Nick Feldman

Nicholas Laurence Feldman (born 1 May 1955) is an English musician best known for forming the British new wave band Wang Chung in 1980.

[2] He attended Highgate School and the University of Liverpool, originally studying psychology; however, his interest in the subject waned before graduation.

Two years later, Feldman and Hues formed 57 Men with future Wang Chung drummer Darren Costin, bassist Leigh Gorman, keyboardist Simon Campbell and vocalist Glenn Gregory.

That year (still as Nick De Spig), Feldman co-wrote one track of the album Walls Have Ears by Blanket of Secrecy.

After a summer tour for their first Geffen album (Points on the Curve) in 1984, Costin left the band to pursue a solo career.

Without a full-time drummer, Wang Chung continued recording, releasing singles (including "Dance Hall Days" and "Everybody Have Fun Tonight" which reached No.

In addition to writing and producing for Wang Chung, Feldman scored the William Friedkin film To Live and Die in L.A., and wrote and performed for John Hughes' The Breakfast Club.

Within two years the band broke-up and Feldman became a founding investor in a multimedia software distribution company, Interactive Ideas.

[2] In 2005, Wang Chung appeared on Hit Me Baby One More Time on ABC in the U.S., performing "Everybody Have Fun Tonight" and "Hot in Herre" by Nelly.