IT'S NO BIG BIG THING DURAN DURAN CREW SEEMS GLAD TO PUT GLORY DAYS TO REST
Published on WEDNESDAY, February 1, 1989
Byline: By Gary Graff, Knight-Ridder
The title of its latest album is Big Thing, but the members of Duran Duran admit their group isn't quite as big as it was, say,
four years ago. Keyboardist Nick Rhodes says that's not such a big deal.
''It's nice to be away from the pressure,'' Rhodes, 26, said during a phone interview from Tampa, Fla. ''Our heyday, if you
will, was very exciting, but at the same time it represented something very false. People were coming to see us out of
curiosity, not necessarily because they were fans.
''So we may not be as big as we once were, but I think we're in a better position now.''
Rhodes said things haven't slipped too far for the 11-year-old group, which joins Pursuit of Happiness in a show tonight at
the Arizona State University Activity Center. ''Maybe Duran Duran used to sell 7 or 8 million copies (worldwide) of an
album,'' he said, ''but we still sell 4 or 5 million. We're still incredibly lucky in the way we do sell records.''
Big Thing has sold only about 500,000 copies in the United States.
Rhodes said he and his band mates -- singer Simon Le Bon and bassist John Taylor -- are simply pleased to have survived a
dose of early '80s hype that almost leveled the band. Duran was one of MTV's first core bands, saturating the cable music
channel with its good looks and videos shot in exotic locales. American radio, initially unresponsive to Duran's high-tech
dance fare, was forced to respond by legions of fans who called in to request songs such as Girls on Film and Hungry Like
the Wolf.
Before you could say Duran twice, the group was a pop phenomenon. Shrieking teens packed its concerts, and Rolling
Stone magazine dubbed the group the Fab Five.
''We got on a ride, and we thought it was going to slow down any minute,''
Rhodes said. ''But it didn't slow down for five years.''
The group actually applied its own brakes, calling a two-year hiatus in 1985 and splitting into the spinoff bands Power Station
and Arcadia. When it came time to reunite, however, two members -- drummer Roger Taylor and guitarist Andy Taylor
(none of the Taylors is related) -- decided they wanted off the ride.
Still, Rhodes, Le Bon and John Taylor found life as a trio to their liking. ''We have more musical independence,'' Taylor said.
''Instead of thinking, 'Well, can I make this kind of music with this band?' we can just decide what we want and invent the
band we need.''
Rhodes and his mates also have hired a new manager -- Peter Rudge, whose credits include the Rolling Stones and The
Who. And thanks to steady airplay, the Big Thing album is still hovering in the Billboard Top 40. So, is Duran Duran thinking
about being a big thing again?
''That would be OK,'' Rhodes said, ''but we've learned that success isn't measured by how many records you sell. I still get
the greatest kick out of seeing someone dance to one of our songs. To me, that's as important as anyone buying the record.''
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