Bronski Beat founder Steve Bronski dies at 61
- Published
Steve Bronski, co-founder and keyboard player in 1980s pop group Bronski Beat, has died at the age of 61.
Bronski, from Glasgow, was born Steve Forrest and formed the group in 1983 with singer Jimmy Somerville and fellow-musician Larry Steinbachek.
They enjoyed UK top 10 hits with the gay anthem Smalltown Boy, Why? and a cover of Donna Summer's I Feel Love.
Somerville said: "Sad to hear Steve has died. He was a talented and a very melodic man."
The singer added: "Working with him on songs and the one song that changed our lives and touched so many other lives, was a fun and exciting time."
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Bronski's friend Josephine Samuel told BBC News he was a "gentle, kind and talented man".
The group began when Bronski and Steinbachek met Somerville through a documentary called Framed Youth - Revenge of the Teenage Perverts, which was made for a gay arts festival.
Smalltown Boy, their debut single, was a synth-pop classic, and reached number three in the charts. It was particularly ground-breaking for many fans who related to its story of a young, gay man leaving his home town for the freedom of the big city.
The hard-hitting video showed Somerville being chased by a homophobic gang, taken home by the police and thrown out by his parents, before getting on the train to start a new life with Bronski and Steinbachek.
"At the time we were just three gay guys who started a band - we didn't feel like part of any particular movement," Bronski told The Guardian in 2018, external. "Of course, it would transpire many years later that there were more gay artists than the public were led to believe."
Their debut album Age of Consent followed in 1984. The title referred to the difference in the legal ages for gay and straight sex, and the sleeve listed the ages of consent for countries around the world.
"When you saw it written down, the discrimination was astonishing," Somerville later said. "We printed the number of the Gay Switchboards across Britain on the record sleeve and they were swamped as a result."
The singer left to form The Communards but Bronski Beat continued, reaching the top 10 again with Hit That Perfect Beat in November 1985.
The group carried on in the 1980s and 90s, and in 2017 released their first new album for 22 years, with Bronski as the only remaining original member. Steinbachek died in 2016.
- Published12 January 2017