
Lyrically the record touched on dystopian and sci-fi themes similar to those employed by authors J. As Numan was unhappy with playing on the often violent London punk scene, they became a studio-only band, quickly recording the 'Tubeway Army' album, and while it was still largely guitar/bass/drums-based, the album saw Numan's first tentative use of the Minimoog synthesizer, which he had come across by accident in the recording studio during the album sessions. During this time the band went through some line-up changes, changing drummers, and briefly adding a second guitarist, but due to musical differences Webb (now renamed Gary Numan) and Gardiner split with them as they wanted to move away from punk rock. Webb was a prolific songwriter, and through playing gigs on the punk scene, and also recording some demos (later released on CD as 'The Plan') they managed to secure a record deal with the independent Beggars Banquet label, releasing two guitar-heavy, punk-style singles in the first half of 1978.

The Lasers soon became Tubeway Army when Webb's uncle Jess Lidyard joined on drums, and the band gave them selves suitably sci-fi names, with Webb rechristening himself 'Valerian', Gardiner was 'Scarlett', and Lidyard became 'Rael'. Gary Anthony James Webb had fronted London band Mean Street in 1976 when he was just 18, and they saw their song 'Bunch Of Stiffs' appear on the 'Live At The Vortex' compilation album, after which he left the band and auditioned as lead guitarist for The Lasers, where he met bass-player Paul Gardiner.
