for “The Corn Is Green” and at midnight that night my agent phoned me and she said “you've got the part. They saw 2000 girls and you've got the part. Katharine Hepburn wants to see you tomorrow to read the whole script”. She was just gorgeous. She told me that when she was the same age as I was, she was non-conformist. She wore men's clothes

ALAN: She did

TOYAH: She loved to wear trousers. She was criticised for it and she said the moment she met me she knew she'd met a similar soul to her and we were pretty inseparable

ALAN: Did you keep up with her afterwards?

TOYAH:
I didn't keep up with her, but she wrote two books in which I featured

ALAN: Oh!

TOYAH:
She said she fell in love with the fire in my eyes

ALAN:
What an experience!


TOYAH: She knew I went on to become a really famous singer and she kept writing in all her books “Toyah is now a famous singer, but when I saw her she was a child with fire in her eyes”

ALAN: Talking about fire in your eyes, the fire that Katharine Hepburn had in her eyes there when you're playing opposites. The old thing is that if you play a bit of tennis and you play with somebody who's really good it lifts your game. When you're playing opposite someone like Katharine Hepburn that must lift your game?

TOYAH: It did lift my game and George Cukor, bless him, with his incredible history - because he discovered Marilyn Monroe and James Dean. He would favor Katharine in the scenes and Katharine would say (puts on Katharine’s voice) “no, George, I want the camera on Toyah here. This is her moment”

They had this amazing relationship where they would banter and barter and argue. They were both very strong people and Katharine would insist that I had close-ups where probably I wouldn't have got them in that particular kind of circumstance

ALAN:
Oh! A generous performer then?



TOYAH: She was generous, she was beautiful, she was extraordinary and she taught me more about life than anyone else and I've worked with Sir Laurence Olivier (above) as well. Both of these people were so unique, and their lust for life burnt so brightly it just taught me to treasure every single moment. Every working day, I just treasure it

ALAN:
There's a great chance in circumstances like that that you'll be completely overawed, intimidated and a gibbering wreck


TOYAH: I didn't know who they were (Alan cracks up laughing) I hate to say it when I met George Cukor and Katharine - I didn't know who they were. When I sat down next to Katharine she told me about the discipline you have to have. Know your lines, arrive on time, respect those above you, be polite. All of those values of early Hollywood

ALAN:
They've stuck with you, haven’t they?


TOYAH: Yeah, they really have

ALAN: But then so has the music and so has one particular chap with whom you still perform. Here you are at the Isle of Wight Festival

(A clip of Toyah and Robert performing “Heroes” plays)

ALAN: Toyah Willcox alongside Robert Fripp at the Isle of Wight Festival there on guitar. Still alongside Robert Fripp, after 37 years!

TOYAH: 38!

ALAN: 38! One behind!

ROBERT has joined them in the studio

ROBERT: And last week was the 39th anniversary of our first date

TOYAH: Yeah, our very first date

ALAN: How did you meet?

TOYAH: Well, initially, we were introduced by Princess Michael of Kent at a charity event (below)

ALAN: Oh, give over! It's all name drops on this show!


TOYAH: She grabbed both of us. We'd never met and she pulled us together and said “I want a photo with both of these people”. I got a copy of that photo and it also went into the Daily Express the next day but they’d cut Robert out of it (Alan laughs) If he's badly behaved enough he always makes the papers


ALAN: Now, talking about being badly behaved, there was one instance in “Strictly Come Dancing” where you were very badly behaved. Here's an example

(A clip of Robert booing judge Craig Revel Horwood dressed as Captain Jack Sparrow for "Movie Week")

ALAN: It was hard to see it was Craig under all that beardage and whatnot. But you're sticking up your wife

ROBERT: Well, two things are involved. Firstly, Craig clearly plays the role of the panto villain so what the audience does is boo. Secondly, the principal needs to be established. If you diss my wife when I'm in the room there will be repercussions. So I stood up for the second time and booed

ALAN: Some of the work that you've done, Robert, as guitarist - astonishing work with David Bowie. You can set the record straight. We've had a discussion in here. Is it (pronounces the name differently) David Bauwie, or David Bowie?

ROBERT: Bowie I thought

TOYAH: Bowie

ALAN: That was the majority verdict that’s it Bowie. Working with people like that, from your point of view, again, as a musician, tell me about Bowie, because we don't see lots of him nowadays as much as we used to but an enormous name

ROBERT: A very charismatic man. Bowie met his wife Angie dancing, jiving, to King Crimson's first show at The Speakeasy in London

ALAN: And you were King Crimson?


ROBERT: Yes, in 1969. I met him socially in 1972 but really, until the call came in in 1977 ... I’d moved to live in New York and the call came in and it was Brian Eno on the phone. He said “I'm here in Berlin with David. I'll pass you over” and David came on and he said “do you think you can play some hairy rock and roll guitar?”

And I said, “Well, I haven't really been playing lately because I've been on a retreat, but if you're prepared to take the chance, so am I”. And the first class ticket arrived and I flew Lufthansa first class to Berlin

ALAN: To play for Bowie

ROBERT: “Heroes” by the (Berlin) wall and over there, 300 yards away, was the machine gun turret

ALAN: Oh, my goodness!

ROBERT: Looking in towards the studio. But it was a remarkable in-between time. Berlin and New York were both in-between, liminal places

TOYAH: I played for the American forces in Berlin and the tension near the wall was extraordinary at that time. So I think you doing “Heroes” with that view out of the window, knowing how close these people were encased the other side of the wall - I think it really added to that recording

ROBERT: Yes, there was an edge

ALAN: Yeah, 39 years together then - what's the secret?


TOYAH: (laughs) Well, I'd say for 30 of those we never saw each other! We were on the road separately!

ALAN: That’s the secret, just make sure it's only nine of them you are together!

TOYAH: But now we're on the road together and that's really beautiful. It's really lovely. I love looking over and seeing my husband playing and his gorgeous world accomplished playing it really thrills me. You mentioned earlier that when you work with the greats, they elevate you. Well, I look over at my husband and the love elevates me, but also his incredible ability elevates me

ROBERT: Well, I look over at my wife and within 90 seconds of walking on stage Toyah owns the space

ALAN: There you are, compliments flying. So you're doing this tour?

TOYAH: Yes, we are doing our “Toyah and Robert’s Christmas Party Tour.” We start in Edinburgh, we work our way down Sunderland, Bath, Wolverhampton, the Indigo at the O2 in London. It's quite a short tour, but it's going to be quite intense

ALAN: There's a fair chance you'll still be together when you get to the end of it if it's a short one

TOYAH:
Please! (they all cackle)

ALAN: Toyah and Robert, thank you both very much, lovely to see you!

13.11.24

TOYAH TALKS
LOVE IS THE LAW IN 2024

From the DVD of the Love Is Law reissue 2024


TOYAH: 1983, at the beginning of the idea of recording, at the very, very beginning, I felt very strongly that I wanted a writing process that represented the writing process we had with “Sheep Farming In Barnet” and “Blue Meaning” where we were left alone as creative artists and musicians to just write and see what would happen. So the best way we felt to do this was to move everybody into my house

I had a room that was really a dining room, but had been converted into a gym. We moved an entire studio into the gym. Simon Darlow, who I have known since I was 18, and he was 17, moved into the house with us. Joel Bogen (guitar) lived about 500 yards down the road, so he could get to me very quickly

We decided that we would start writing every day from 10 am. I was taking on a play at that time called "Trafford Tanzi" (below), but once that opened I didn't leave the house till 4.30. I finished the play around 11 pm and a car would take me to the Marquee Studios, and we'd work through the night. Now this may sound exhausting, but it was actually exhilarating. Absolutely exhilarating. To add Simon Darlow into the writing process took attention away from me and Joel. Joel always wanted something to go one way and I was always pushing in another


It wasn't that we were completely polarized, because we were great friends, but “The Changeling” was very challenging in that I felt I was edged out of it in under certain circumstances. That was mainly because Steve Lillywhite, who's a very good man and a brilliant producer, I don't think understands women

So I didn't ever want to be in that situation again where I felt like an outsider on my own project. So by moving everyone into my house I was incredibly happy. It was breathtakingly spontaneous, creative. We just could not record the ideas quick enough. Having Simon Darlow there, who was a remarkable catalyst, having him back in my life, because he did some keyboard work on “The Changeling” and the moment he walked into the studio, it's like, “thank fuck! It's like my brother has come home!”

He instantly bought me back into the fold. Having him in our house, we would actually get up early and write a song like “Haunted”. I've been working with Simon Darlow recently, and he said “you do know we wrote that at about six in the morning in your office?” and I had no memory of that. Because he was always there, and he was always with me, and he was a really supportive friend

It meant if I said something like, “oh gosh, I feel haunted by this”. He said, “That's a song! It's a song” Let's do it!” Got the keyboard out and we'd start jamming. He made everything possible for this album with his enthusiasm. He hadn't been touched in any way or tainted by how outsiders can influence a process negatively. He was just like a puppy with a new toy. He was full of energy, and it really, really helped me and Joel a lot

"Trafford Tanzi" was a media hit. It was a massive critical hit for me, and slightly highlighted by the fact that on Broadway Debbie Harry opened it the same week, and the critics on Broadway virtually closed it within a week. In Japan a version opened and the critics virtually shut it down within a week there. But our version - it's about an English, northern couple who sought their wedding problems out in the wrestling ring. So it was quintessentially an English, British project and I think that's why it worked


The music was great. It was a musical. It was completely sold out for the entire run, and it saved the Mermaid Theatre. It invigorated me. I think part of it, as the artist I am, is I needed to move between genres to find out my voice at that time, and it invigorated me to have a lot of personal freedom at that time. I traveled without security. I didn't have security at the theatre

It was a remarkable event that for five months it became a campsite outside the Mermaid Theatre with up to 130 to 300 fans sleeping rough outside the theatre. There was a tunnel, a road tunnel, that went along beside the theatre that was graffitied so often I had to pay for it to be painted twice

The fans were fantastic, and a lot of them became couples and it was a very lovely experience. So when I arrived, there was a crowd waiting for me, and I stayed and I talked with them as much as I could, probably half an hour to an hour each time. In the interval, I would go out and talk to them. You've got to bear in mind there's always been a process with me if you don't schedule a an eating I don't eat. So I used to go out with my cup of Complan, which is a meal supplement in the interval, and have my Complan while talking to them

I found it very, very grounding. It tuned me in to who and what they were and their mental frailties, as well as their joys and how they saw me and what I gave to them. Because you can get so isolated as an artist and you can get disillusioned or illusional about things. You just get the wrong impression. To be with them helped me become more grounded and bit more street level as well

That's really important, I think, to get your ideas from the street rather than from the latest wonderful dinner at the Grosvenor Hotel. It's much more important. Eventually, when we started moving to the Marquee to record, they followed. It was a small group that followed. The Marquee was down a very narrow driveway, and they couldn't fit 300 tents in, but some followed. That was a very nice experience too, because we could play them stuff on "Love Is The Law". We called about 21 of them in and said “you’re going to sing the chorus now”

I remember they all went from being really cocky, sure of themselves people into quiet as mice, slightly terrified, not understanding the process. We were lovely with them, and (the producer) Nick Tauber was fabulous with them. They were just standing at the mics like rabbits in the headlight. But we got it and all we needed them to do was chant “love is the law”and they did it brilliantly. It's just so lovely that they are there, on that recording

With this huge encampment outside the theatre they started to call themselves The Angels and Demons, which gave them their identity. It showed that they were there for a purpose, and there was a purpose in what they did every day. So The Angels and Demons came into the world at that point


The most collaborative I have ever experienced with the band was in the very beginning when Pete Bush, Joel Bogen and I would meet every Sunday and we'd write. Then when we got signed we were given time in a rehearsal studio to write. We were writing for months on end and occasionally going out and doing a series of gigs. For "The Blue Meaning" we had to do some of the writing in Battle, Hastings while we were recording. "IEYA" had only ever been an encore improvisation up until the point we went into the studio to record "The Blue Meaning"

So there was a long writing and recording process actually in the studio, which for me doesn't help. You get so pressurized and the anxiety - you're in overload. Then with "Anthem", by some magical alchemy, the band was sending me backing tracks of the songs that they'd written together with no vocals on. The alchemy was just extraordinary. I think that's partly because of the musicality of Phil Spalding (bass), Nigel Glockler (drums), obviously Joel and Adrian Lee (keyboards). You had a group of phenomenal composers all in the same room

I was writing lyrics, the top lines in the morning and recording it in the afternoon, without fail, on an entire album. I think I did it all in two weeks. On "The Changeling" the collaboration became very fractured, and I'm not sure why. It shouldn't have become fractured. I think part of it was that Joel and Phil Spalding wanted to separate themselves from Toyah the star. That point the band were being held apart from me, and it started to show. But I think the tension has worked really well in that end product. What I wanted to go back to was the sheer improvisational joy of being in a room with musicians who all have experience of songwriting

An example of this is "I Explode", which for me, is a really fucking great song. It captures everything I needed and wanted to experience as a very physical singer. I think it came from Joel creating a riff, and then Simon Darlow adding a sequencer and doing something complimentary to Joel's riff. It was so exciting. It was like an unstoppable train. I wanted to create this image, which really comes from Aleister Crowley (and English occultist) creating the myth that exploded his son through a magical spell. This was during the time of the Hellfire Club, where everyone was experimenting with the spirit side of life and with the occult and all of that

I wanted to express how I felt as a dyslexic when I can't express myself properly because you get blockages in your processes. You feel as if you're just going to explode because you know it's alive in there and you can't transfer it into the outside world. I was marrying that to the imagery of a human combustion. This song is just breathtaking! To perform it live is like a possession. I absolutely love it!

This is why that collaborative process was so magical on “Love Is The Law” because we never once sat there with writer's block. The three people who easily could have been polarized suddenly clicked, and it was really exciting. And then we brought Nick Tauber in, and Tauber has always been the right person for us, other than Steve James, who moved to Australia

Nick produced "Sheep Farming In Barnet" and "The Blue Meaning". Tauber has always been perfect. He kept us together as friends, never judged, never caused friction, made every idea we suggested possible. He was open. He just understood us and he didn't block us if he didn't understand something we were trying to do. He explored it


I think one of the funniest experiences is he had to bring me down to earth every time I arrived after the theatre performance, because I would be revving at 190% until about four in the morning because of this incredible stage show. I think he asked me to take a sleeping pill before I did either “Martian Cowboy” or “Rebel Of Love”. He needed to bring me down so I took the sleeping pill and it just made me normal (laughs) so that I could just give a relaxed performance

I love writing via improvisation. Even today Simon Darlow and I improvise for about two days and then take the songs from sections of the improvisation. It's a really beautiful way of using the truth of who you are, rather than reflecting influence from others. It's the way I find my voice. Before we went into the Marquee Studios we needed about 10 demos, so I would get home after the theatre - it would take about an hour and a half to get to North London in those days. It was a very bad journey

Simon Darlow would be ready for me, and I'd eat, and then we'd go into the studio. I can't remember drinking, but perhaps I did. I was never really a very heavy drinker, from about 1976 to about 1980 I probably did drink a lot to try and bring me down. To just get me down to a human level, because I'm really ramped all the time, naturally

I just don't know what I would have drunk. It might have been Bacardi and Coke or something like that. That is something I genuinely can't remember. They tried me with the wacky backy (weed) and I'd just fall asleep. So that didn't do its job. But I always felt very safe with Simon. Simon and I have a kind of old soul past life connection. I always feel in his company that he's never judging me. He never ever comments on my inability to play a musical instrument while he's playing even though on "Posh Pop" I could play guitar with him. He always just listened and appreciated the ideas I came out with and he loves what I do as a lyricist. So there's not only a bond, there is a very special trust and we probably worked right through the night

It was a geographical choice as well of having wonderful memories of the Marquee Studios because parts of "Sheep Farming In Barnet" and parts of "The Blue Meanin" were finished there and we did the whole "Anthem" there. So I felt very at home at those studios. It was like going home. Geographically it was close to the Mermaid Theatre as well, and it worked for the whole band

Our decision to go with Nick Tauber was that he's incredibly easy to work with. He made us feel like a band. He didn't play games with any of the members of the band. There's no hierarchy. There's none of that going on. He's a great communicator with the record label and with management. So he was a good peace keeper. He had lovely ideas as well. Sometimes he’d put about seven mics around me to get a different ambient feel. He always got the sound in my cans (headphones) that I needed to hear. He understood that I've always had great difficulty singing with anything covering my ears

So he'd even set up a speaker in the sound booth so I didn't have to wear headphones. Or he would create an ambient track that gave me the feeling of being in an open room and that way I could use my vocal cords better. He just knew and I didn't have to explain anything. I didn't have to get frustrated. He just knew, and he did it


Without a shadow of a doubt running "Trafford Tanzi" next to the writing and recording of "Love Is The Law" is the happiest time in my life. It was just breathtaking. Everything was how I wanted it to be in that I wanted, and still do,  to be an actress and a singer. I don't want to do musicals. I don't want to be in the West End doing a musical eight times a week. I don't have that stamina

But what happened with "Traffod Tanzi", ironically, which was like running a marathon every day, the separation created something in me that just made me ultra creative. I think it's that thing of the fans outside and the extraordinary audiences in the theatre. The whole world came to see this production. I remember looking out and there was Tom Baker, one of the Doctor Who's. Or looking out and seeing … was that Prince or was that Bowie?

Everyone was in that audience, and it made me feel accepted as someone in showbiz, rather than someone that was an oddball that was tolerated. It was my moment because that play really suited me. So by the time I went to the studio I was a fully rounded, confident artist. Psychologically that's down to "Trafford Tanzi" and psychologically down to the support of Simon Darlow and Joel Bogen at that time

Simon Darlow added a lot of sound presence on the album, and it's something that we all wanted, probably especially me. We wanted the album to sound futuristic. It was at the height of synthesizer development. You had Pet Shop Boys coming into the equation. You had Human League evolving into the Phil Oakey version. Then you had Heaven 17 coming in. This was the era of the synthesizer and I really wanted something that was cinematic

So with "Dreamscape", where you have this opening where the sound is traveling and panning across the stereo - the whole idea is this massive machine is arriving and then out of this machine comes a different form of human being. A differently evolved human being, and we referred to it openly back then as fairy tribes - but not fairies as in Enid Blyton – fairies as in warriors with weapons that fought each other and didn't like he elves. So it was bit more like that

What inspired me to explore love on "Love Is The Law" I think is that it’s something I have never, ever explored. I've been totally unwilling to explore (it). It's been something up until that point that had been quite evasive in my life. What I mean by that is that there was love, and people possibly loved me, but I couldn't experience or feel it. That's probably because of my background and my childhood


Really interesting around this time - the fans gave me so much and to see what I meant to them and their lives helped me understand relationships and understand that people were seeing in me the dislocation they felt in their social circumstances. I think there's an awful lot of people out there, even today, who feel they don't belong. They feel dislocated from life. They don't fit into the patterns we're told we should fit into. Being with the fans in that way outside the theatre every single day for four months I think just taught me so much

Simon Darlow was very kind and he loved women, he just saw women and just adored them. It's probably been a problem in his life but he just loved women. I think I came to a better understanding with myself during this time and was becoming more independent. The whole event changed me radically

Then immediately after, I went away and did "The Ebony Tower" with Sir Lawrence Olivier, which was all about nudity and sex. It's as if this period of doing "Trafford Tanzi", being with the fans, and making the album was teaching me enough to go into "Ebony Tower" and shoot what needed to be shot for that movie because I just don't know how else I would have done it. So it was a time of transformation for me

There's something about 1983 - it was a remarkable year in that everything I planned went to plan. So towards the end of "Trafford Tanzi" I was already in the audition process to go into a movie with Sir Lawrence Olivier, Greta Scacchi and Roger Rees and to be in the Dordogne (a region in France) for three months shooting that movie. I knew the actresses that I was up against for the part I played and I was up against the best. That kept my confidence up

Also, I just love this album. I love "Love Is The Law". I knew that every song was special. Every song worked. Nick Tauber gave it the production it deserved. He gave me the vocal presence that I wanted to hear. I think my singing was stronger and more on point because Simon was there to guide me. Simon has always guided me when I'm singing. He’d say “no, don't do (makes a sound), do (another sound)”. Little things like that just make something different. I thought the songs were fantastic

I enjoyed doing the shoot for the artwork. I wanted to look strong and tough and futuristic, like something out of the sci-fi film. We got Swanky Modes designers on board to design my outfit. We shot the video for “Rebel Run”, which was everyone's choice for the first single. There's a few others I'd have liked to have been singles as well. “Time Is Ours” I think is a gorgeous song. “Remember” is a gorgeous song. They could have all been singles


I think "Trafford Tanzi" closed, and I went immediately to Welwyn Garden City where there was a race track, and we shot the cover material with John Swannel. So I got back with John Swannel, who shot the cover of “Thunder In The Mountains “. Again John Swannell is someone that just fills me with confidence. He sees beauty, he brings beauty out so I knew he was right. We had David Mamet directing the video. The best video director in the world which was fantastic. I do have to say by the time we shot the video, which I wanted to be a little bit like the movie “Tron” I was starting to get tired. It had been a long, long six months

I wasn’t in burnout - you sometimes get times where you just don't have mental clarity. I remember the day we shot the video. It was only a few days after "Trafford Tanzi" had finished. My body had kind of gone into shock. I think it's a lovely video, and it certainly does what it says on the can. I don't think my lip syncing is great and part of that is probably just pure exhaustion

I think the thing is every album needs to have a slight redirection about it, otherwise you're just producing the same thing over and over again. I've always felt that I like to diversify every time. I just like to move in a different way every time. I think that gives your fans more information about you. I definitely wanted the look of “Love Is The Law” and “Rebel Run” to be different to anything I've done before. Part of it was I was just so muscular from having been a wrestler for four months

Physically, I was very, very strong and looked great and I just wanted to exploit that and felt confident about it. I also wanted to just look a bit more “Tank Girl” than glamor girl. This is at the time when wonderful, wonderful Duran Duran were using very beautiful girls in their videos. I thought, well, I think I'm just going to go in the opposite direction and I'm going to be a woman at war. A kind of woman on the battlefront, as it were, but a futuristic battlefront

I don't know who came up with the fencing idea behind me, but putting red against grey is a very, very strong thing to do because it makes the red really ping. It's a lovely device, and in design using red against grey makes something stand out. So this was all designed by Esme at Swanky Modes and it might have been her decision that we needed people in the background. Like a team behind me, who were all good skaters, who could all stand on their roller skates because we did a lot of posing. We did very minimalistic movement, actually. We we never moved more than about 10 feet each time, and John Swannell just capturing what we did

But the girls in the fencing outfits were absolutely fabulous. They could skate brilliantly. They were confident and they were strong. But I don't know who actually came up with that concept of putting the kind of faceless team behind me, but I imagine it was Esme of Swanky Modes. It makes sense

***

Watch Toyah talking to Esme Young about "Love Is The Law" and Swanky Modes during The Great British Sewing Bee Christmas Special 2023 on BBC1 HERE


With the logo at the time, we'd obviously had the very famous Toyah logo, which was a part of my signature and I felt that we needed just completely moving to this decade. It's a decade that was very electronic. I'd come from a kind of guitar, punky background and we just were moving forward. We're being forward thinking. I came up with this idea that it’s partly like a lightning bolt, but without the kind of stereotypical zigzag that Bowie used. So we just took it and had it in very straight, sharp angles so it looks like something you could throw at someone if it was made out of metal and that's where the idea came from

At the time this was released, I was in the Dordogne halfway through making the movie “Ebony Tower”. We had the video play on Top Of The Pops twice. I think we were really concerned that the album only went to (number) 28 (in the charts) because “The Changeling” went to number two. So it was a bit of a shock. And the single going to 24 was a bit of a shock. We didn't quite understand it. It's an interesting thing to discuss because I was doing a promotional tour on where I heard a record shop in Bristol say, “don't mark down Toyah’s sale. We're putting it under a different artist.” I don't know if that was “Brave New World”. I don't think it was “Rebel Run”. I think it was actually a bit later on

I realized that the record shops were not marking things down the way they should be. So I don't know what was going on. I was in France. I wasn't around. It was slightly concerning. It was actually really frightening because this is a brilliant album. But I think when things like that happen you haven't got a team on the ground going to the record shops and actually keeping an eye on stock. I think at that time, those things could happen

This point in time I think Joel wanted to musically move in a different direction. I think he actually went off and joined Eurythmics and toured with them. Everyone wanted me to be a solo artist and a solo artist that stood there alone without a band on the stage. So my management at the time were pushing for that. They were pushing for a big deal with CBS. Eventually I signed to the Portrait Label, along with Alison Moyet and Debbie Harry. That's the direction I went in, which seemed a very logical direction to go in at that time

I think Joel very successfully moved on to work with other artists and to do a lot of touring. That's what happened, really. None of us questioned it and none of us put a stop to it. It could have very much been helped in a negative way by “Love Is The Law” not catching fire. I think we were definitely disappointed that it didn't go Top 10. There's songs on this album that were influencing people as much as songs on “The Changeling” did. There's a lot that Joel did on this album that I started to hear other bands pick up on. So the influence was there


I think “Love Is The Law” is a very vibrant, brilliant rock/pop album. I think it's absolutely gorgeous. I think the songs are fantastic. There's songs that, when you perform them, like “Martian Cowboy” - they are just remarkable to perform. “I Explode” is remarkable to perform. I think the songs are great. I think the production is great. It just didn't get the window it needed - whether it was that MTV didn't put the video in rotation. You just don't know what that missing ingredient was. But I think this is the one that got away. I love this album

At that particular time we were all young and moving on didn't feel an odd thing to do. None of us were sacked, none of us were banned from being with each other. We all kind of made a mutual decision. I think one of the decisions was (the record company) Safari didn't have the power any more to push our albums as much as they needed pushing. They might have felt that on the back of “Anthem” and “The Changeling” “Love Is The Law” could sell itself. Well, that's never the case, and it never has been the case. I think our feeling was that we've done the job that was meant to be done. These incredible albums came out in this period of time. It's now time to move on and explore different territories and different styles

It felt absolutely fine at the time. There was no sense of heartbreak. If anything, there was a slight sense of relief because I think a bit of a vacuum was forming between us, the artist and the record label. It could be that with the introduction of MTV, which was in August 1981, where everything became slightly more politicised rather than fans having the power to put something into the charts alone, it could be we just knew we had to move to a major (record label) Simple as that

LOVE IS THE LAW - TRACK BY TRACK

TOYAH: With "Broken Diamonds", which Joel and I wrote with Simon Darlow there, it meant Simon Darlow could do these wonderful chords that the guitar couldn't quite do. On the keyboards with the synth sound, the stabbing was very 80s. Trevor Horn used the Synclavier to have this kind of orchestra stab. We were looking for this similar kind of punch to come out of the song. But also we were looking at early Motown

So what I mean (sings) “sensation, temptation”, all of those things are things that I grew up with Motown, and how their writers used three singers at once to just throw a word out, throw a theme out. This is a really remarkable period in time for song writing with Motown and everything that they put out. I wanted that influence to be put through the mixer as it were, along with my punk/new wave history and what was going on in 1983. We used that kind of style of just using words with three syllables or two syllables to just kind of punch the message home


But also because Simon Darlow (above with Toyah at the Marquee Studios) is a very good arranger, that meant that we could take the song beyond the verse, bridge, chorus, verse, bridge, chorus, and we could develop the middle eight into another journey. So we wanted it to build and build and build and then just gently come down again. A lot of my work is about unrequited emotions and "Broken Diamonds" is about breakdown in communication - of not being able to express oneself or one's true feelings

And also, I think there are people out there, and I'm definitely one of them, even though I've been married for 38 years, where love has never been a mutual experience. It's always been something I've just kept to myself. I keep those feelings to myself. That's probably going right back to my upbringing where I was never allowed to express love so with "Broken Diamonds", it's about that lack of ability of communication and how something is broken before it ever is born. It's just about unrequited, broken love in a relationship where something needed to be expressed and couldn't be expressed

“I Explode” is my favorite personal all time song. I am so in love with this song. It does everything I've ever wanted a song to do. The repetition is extraordinary and very, very powerful - especially live. It's so challenging for a guitarist to play that riff. What I love about it, it's about standing in moonlight, basically, alone in the moonlight with complete frustration. Again, it's a relationship song, but it's about the inner voice and the repetition is what allows it to grow and to go where it goes. So it's about frustration. It's about realisation of frustration. It's about the power of the individual. Is about anger and it's about release

It's just the most extraordinary song. I'm in love with it and I'm probably in love with it because there's an ambiguity about it as well. Yes, it's a relationship song, but it's also an identity song. It's about self identity, and it's a song about how powerful an individual can be to the point that they do actually explode or implode. It's just pure force. I think it's fantastic. I loved recording this song. It was recorded at about midnight one night after a performance of "Trafford Tanzi". Because Nick Tauber was at the controls he gave me such a great sound that I could sing very minimalistically, which allowed me to move the notes with greater dexterity than when you're fighting against a bass drum in your ears

So I wanted the beginning to be very kind of soulful. Might not be the right word, but soulful, emotionally in (sings) “skimming the surface of a dream”, it's melodic, it's beautiful. You don't know where it's going and then the tension builds with the anger, and the anger comes in. But then I wanted backing vocals to come in that were ever so slightly Motown’ish in their delivery - that it's kind of punchy and that brings the listener in. It says welcome in and then whoomph - it just takes off with this kind of roller coaster of anger of I explode, I explode, I explode


“Rebel Of Love” was a very satisfying track to write. Joel Bogen, myself and Simon Darlow - we always have loved experimentation. Joel has a love of jazz and a free form, and I have a love of poetry and what I call lyrical images. My writing is always involved with imagery. I wanted to write something about a boy that was completely unreadable, and that he was unreadable because basically he was not human. This boy knew something before the singer knew it. This boy lived in a different place, a different time. Kind of transcended time, and that's what “Rebel Of Love” is about. It is deliberately abstract and it's abstract because it's about that kind of otherness when you meet someone who's impenetrable yet utterly charismatic

When I write, especially when I write with Simon Darlow, we come up with the song with improvisation. So we've been doing that now for close to 50 years. So when we go into the studio, we just improvise. Now I've got apps like Soundtrap, where I can actually build an idea and I build the first 30 seconds and say “Simon, what do you think?” and then he'll build a track on that and I go in and we improvise some more. So we've always come up with the song we intend to write through improvisation

With “Rebel Of Love” we were in the gym at my home, and Joel and Simon were just playing this kind of very mysterious music and I started to improvise something I was feeling very strongly and that was this boy that was being idolized for not being human and for being something completely different. So it started as an improvisation, but once we made it to the Marquee Studios, it got its form. I worked on it. I honed it, because I needed Nick Tauber to understand what we were aiming for, and it had to have form for Nick to be able to produce it. But the beginning was improvised, yes

When you're recording an album, you do have to keep in mind that something has got to be a single. We didn't really do that with “The Changeling”. We were just lucky that “Brave New World” was so poetical. When I'm writing a song, I'm keeping in mind all the time do I want to perform this live? It's really important to me. If I'm writing something and I'm thinking I don't want to ever perform this live, it's not quite right. So with “Rebel Run”, which Simon Darlow and I wrote, Simon put that pulse in (sings the pulse). It's a really important pulse, and it's the whole backbone of what I'm talking about, which is rebels, it's revolutionaries, its people winning back their town, winning back the industries around their town

It's about change. It's like a sci-fi Che Guevara. It's all about the romanticism of rebellion. I wanted it to just have that really important pace, this beat in it, this heartbeat. I think it's done that particularly well. I think it resonates very well. It's fabulous to perform live. And today, in this new millennium, I'm performing it quite often in front of people who are seeing me for the first time


When that bass starts, it's like whoa. It's one of those moments. You know they're not going to forget that song. We made the video not long after I finished "Trafford Tanzi". The whole run of "Trafford Tanzi", that four months, I never was able to come down from that sheer energy of doing a show that was three hours of wrestling every night. Funny enough, when we got to the (video) shoot with David Mamet, I felt exhausted. I was actually really exhausted. I can see it in the video. I can see it in my eyes, I can see the lip sync isn't quite on. I think I was starting to physically crash

The video we wanted to base on the movie "Tron". That kind of someone moving through tubes. We didn't have internet at that time, but moving down kind of optical pipes and all of that. I think that's very successful. It is quite a unique video in that, but it's only me. It's an interesting one. I think when I look at it I just see how I physically felt on the day and it was like ugh! My god I need a holiday!

“Martian Cowboy” - I've always been totally in love with this song. I love its pace. I love its delivery. I love the musicality of it. Really love the lyrics. There is this story that I was given a sleeping pill and I'm not sure who gave it to me. I might have even had my own sleeping pill. I do know that we we did something very naughty and we slipped one into Joel’s drink. He ended up between the sound booth and the recording booth just going “where am I?” I remember that and I think by that time I might have recorded the whole vocal

The thing is, you give me a sleeping pill ... all it does is make me normal. I don't ever really slow down. Nick needed me to just be able to deliver something at a very gentle pace, and that's very rarely me. I'm always a 100 miles an hour in everything I do. So I think there's truth in that story. Who gave me the sleeping pill? I don't know but I know they were too involved and I slipped one to Joel (chuckles)

I loved doing that vocal. I really loved it. And it could be that the sleeping pill took away my natural anxiety and doubt about myself that I was just able to float away into the track. I think it’s fabulous track. Fabulous. Performing it live every hair just stands on end because it's so beautiful. “Pop Star” on "Anthem" is about me. It's about alienation. It's about not being able to reach out and contact people with the natural social freedom everyone else has - because fame, ironically, just stops all that. And then when we got to write “Martian Cowboy”, Martian cowboy is the yin and yang. The Martian cowboy is the other person in that relationship, so they both kind of meet up, pop star and Martian cowboy. But the Martian cowboy has exited the song. It's a song of yearning

With “Dreamscape”, we just wrote a song that I wanted to perform, and we wanted it to be really, really big and able to use the latest technology in doing it. I wanted something that literally as an experience to listen to would swallow the audience, swallow the listener, and also be about the listener. “The whole of the world needs a dreamscape”. It's an ideology. It's a utopian song, rather than dystopian. I just wanted something that was really, really big and warm and comforting. It's like the treacle sponge and custard song. It wraps you up and it's it's beautiful comfort and warmth


When we recorded it, Nick Tauber just entered into the spirit of it completely. There was so many things he wanted to try. The thing with Nick, he wasn't a producer that worked on his own. He worked with the musicians. So when he wanted to try something we were the people that were playing the instruments. It wasn't Nick. So he completely entered into the spirit of this. He said, “let's try this. Let's loop this. Let's play this backwards. Sing that. Simon, play that. Joel try this”. So we were really involved with everything on this album, and especially with that track. And he enjoyed it as much as us. It was pure expressionism

With “Time Is Ours” I was about to turn 25 and this is such a marker point, because at the age of 25 no one warns you of that feeling of never returning to youth, or never returning to the irresponsibility of being a youth. And it hit me, 25. What's next? 30? And I never thought beyond 30. So “Time Is Ours” I think is an absolutely beautiful song in its melodic movement. It’s gorgeous. It's perfect. It's actually about loss and it's about learning to live in the moment, because we are moving through time and if you live in the past, you're losing the present. It's a song about grief and grief of self, but I think at the same time, it's an absolutely stunning pop song

With “Love Is The Law” I wanted a song that involved the fans. This is because the fans had been so present in our lives for the whole of this writing process, with them camping outside the Mermaid Theatre where I was performing and then following me to the Marquee Studios. They were there all the time. When we weren't in the studio, when we were in the green room, either having a cup of tea or eating, we could hear them outside. So we started to get more and more involved with them and involving them on some of the tracks, especially “Love Is The Law”. We'd play them tracks. We'd say “what do you think of this? What do you think of that melody? What do you think of that?” We got feedback actually in the moment, which was extraordinary

With “Love Is The Law” I wanted something that was a bit like a tribal, urban chant. It was this kind of discovery that love holds everything together. I actually personally, and especially now, that I'm about to turn 66, think love is something that transcends time. I think eternity is love. So it holds on to the past, it's in the present, and it reaches to the future. I think there's something really powerful there. If we want a time machine, look at what love does to us, what love creates, what love makes possible. Then I think we transcend into something other than human

"Love is the law" is a saying from Aleister Crowley but also, I think there's a massive clue there in that love is something that is utterly extraordinary. So to bring the fans in on this, and have them do the chorus (sings) “love is the law, love is the law” - it's as simple as that, and bringing in the power of nature and the power of animals and the power of the environment of Earth. It was a song I felt very passionate about when I was writing and very passionate about when I was recording. Funny enough, it's quite a difficult one to do live and if I was ever to do it - the service it needs live, I would have to have a choir on stage and a lot of technology on stage. But I think in the context of this album, it works really, really well


The song was definitely written in the gym at my home and it was something where I was saying I just want this very big chorus of “love is the law”, and we worked on it in the gym. Joel, myself, Simon Darlow - we worked on the sounds. We did a demo, took that into the studio. I've always loved the phrase "love is the law." Never quite understood why Crowley used it, because Crowley was definitely an anarchic and he didn't want the structures we live by today. But when you look on the term "love is the law", it should be something that every nation uses. Separate it from its history and use it as what humans must represent to outer universes. This is the law of life. Love is the law

My memory of writing “Remember” is it's one of the last songs. We were coming towards the end of the album, and this is one of the last songs. Probably Joel presented us an idea, like a riff or a section, and then we decided we'll go with that. Let's write a song, because we need another song. That's my kind of feeling about it. But also, when you look at the lyrics, “remember the past”, and it's all about remembering a relationship. It was probably coming towards the end of the recording, and the end of "Trafford Tanzi" and everything that had been so remarkable and in a bubble

About four months was coming to an end. There's a melancholy in it. It's "no one gets out of here alive". It's goodbye. It is quite a sad song, really. I cannot remember this story that the lyric came about because I was angry with a fan who was drunk and apparently tried to hit me. I can't remember that incident at all and I can't remember that reason. But when I look at the lyric, the lyric is kind of like a warning, and it's the coming to the end of something. With the fans outside the Mermaid Theatre during the run of "Trafford Tanzi" we were a very happy bunch, but there were some arguments developing between some of the fans towards the end

There may have been kind of one occasion where someone would turn up drunk and didn't quite fit in because of that. If was angry at anything, it would be that I was trying to hold so much together and suddenly I was dealing with someone's very personal issues. That would not have been appreciated at a time when I was starring in a play and writing an album. It would be just “don't waste my time, get your life together.” That might have influenced me in some way, but I cannot remember that incident

“No one gets out of here alive”. I first heard the term come from Jim Morrison of The Doors. When you say that to someone who hasn't hit 25 it's a terrifying thing. It hits home. No one gets out of here alive. It's so negative. It's such a downer. I think it's also a wake-up call. Today at the age I'm at, it's like god, no one gets out of here alive. Can't fucking wait to move on (laughs) You feel so differently about it. It's a natural process that you've had the privilege of time to experience and understand. I think that no one gets out of here alive is just fact. So make the most of your life. Simple as that

I think “The Vow” was Joel and myself wanting just mature and being more mature writers and definitely release more mature material. We felt that we had a lot of great history, great music behind us and that we wanted to just be seen in a different light. It's a very brave choice to have written “The Vow” and to release it as a single, especially at Christmas. This was a time where we just wanted to sing about peace among mankind and a song about the effects of war on other planets and how that affects how those planets see somewhere as green and as beautiful as Earth

Simon Darlow’s father did the string arrangements on it. He also did the string arrangements on “Rebel Run” as well. He was a fantastic arranger, really gorgeous. What he brought into the space was beautiful and perfect. It was lovely to see Simon Darlow so proud that his dad was involved. I think “The Vow” is a gorgeous song, and the fans have always loved it. Ironically, whenever we've performed it live all they do is talk through it. They never listen! Off to the bar. They're talking at me “Hello, Toyah! When are you going to do “Race Through Space”? It's a song they can never focus on yet they always request it

It's a song I like and I'm very happy that we released it and that we stood by it. Very happy. “The Vow” is a very rare song in our repertoire. It's a quiet love song. It's a slow, inward looking love song. I think it's a very sobering song as well. It's a song with a message and that is we've got to stop fighting each other, we've got to stop allowing wars, and we need to promise each other we'll never let that happen. So it's a song about an unspoken promise. I think it's a very natural song to finish “Love Is The Law”

Listen to the interview



See also the Love Is The Law 2024 Special Feature