The '80s hitmaker has a lot on his mind as he preps new album Global Citizen.
Repairing one of his vintage analog synthesizers provided the impetus for Howard Jones’ new single, “Stand Up,” premiering exclusively below as the first taste of his next album, Global Citizen.
The Roland Jupiter-8 is the same instrument Jones used on Billboard Hot 100 hits such as “New Song,” “Things Can Only Get Better” and “What is Love?” “I decided to do a whole track based on sounds from my favorite synthesizer — that’s how (‘Stand Up’) came about, really,” the British singer and composer tells Billboard via Zoom from his home in Somerset, England. “My friend up in Leeds fixed all my synths for it. He had (the Jupiter-8) for several months and I hadn’t really had a chance to mess with it.
“When it came back I just realized, ‘This synth is so good.’ It really makes the software of today look pathetic, to be honest. So I was inspired by the sounds I was getting, going back to the old school of performing the pieces, actually manipulating the sound as I recorded it. It was very joyful.”
Lyrically, meanwhile, “Stand Up” draws from Rev. Jesse Jackson’s 1972 poem “Stand Up, Black Man,” which Jones read after the Civil Rights icon’s death in February. “I wasn’t familiar with the poem,” Jones explains, “so I looked it up online and was very inspired to write something along those lines — ‘Stand up. You are somebody. Don’t let no one put you down,’ for people to realize the greatness they have inside themselves. I’ve always written songs about self-reflection: how do you live your life as a human being in a successful way? How do you work things out? Why are we here? It’s always been about that for me. And there’s plenty of material to be inspired by now, with the way things are in the world. It’s a scary time for pretty much everyone. You’ve got incredibly powerful people who do not have any philosophical or moral compass whatsoever. The turn to the populist right in all parts of the world is really concerning, and at the same time our climate is just going haywire.
“There’s plenty to write about, and I will be doing that. I feel so fortunate that I can sing those songs with more conviction than I probably had when I was younger because I’ve lived so much more life now.”
Jones says that philosophy, along with the musical impact of his vintage synthesizers, will provide the foundation for Global Citizen, which is due out during 2027. “I’m sort of five tracks on the go right now,” he reports. “Who knows how long it’s gonna take me. I’m working on it every day. It may be the last album that I do (of) original work, so I want to make it very special.”
The last album?
“Back, I guess, 10 years ago I said to the fans that I would do four album projects over the next 10 years, and I told them what the albums were gonna be called,” explains Jones, who’s releasing Original Studio Albums 1984-1992, featuring his first five studio sets, this week. “I just feel (Global Citizen) is an album that wraps up the whole career in a way. And it takes me so long to write and so long to do stuff, so…yeah.” He almost instantly equivocates, however.
“It may not be the last one,” Jones says with a laugh. “But I think it’s the last sort of full-on synth record that I’ll do, put it that way. My wife said to me the other day, ‘When you did the (piano) albums you said, ‘Oh, I only want to compose music for the piano now, and I’m not gonna do any more synths or anything like that’ — I just want to remind you that you said that.’ She’s got a point there.”
Jones promises he’ll be in “full-on synth” mode — electronic drum kit and all — when he begins his Things Can Only Get Better tour on July 19 in Napa, Calif. The 23-date trek also features Wang Chung, the English Beat and Modern English, and it’s a concept Jones hopes to turn into an annual touring package.
“It’s the biggest project, live, that I’ve ever done,” he says. “It’s a mini-festival. It’s been quite a lot of making sure that the other bands have got what they need to do the show; I didn’t realize we would be so involved in that side of it, practically. You want every band to be able to function at their highest level, so they’ve got to have the equipment they need, things like that. It’s interesting to be involved on that side of it.”
Jones adds that while the acts are contemporaries, “I didn’t bump into any of those people during the ‘80s. But I’ve gotten to know them since then. I’ve gotten to know Jack [Hues of Wang Chung] really well; when he was a professor at Norwich (University of the Arts) he invited me to come and give a songwriting seminar, so I got to know him really well through that, but we never toured together. It will be great.”
Jones also promises fans will see him looking as well as sounding like he did back during the early days of his career, with no regrets about the colorful fashions and extravagant hairstyles that were trademarks.
“I’m so pleased that I did all that because, again, it’s a statement, isn’t it? ‘Be who you are. Don’t be afraid to do that’,” Jones explains. “Somebody once said to me, ‘Be yourself; everyone else is taken,’ and that’s so great. So, y’know, the having dyed hair and crazy outfits, this is me, and I’m proud of it. That’s how I was then, and I still have that streak in me now. There’s more coming for this tour than ever, real fun things. So, no regrets.”
The itinerary for Jones’ Things Can Only Get Better tour includes:
JULY
19 Napa, CA Blue Note Napa Summer Sessions
20 Saratoga, CA The Mountain Winery
21 Paso Robles, CA Paso Robles Event Center
23 Los Angeles, CA The Greek Theatre
24 San Diego, CA Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre
26 Las Vegas, NV Resorts World Theatre
29 West Valley City, UT Maverik Center
30 Greenwood Village, CO Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre
AUGUST
1 Council Bluffs, IA Harrah’s Stir Cove
4 Austin, TX ACL Live At The Moody Theatre
5 Grand Prairie, TX Texas Trust CU Theatre
7 Indianapolis, IN Everwise Amphitheater At White River State Park
8 Rochester Hills, MI Meadow Brook Amphitheatre
9 Nashville, TN Ascend Amphitheatre
11 Kettering, OH Fraze Pavilion
12 Lewiston, NY Artpark Amphitheater
14 Atlantic City, NJ Borgata Resort Spa & Casino
15 Washington, DC The Anthem
16 Cleveland, OH Jacobs Pavilion
19 Boston, MA Citizens House Of Blues
20 Wantagh, NY Northwell Health At Jones Beach Theater
21 Holmdel, NJ PNC Bank Arts Center
23 Toronto, ON The Bowl At Sobeys Stadium