Born Gary Anthony James Webb, he came up with "Numan" after spotting a plumber called Neumann in the Yellow Pages. He liked the sound of it: technical, futuristic, just anonymous enough to buffer him from failure if the music thing didn't work out.
Though now considered one of the godfathers of electronic music, Numan started in a punk band. "I didn't know anything about electronic music in 1977,"
he told Songfacts.
While preparing to record his first punk album, Numan stumbled across a Minimoog left in the studio. One riff later, he ditched guitar-based punk and reinvented himself as an android synth overlord.
While Numan is known for icy synths and dystopian soundscapes, the guitar has been a constant in his work. "Apart from The Pleasure Principle, guitar has been on every album I've ever made," he told Songfacts in 2010.
Numan still owns the same guitar he got when he was 17, a Gibson Les Paul.
From "
Cars" to "
Are 'Friends' Electric?," Numan's lyrics explore paranoia, isolation, and survival in a synthetic world. He once said
The Pleasure Principle album was inspired by the idea of removing love, sex, and emotion entirely - just a man and his machines.
Afrika Bambaataa and early electro DJs cited Numan's 1979 track "
Films" as a major influence. The rhythm bed from that song became part of the DNA of early hip-hop, electro, and breakbeat scenes.
In 1981, after three sold-out shows at Wembley Arena, Numan announced he was retiring from touring. But the "retirement" only lasted a couple of years, and he later admitted the way he handled it hurt his career, calling it one of his biggest regrets.
In 1995, Numan released the single "Absolution," which sold just 3,000 copies. But in the 2000s, his fortunes turned. Sugababes mashed up "Are 'Friends' Electric?" for their UK #1 hit "
Freak Like Me," and artists like Trent Reznor and David Bowie hailed Numan as a visionary.
Numan was kicked out of two schools, and at 15 a psychologist referenced Asperger's Syndrome, though it wasn't formally diagnosed until much later. He was put on Valium and Nardil (a powerful MAOI) for a year. Making and keeping friends was difficult for most of his early life, and he often found more connection in machines than in people.
That cold, disconnected android image? It wasn't only performance art - it was a coping mechanism. Crowds terrified him. "Socializing will always be stressful for me,"
he told The Guardian. His stage presence - icy, unmoving - helped shield him from the panic.
Gary Numan first met Gemma O'Neill when Gemma was about 11 years old after her father arranged for her to meet the pop star. Their relationship remained that of fan and artist for several years, with Gemma attending concerts and airshows and gradually becoming a familiar face to Numan by the late 1980s.
They truly began to get to know each other in the early 1990s when Gemma's mother was terminally ill. Gary reached out to her after learning about her mother's death, and this marked the beginning of their deeper personal connection. Their first proper date was a casual outing to a Little Chef restaurant, and they married in August 1997.
Gemma has helped Numan learn to navigate social interactions, something he's always struggled with due to Asperger's. "I'm quite happy to hide in her shadow when we're out," he told The Guardian. "She has given me a confidence I never had before."
Numan joined the Air Training Corps at 13 and began flight training when he was still an underground act. In 1982, he attempted a solo flight around the world in a Cessna and was arrested in India on suspicion of spying. He later trained as a stunt pilot, flying vintage World War II planes and helicopters. Music may have paid the bills, but flying, he told Q magazine, gave him a sense of mastery and trust: "People let you down... airplanes don't."
Numan finally performed at Glastonbury in 2024. He almost canceled because of hearing loss, but he pushed through and shared the stage with his daughters Raven and Persia, turning the set into both a professional milestone and a family memory.