Hohokam were formed around 1983 by Dave Earl on guitar, Steve Devier on vocals, Tony Alum on drums, and George Kamm on synths and bass, and were an electro-pop band very much in the style Depeche Mode, named after an ancient archaeological culture. Rumour has it that the four lads trespassed onto Gary Numan's property with a demo tape that inspired him to create his record label, Numa Records, and their 1984 single 'King' became the third record to be released on the label. Numan would generally preside over the recordings, acting as producer and occasional contributor, and their most successful single was 1985's 'Harlequin Tears', also on Numa, and which you can still hear in some more well-informed clubs to date. Hohokam were probably the label's main hopes, and were one of the reasons Numan apparently started the label, and 'Harlequin Tears' is certainly a supremely energetic and menacing slice of synth-pop, sounding part Depeche Mode in their leather-and-whips pomp, and part Dead or Alive at the height of their 'Spin Me Round' world domination. It was the closest the label came to a non-Numan chart hit, though given that it failed to even touch the Top 75, it clearly still fell a long way short of the target. Perhaps Hohokam lacked a strongly identifiable sound of their own, or a style that made them instantly recognisable as soon as they came on the radio, and being heavily associated with Numan as his career declined may not have been to the band's advantage at the time. After George Kamm left the group, Numan's in house studio sound engineer Andy Reilly joined the band as drummer, and Tony Alum took over keyboard duties. Soon after that Steve Devier departed and Skip Collins took over vocal duties, and this line up went on to record their sole album, 'Seven Deadly Sins'. However, the failure of the two singles, plus the third from the label, 'Don't You Know', presumably left Numan with his back against the wall, and no viable way of releasing it, and it remains consigned to the vaults to this day. If you're into 80's electro-pop then you could do worse than to give this a spin, as they were a promising band who just didn't get the breaks.
Track listing
01 Don't You Know
02 Catch A Tear
03 Seven Sins
04 Envy Your Innocence
05 In Your Eyes
06 Harlequin Tears
07 Gypsy
08 To Sleep
09 Broken Days
10 Point Of View
Even if you already own this album then it's worth grabbing this copy, as I've done a lot of work on it in order to beef up the sound, fix the many drop-outs, and completely replace the extremely low-quality first track with the 7" single edit of the song.