The Wanderers | |
---|---|
Origin | England |
Genres | Punk rock |
Years active | 1980 | –1981
Labels | Polydor |
Past members |
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The Wanderers were a short-lived British punk rock band consisting of Stiv Bators and members of Sham 69, and active between 1980 and 1981. They recorded one album before splitting up.
After Jimmy Pursey left Sham 69 in 1980, Dave Parsons (guitar), Dave Tregunna (bass) and Ricky "Rock" Goldstein (drums), decided to continue making music. [1] [2] With Stiv Bators (ex-Dead Boys member who had just published his solo album Disconnected ) on vocals, they intended to carry on as Sham 69, but for contractual reasons initially used the name The Allies before renaming the band The Wanderers (after the film of the same name) in 1981. [1] [3] [4] In December 1980, they finished producing an album, but it was not released until May 1981. [1] The English press called the band 'Dead 69' or 'Sham Boys' in reference to the origins of the band members.
In March 1981, the band's first single, "Ready to Snap" (B-side: "Beyond the Law"), was released, [1] and the band played at the Lyceum Theatre in London. On 18 May, the debut album Only Lovers Left Alive was released, the title taken from the novel by Dave Wallis. [1] [3] The concept album tells the story of far-right conspiracy theorist Peter Beter (who allegedly provided secret information on tapes) from the perspective of a teenager who wants to fight "the system" only to ultimately succumb to it. [2] [5] The album had 12 songs, and on the back cover art they printed "They Made Me Criminal". However, that song was never part of the album. The album got great reviews from the magazine Sounds , while the magazine Record Mirror reacted somewhat cautiously to it. [6] Writing for Allmusic, Dave Thompson wrote that the album "remains one of the most foreboding records ever released and plunges the listener into a world of Bolshevik plots, duplicate Popes, and a third World War that is so close you can smell it". [2] An Allmusic review described the music as "gutsy pop-punk built around razor-sharp guitars". [7] A Phoenix New Times review was less positive, with Brian Smith viewing the album to be "plagued by faux strings, tin-eared production and hokey Orwellian themes". [8]
In June 1981, they released their cover version of the Bob Dylan song "The Times They Are A-Changin'" (B-side: "It's a Little Bit Frightening") as their last single.
The sales expectations of Polydor Records were not met and they were also unsuccessful at self-funding a US tour. When Dave Parsons became infected with hepatitis, the band broke up. Stiv Bators and Dave Tregunna created The Lords of the New Church, [1] [4] while Ricky Goldstein joined the cover band, The Bootleg Beatles. After partial recovery, Dave Parsons played for Framed, coordinated a Sham 69 reunion with Pursey in 1987 and recorded solo albums. [1]
Only Lovers Left Alive was reissued on the Captain Oi! label in 2000. [2]
The Dead Boys are an American punk rock band from Cleveland, Ohio. The band was among the first wave of punk, and regarded by many as one of the rowdiest and most violent groups of the era. They were formed by vocalist Stiv Bators, rhythm guitarist Jimmy Zero, bassist Jeff Magnum, lead guitarist Cheetah Chrome, and drummer Johnny Blitz in 1975, with the later two having splintered from the band Rocket From The Tombs. The original Dead Boys released two studio albums, Young Loud and Snotty, and We Have Come for Your Children.
Sham 69 are an English punk rock band that formed in Hersham in Surrey in 1975. They changed their musical direction after seeing the Sex Pistols play live in early 1976. They were one of the most successful punk bands in the United Kingdom, achieving five top 20 singles, including "If the Kids Are United" and "Hurry Up Harry". The group's popularity saw them perform on the BBC’s Top of the Pops, and they appeared in the rockumentary film, D.O.A.. The original unit broke up in 1979, with frontman Jimmy Pursey moving on to pursue a solo career.
Steven John Bator, known professionally as Stiv Bator and later as Stiv Bators, was an American punk rock vocalist and guitarist from Youngstown, Ohio. He is best remembered for his bands Dead Boys and The Lords of the New Church.
The Lords of the New Church were a British-American rock band. A supergroup, the line-up originally consisted of four musicians from 1970s punk bands. This line-up comprised vocalist Stiv Bators, guitarist Brian James, bassist Dave Tregunna and drummer Nick Turner. Launched in 1981, the band released three studio albums prior to their dissolution in 1989. During this time, they underwent several line-up changes.
James Timothy Pursey is an English rock musician. He is the founder and frontman of the punk rock band Sham 69, which he has performed with since 1976, along with releasing material as a solo artist.
The Sham Pistols were a short-lived punk rock supergroup composed of guitarist Steve Jones and drummer Paul Cook of the Sex Pistols, with vocalist Jimmy Pursey and bass player Dave Tregunna of Sham 69. Although now referred to as The Sham Pistols, no name had been decided upon at the time. There was a possibility that they may have been called the Sex Pistols.
Tell Us the Truth is the debut album by English punk rock band Sham 69, released in 1978. The first side of the album was recorded live in concert, while the other was recorded in the studio. Tell Us the Truth includes one of Sham 69's biggest hits, "Borstal Breakout", on the live side of the album. The album peaked at number 25 on the UK Albums Chart.
That's Life is the second album by English punk rock band Sham 69, released in 1978.
The Adventures of the Hersham Boys is an album by punk band Sham 69, released in 1979. It is their most successful album, peaking at No. 8 in the UK.
The Game is an album by Oi! band Sham 69, released in 1980. The album was recorded in the French Alps with overdubbing and mixing completed at Rock City Studios, Shepperton.
The A Files is an album by the punk band Sham 69, released in 1997.
Hollywood Hero, released as Western Culture in the UK, is an album by punk band Sham 69. It was released in the US on August 21, 2007, by SOS Records and in the UK on November 26, 2007, by Bad Dog Records. This is the first Sham 69 album without the original vocalist Jimmy Pursey.
Who Killed Joe Public is the Eleventh studio album by punk rock band Sham 69 and the second album not to feature original singer Jimmy Pursey. During the making of the album Pursey put up on his official site a message saying "Who Killed Sham 69?", an obvious play on words aimed at Parsons. One year after the album's release Pursey and Parsons settled their differences and reformed the 1977 line-up, thus leaving and angering the leftover members. The leftover members formed their own band called 'IF...' and toured the UK with Tony Feedback of the Angelic Upstarts and Rick Buckler of The Jam, having two drummers live. After feeling hard done by, the leftover members then decided to also tour under the name Sham 69 after original member Neil Harris joined them.
Only Lovers Left Alive is a 1964 dystopian fiction novel by Dave Wallis. It describes a near-future society in which all adults have committed suicide and teenagers are able to run wild. With its theme of youth in charge and out of control, the book hit a chord with the emerging counter-culture, and a film adaptation starring the Rolling Stones and directed by Nicholas Ray was planned in the mid-1960s.
The Punk Singles Collection 1977–80 is a compilation album by Sham 69. It was originally released by Cleopatra in 1998. It features all of the singles, with their b-sides, released by the band from their start to their first break-up. It was re-released in 2006 by Captain Oi!, this time featuring the four missing live b-sides.
"I Don't Wanna" is a song by English punk rock band Sham 69, which was released as the band's debut single on 28 October 1977. It was their only release on independent label Step Forward Records before signing with Polydor, and was successful on the independent chart. Two B-side tracks, "Ulster" and "Red London" appear on the single. "I Don't Wanna" was written by frontman Jimmy Pursey and guitarist Dave Parsons and produced by John Cale, a founding and former member of experimental rock band The Velvet Underground. The songs were recorded in August 1977 at Pathway Studios in London. Jill Furmanovsky took the cover photograph.
BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert is a 1993 live album by Sham 69. It was recorded by the BBC during the band's concert at the Paris Theatre in London on 21 February 1979 and released as a live album in 1993.
Shams Last Stand is a live and compilation album by Sham 69 and Sham Pistols, was recorded in 1977–1979 at Rainbow Theatre, London, England. It was released as live album in 1989 and on 24 August 1999 as compilation album. The tracks includes "Pretty Vacant" by Sex Pistols and "White Riot" by The Clash was later featured on compilation album and was covered by Sham 69.
Greatest Hits Live is a live album by punk rock band Sham 69. It was recorded live at Clockwise Mobile Studio in Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan in March 1991, and released in 2001 on Cherry Red Records.
The Lords of the New Church is the debut studio album by the British-American rock band the Lords of the New Church. It was released in 1982 by Illegal Records in the United Kingdom and by I.R.S. Records in the United States.