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Synth-pop legends OMD talk early days ahead of 40th anniversary tour stop at the Greek

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Back in October of 1978, Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys planned to play a one-night gig at a small Liverpool club called Eric’s, so the duo came up with a band name, an unusual one, on a whim the night before their first show.

Calling themselves Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, the duo took the stage with a homemade synthesizer, a bass guitar and a tape recorder playing backing music, never imagining they’d one day be seen as synthpop legends and pioneers of electronic dance music.

“When we started, we never anticipated it was going to be the next big thing or that it would continue in such a successful way for more than 40 years. We were just a couple of weirdo geeks who wanted to do something a bit different,” said McCluskey, vocalist and bassist for Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, or OMD as they are now commonly referred to.

With more than 40 million records sold and hit dance tracks like “Electricity,” “Enola Gay,” “Secret,” “So in Love,” and perhaps their best-known hit “If You Leave” that appeared on the “Pretty in Pink” soundtrack, the band comes to the Greek Theatre on May 26 as part of their belated 40-year anniversary tour.

“I still can’t believe we’re doing this,” McCluskey said during a phone interview. “We must still be doing something right and it’s wonderful to celebrate 40, although it’s really been 43 and a half years,” he added.

NEW YORK, NY – MARCH 08: Andy McCluskey of OMD performs at Terminal 5 on March 8, 2011 in New York City. The band comes to the Greek on May 26 as part of their 40-year anniversary tour.(Photo by Cory Schwartz/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Andy McCluskey

Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, or OMD, performed at the 2013 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on Sunday, April 21. The band comes to the Greek on May 26 as part of their 40-year anniversary tour. (Photo by Vanessa Franko).

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The beginnings

Before that fateful show, the lifelong friends bonded over their love of music and what McCluskey called a “symbiotic relationship” when McCluskey would buy German import records with money from his paper route, and Humphreys, who was into electronics, built a stereo so the two would listen to songs from burgeoning electronic music bands.

“We thought we could do this, too. But all we had was my bass guitar and Paul had nothing so he started making weird machines from the circuit board of his auntie’s radio,” McCluskey said.

One of the machines Humphreys was building became OMD’s first synthesizer; the then-16-year-olds used it to write a melody that would eventually become their 1979 debut single and first international hit, “Electricity,” which has remained a dance club staple for decades thanks to its catchy keyboard intro.

“It was done on this cheap organ, and that’s how it all started, with just that tease-y piano song,” he said.

After writing a few more songs, the friends were expecting to move on; McCluskey planned to attend fine arts school while Humphreys was going to pursue a career in electronics.

On a whim, they dared each other to go on stage for one night at Eric’s, the local club in Liverpool where New Wave bands like Echo and the Bunnymen, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Dead or Alive and Flock of Seagulls would also perform some of their earliest shows.

“We just knocked on the door and asked if we could do a gig doing our electronic music,” he said.

As they didn’t expect the club owner to agree, they hadn’t even come up with a name for the band yet.

“So we came up with that name for a one-night gig and we played six songs for about 25 minutes for 30 people, and so this one gig became two gigs and yeah, this hobby thing that was going to be one gig suddenly became a real band that was doing gigs and we released a record and things started to explode really quick,” McCluskey said.

OMD has since released 13 albums and performed all over the world, including at festivals like Coachella, where they performed in 2013.

Although the band formed more than 40 years ago, the anniversary tour was delayed due to the pandemic and other unrelated factors that caused them to get a late jump on the milestone tour.

But the band isn’t sweating the delay. After all, they were never supposed to make it this far, to begin with.

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“We came up with the most preposterous name we could come up with and it didn’t matter, we were only going to do one concert and here we are 43 and a half years later, listen, it could have been worse,” McCluskey said with a laugh.

OMD

When: 8 p.m. May 26

Where: The Greek Theater,  2700 N Vermont Ave., Los Angeles

Tickets: $29-$79

Information: lagreektheatre.com

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