Dictionary Definition
erasure
Noun
1 a correction made by erasing; "there were many
erasures in the typescript"
2 a surface area where something has been erased;
"another word had been written over the erasure"
3 deletion by an act of expunging or erasing
[syn: expunction,
expunging]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The action of erasing; deletion; obliteration.
- The state of having been erased; total blankness.
Synonyms
- (action of erasing): cancelation (US), cancellation (British), canceling (US), cancelling (British),deleting, deletion, erasing, obliterating, obliteration, wiping
- (state of having been erased): blankness
Quotations
total blankness- 2004, Bush, even when he had the floor, grimaced as he spoke, except on several occasions when he lost his way and a look of total erasure came over him, a blank, stricken stare for which the French, alas, have the most apt expression: like a cow watching a train go by. — The New Yorker, 18 Oct 2004
Translations
action of erasing
state of having been erased
Extensive Definition
Erasure is an English synth pop
duo
band formed by keyboardist Vince Clarke
and singer Andy
Bell in 1985. It was the third
group that Vince Clarke co-formed (Depeche Mode
and Yazoo being
the first two). Erasure released twenty-four consecutive Top 20
hits in the United Kingdom and sold 25 million albums worldwide The
band also has strong following in the LGBT community and
openly homosexual Andy Bell has been called a gay icon.
History
In the mid-1980s, Vince Clarke placed an advertisement in Melody Maker, looking for a vocalist for a new musical project. He selected Andy Bell, who was the 43rd to audition.Erasure's first three singles were commercial
failures in the UK, although the third, "Oh L'amour",
charted well in Australia and
some European countries (especially in France, where it
still remains Erasure's only hit to date). Their fourth single,
"Sometimes",
peaked at number 2 and spent many weeks in the UK Top 40. The album
The
Circus, turned platinum in the UK with three additional hit
singles - "It
Doesn't Have To Be", "Victim
of Love" and "The
Circus". It remained on the charts for over a year.
The third album, The
Innocents, was released in 1988. Preceded by the Top 10 single
"Ship
of Fools", the album hit number one in the UK on its initial
release and returned to popularity a year later, eventually going
triple platinum. It also turned platinum in the U.S., generating
two Top 20 hits in "Chains
of Love" and "A Little
Respect".
The Innocents was the first of five consecutive
number one albums for Erasure in the UK - an achievement unmatched
by any of their contemporaries. Wild! in 1989 and
Chorus
in 1991 both contained four Top 20 singles.
In late 1988, an EP, Crackers
International, led by the song "Stop!", hit number two in the
UK singles chart. This was bettered in 1992 by another EP, Abba-esque,
covering four ABBA hits, which
became Erasure's first number one in the UK Singles
Chart. Later that year, a singles compilation,
Pop! - the First 20 Hits, also hit number one and went triple
platinum.
In 1994, Erasure released I
Say I Say I Say, their fifth consecutive number one in the
UK
Albums Chart. Its first single "Always"
became the band's third Top 20 hit in the United States.
The 1995 release of the album Erasure
marked a determined shift away from their signature three minute
synth-pop to a more introspective sound.
In spite of a return to three minute pop songs,
the 1997 album Cowboy did
not restore the success of their 1986-1994 era. Cowboy enjoyed a
short-lived success, peaking at number ten in the UK but lasted
only two weeks on the UK Top 40.
The 2003 release Other
People's Songs was a collection of cover
versions such as the first single from the album, Peter
Gabriel's song "Solsbury
Hill" which reached number ten in the UK Singles Chart. Erasure
were invited to perform on Top of
the Pops for the first time since March 1997.
Erasure's 2005 album Nightbirds first
single, "Breathe",
reached number four in the UK charts (their first Top 5 hit in more
than a decade) and achieved the number one position on the U.S.
Dance Chart, eighteen years after their first chart-topper. The
next single, "Don't
Say You Love Me," enabled purchasers to configure their own
remixes of the single through the band's website, with each variant
of the song limited to a single download.
Union
Street was a 2006 side-project
which featured a collection of previously released album tracks
that the band reinterpreted in an acoustic/country
& western style. The album was named after the recording
studio in Brooklyn where it
was recorded.
The duo then released a more 'dance oriented'
album than some of their more recent work. Titled
Light at the End of the World, the album was produced by
Gareth Jones and was released on 21 May 2007 in the UK, and in
North America the following day. The album was preceded by its
first single "I
Could Fall in Love with You" in April and a second single,
"Sunday
Girl", was released in June..
Vince Clarke has stated in radio interviews that
the band wants to complete the concept album of nursery
rhymes that they have been working on for some time.
True Colors tour
During the summer of 2007 Erasure was a part of the multi-artist True Colors Tour, which traveled through 15 cities in the United States and Canada. The tour, sponsored by the Logo channel, began on June 8, 2007. Hosted by comedian Margaret Cho and headlined by Cyndi Lauper, the tour also included Deborah Harry, The Gossip, Rufus Wainwright, The Dresden Dolls, The MisShapes, Rosie O'Donnell, Indigo Girls, The Cliks and other special guests. Profits from the tour helped to benefit the Human Rights Campaign as well as PFLAG and The Matthew Shepard Foundation.Erasure performed alongside many of the other
guests for the encore
song, "True
Colors".
Discography
See also
External links
- Erasureinfo.com - The Official Erasure website.
- Gareth Jones' Erasure Diary
- Erasure.ru - Russian Erasure site (rus/eng)
References
erasure in Belarusian: Erasure
erasure in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Erasure
erasure in Breton: Erasure
erasure in Bulgarian: Ирейжър
erasure in Czech: Erasure
erasure in Danish: Erasure
erasure in German: Erasure
erasure in Estonian: Erasure
erasure in Modern Greek (1453-): Erasure
erasure in Spanish: Erasure
erasure in Esperanto: Erasure
erasure in French: Erasure
erasure in Croatian: Erasure
erasure in Icelandic: Erasure
erasure in Italian: Erasure
erasure in Hebrew: אירייז'ר
erasure in Latvian: Erasure
erasure in Lithuanian: Erasure
erasure in Hungarian: Erasure
erasure in Dutch: Erasure
erasure in Japanese: イレイジャー
erasure in Norwegian: Erasure
erasure in Uzbek: Erasure
erasure in Polish: Erasure
erasure in Portuguese: Erasure
erasure in Romanian: Erasure
erasure in Russian: Erasure
erasure in Albanian: Erasure
erasure in Slovak: Erasure
erasure in Serbian: Erasure
erasure in Finnish: Erasure
erasure in Swedish: Erasure
erasure in Turkish: Erasure
erasure in Ukrainian: Erasure
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abbreviation, ablation, abrasion, abrasive, abridgment, attrition, blackout, blocking, blot, blotting, blotting out,
blue-penciling, bowdlerization, buffing, burnishing, cancel, cancellation, censoring, censorship, chafe, chafing, deletion, dematerialization,
departure, detrition, disappearance, disappearing, dispersion, dissipation, dissolution, dissolving, dressing, eclipse, editing, effacement, elimination, erosion, evanescence, evaporation, expunction, expurgation, extinction, fadeaway, fadeout, fading, filing, fretting, galling, going, grazing, grinding, limation, melting, obliteration, occultation, omission, passing, polishing, rasping, rubbing away, sandblasting, sanding, scouring, scrape, scraping, scratch, scratching, scrub, scrubbing, scuff, shining, smoothing, striking, vanishing, vanishing point,
washing out, wear, wearing
away, wipe, wiping
out