The Other Ones were a pop sextet, formed in 1984 in Berlin with Australian-born singer,
Alf Klimek (ex-
Spliff/
Nina Hagen Band), his siblings – the twins –
Jayney Klimek (lead vocals) and
Johnny Klimek (bass guitar); joined by German-born trio of Stephan Gottwald (keyboards), Andreas Schwarz-Ruszczynski (guitars) and Uwe Hoffmann (drums). The Klimeks' cousins,
Nic and
Chris Cester, are members of Australian rockers,
Jet. Alf had travelled the world in the late 1970s as a
puppeteer and then as a singer, he returned home to Melbourne in 1981 and collaborated with Johnny. In late 1983 the Klimek brothers moved to
West Berlin and along with Jayney (who had been in a band in Australia) formed the group early in the following year. Johnny later recalled that Alf "wanted to get this band together, go to Europe and get a record deal. So we did it, in '83 I went over there, became a cleaner for about three years, and worked in an Indian restaurant. I did all their shit kicking stuff, and got miserably depressed in their European winters." They signed to
Virgin Records in 1984 and recorded an album in
Sussex, England at Comfort's Place Studios. They shared the same management as the band
Alphaville, and based themselves in Berlin. Jayney guested on lead vocals for that group's track, "Lassie Come Home", on their second album,
Afternoons in Utopia (June 1986).
Self-titled debut album Their debut studio album,
The Other Ones, was released in late 1986, it was produced by the Brit,
Christopher Neil. It peaked at No. 55 on the
German Albums Chart.
AllMusic's Jason Kaufman described it as "a perfect example of the simple pop optimism that was everywhere in the middle of the '80s. With tinny, electronic drum kit beats, pseudo-macho guitar solos, cheesy keyboard riffs, and romantic simpleton lyrics on par with 'roses are red, violets are blue,' there's plenty here to offend those who take their songwriting seriously." The album's lead single, "All the Love" (1986), did not chart. Its second single, "We Are What We Are", peaked at No. 53 on the United States
Billboard Hot 100 on 30 May 1987 and No. 38 on the
New Zealand Singles Chart. Its follow up, "Holiday", peaked at No. 29 on 17 October 1987 on the US
Billboard Hot 100, No. 10 in New Zealand, No. 4 in Germany, No. 13 in Austria, and No. 22 in Switzerland. Jerry McCulley described how the "infectious, slickly-produced 'Holiday' became an international smash seemingly everywhere but America." He felt the group "fused the era's synth-riff conceits with some tasty guitar licks, with Jayney leading the way into pop hook heaven."
Music videos for the latter two singles were also provided. "Holiday" was remixed and re-released as "Another Holiday" in 1991.
Learning to Walk The Other Ones toured worldwide for almost a year. In 1988 they issued their second studio album,
Learning to Walk, via Virgin Records. It had been recorded at
Trevor Horn's studios in London with engineer-producer, Pete Schwier, and the band co-producing. For the final album cut, the drums were overdubbed by Geoff Dugmore and percussion was provided by Frank Ricotti. Johnny later remembered "[we had] big budgets, and my ego was like, 'Wow, this is easy!' And I wanted to co-produce with the band and the engineer, and it didn't work (laughs), the record wasn't good." None of its singles charted. In 1990, less than five years after beginning the group, Alf left, in essence dissolving the band. ==After the break-up==