
The single went on to sell over half a million copies in the UK. The album contains 4 UK Top 40 singles All Stood Still, Passing Strangers and Sleepwalk (which is being issued on 12” for the first time as part of Record Store Day 2020) and the title track ‘Vienna’ which reached No.2 in the UK and Top 10 in seven countries around the world. Produced by legendary German producer Conny Plank (Neu!, Kraftwerk), it reached number 3 in the UK album chart and top ten in Australia, New Zealand and several European countries. It is also featured during the intro of the final episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, as Andrew Cunanan (played by Darren Criss) shoots and murders Gianni Versace (played by Édgar Ramírez).įor the track 'Eight Letters', on Take That's 2010 album Progress, the group sampled the famous song and gave songwriting credits to the band.Vienna, Ultravox’s first album with Midge Ure (Vocals/Guitar) was originally released in July 1980. The song is played in the season finale of 13 Reasons Why, over Hannah Baker's final message to Clay Jensen. The song is heard on Professor Grisenko's Walkman in the Doctor Who episode 'Cold War', set in 1983. In Ashes to Ashes, Detective Inspector Alex Drake awakens on a floating brothel in 1981, while 'Vienna'. 'Vienna' was referenced in Father Ted, in the 'A Song for Europe' episode, where it is suggested that it was written and performed by a priest called Father Benny Cake, who changed his name so that nobody would know he was a priest.
Album or cover ultravox vienna tv#

He said of the track: "We wanted to take the song and make it incredibly pompous in the middle, leaving it very sparse before and after, but finishing with a typically over-the top classical ending." Ure is also said to have been influenced by The Walker Brothers' 1978 single 'The Electrician'. I wrote a song about a holiday romance, but in this very dark, ominous surrounding." He said: "I lied to the papers about at the time: the Secessionists and Gustav Klimt, whatever. Midge Ure later said that he made up the inspiration when asked what the song was about. At the time, it was said that the song was inspired by the 1948 film The Third Man, which is based around the Austrian capital of Vienna.
