Tuxedomoon was an avant-garde, electronic-oriented collective whose music ranged from new wave pop to jazz fusion to more experimental synthesizer soundscapes (usually including saxophone and violin), which were frequently married in concert to performance-art shows.
Tuxedomoon was formed in San Francisco in 1977 by two electronic music students at San Francisco City College,
Blaine L. Reininger (keyboards, violin) and
Steven Brown (keyboards, other instruments).
Brown's local theater connections supplied equipment and occasional vocalists in Gregory Cruikshank and
Victoria Lowe, plus more frequent contributions from singer and performance artist
Winston Tong. Punk and new wave were opening up the San Francisco music scene at the time, and
Tuxedomoon landed an opening slot for
Devo in 1978 at around the same time they cut their first single, "Pinheads on the Move."
Lowe quit the band before their first EP,
No Tears, which featured off-and-on members
Michael Belfer (guitar) and
Paul Zahl (drums).
Tong and Belfer departed temporarily, and
Peter Principle (b. Peter Dachert) joined as a full-time member.
Tuxedomoon signed to
the Residents' Ralph Records in 1979, which eventually got them overseas exposure. Feeling that their ideas were more in tune with the European electronic music scene, the band toured Europe after 1980's
Half Mute, for which
Tong returned with filmmaker and visual artist Bruce Geduldig. After 1981's
Desire, the band relocated permanently to Rotterdam, where
Reininger began to branch out as a solo artist.
Tuxedomoon was also hired to score a Maurice Bejart ballet, the results of which were released in 1982 as
Divine.
Reininger left for a solo career in 1983 and was replaced by
Frankie Lievaart and horn player
Luc Van Lieshout. In between side projects and scoring, the band sought an international deal for their forthcoming LP
Holy Wars; it was eventually released in 1985 and became the band's biggest commercial success.
Tong left the group for good that year, leaving
Brown and
Principle the only remaining San Francisco members; multi-instrumentalist Ivan Georgiev was hired to replenish the group's sound for 1986's
Ship of Fools album and tour. 1987's jazz-fusion-oriented
You was
Tuxedomoon's final studio album, although scoring work from past projects was subsequently reissued in Belgium. In addition to
Reininger,
Brown,
Principle, and
Tong have all recorded as solo artists. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide