Martha Jane Ladly is a Canadian academic, designer and musician. She is a professor of design at OCAD University. Mobile Digital Commons Network : people Ladly also has had a long career as a musician and became famous internationally as part of Rock music band Martha and the Muffins. She had a solo career in the mid-1980s and then worked in design and education.
Ladly played with the band from 1978 to 1980 and sang lead vocals on the group's seventh single, her composition "Was Ezo". Ladly left the band in August 1980 having been awarded an art scholarship. She subsequently relocated to the United Kingdom, releasing two solo singles ("Finlandia" and "Light Years from Love") the latter featuring Peter Hook on bass. In addition to music, she worked in visual arts and design with designer Peter Saville. Her painting Factus 8 was used by Saville for the sleeve of New Order's EP 1981–1982 (1982).
During her time in England, while pursuing her twin interests in music and visual art, Ladly became friends with a number of popular British musical acts. Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark credits Ladly for suggesting the titles of their 1981 hit album Architecture & Morality and their 1984 hit single "Tesla Girls". In 1982, Ladly provided backing vocals for Roxy Music and joined cult Scottish post-punk act the Associates appearing with them on Top of the Pops. She left the Associates in 1986 and subsequently worked with Robert Palmer's band.
In 1991, during which time she was known as Martha Ladly Hoffnung, she managed Anta's, 'a trend setting design business' in Portland Road, Holland Park, London. Ladly was designer for the company which recoloured "authentic tartan patterns".Kim Herdman ‘A wee bit of Canada in Scotland’, Richmond (British Columbia) Review 3 July 1991 p. 10
From 1992 to 2001, she worked with Peter Gabriel as the manager of Real World Design and editor of Real World Notes.
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