British musical duo formed by Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart, known for 1980s synth-pop and new wave hits and for evolving into pop-rock and more acoustic styles by the 1990s.

Eurythmics were a duo of Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart. They gained prominence in the 1980s with synth-driven hits such as "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)". They recorded the soundtrack album 1984: For the Love of Big Brother for the film inspired by George Orwell's novel, and collaborated with artists such as Aretha Franklin on the Be Yourself Tonight era ("Sisters Are Doin' It For Themselves").

DeBaser's reviews trace Eurythmics' evolution from early synth-new wave to a more mainstream pop-rock palette. Key albums covered include In the Garden, Sweet Dreams, Touch, Revenge, Savage and the 1999 reunion Peace. Reviewers praise their songwriting, production and Annie Lennox's vocal persona while noting stylistic shifts across the decades.

For:Fans of 1980s synth-pop, Annie Lennox followers, readers of retrospective album reviews

 Bridging the gap between experimentation and mainstream, avant-garde and trend, the Eurythmics remained faithful to the pop character of their proposals and did not seek to make pretentious anti-commercial and radical-chic claims.

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 "Peace" is not just the final statement of a band that in the much-vaunted Eighties elevated the synth-new wave movement to the nth degree, but it is also a solid declaration of intent before writing the unfortunately sad expression "the end" over a most respectable list of musical products.

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 Touch, the album I present to you, is perhaps the studio work that best managed to resist the descent from the peak of the album and the eponymous single and suffered the least from the usual decline of productions following the great hit.

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