They were from Coventry and formed in 1985 (despite what you may have read)
and their first single was 'Thru The Flowers' which was released in May of
1986. It is not the same version that appeared on their album 'Lovely'.
Initialy, they were very primitive and all the songs were noisy and sloppy
because that is how they played. Their drummer at the time Pete Tweedie
wasn't very good so most of the early stuff was actually a drum machine
(something most people don't realize) and Pete would play the ride or hi hat.
They released six singles with the sixth being a re-recorded version of 'Thru
The Flowers' before they eventually signed to RCA in 1987.
In 1988 the album 'Lovely' was released and it is brilliant. It was a night
and day change from their early singles. All of the sudden they knew how to
play their instruments. The first change they made was getting rid of Pete
their drummer. The other key to their sound was producer Paul Sampson who
went back through all their old demos and found 'Crash' a song they had
scraped. It was actually recorded at the same session as the first version
of 'Thru The Flowers'. Anyway, a little know fact here is that Paul S. sat
down with the song which had nothing but simple chords and wrote all the
riffs for the song, arranged it and ummm (I'm going to get shot for letting
this out) Played them as well. There I said it.
Crash was recorded at Cabin Studio's which at the time was a 16 track studio.
Paul S. used a drum machine to keep the time though at about the same time
they hired Tig as their new drummer. In the end they took the tapes to a
studio in London and transfered it to 24 track and Tig sat down with the
already recorded song and layed down a live drum track. They also did some
other things to the song at that time such as run the shu shunt sha shu shunt
guitar from tape (which was a telecaster btw) through a Boss Heavy Metal
pedal and through a Mesa boogie then back to another track.
In between the first album 'Lovely and the second 'Pure' they lost Steve the
bass player who was last spotted as the bus driver for Pulp. Since they
didn't have a bass player Paul Sampson filled in on bass. They holed
themselves up in Cabin for 9 months starting without any song ideas. At the
time of the albums release they still didn't have a permenant bass player so
Paul S. went on tour with them in Japan.
for the next album 'Galore' they hired Ian Broudie (of the Lightning Seeds)
to produce and he also co-wrote some songs with them (see he wanted credit
where Paul S. didn't care) anyway, that is where it all fizzled out and the
band broke up.
Paul Court and Tig went on to form Starpower (not to be confused with the US
band) which released two singles. Tracy sang a bit on the first one.
After nothing much happened for them they formed Hedy which hasn't released
anything and despite my best efforts I haven't been able to hear any of the
demos. I think they are afraid I'll steal their ideas. I guess they found
it strange that I could remember all the lyrics to an un-released Starpower
song that I was only played once two years ago (yes, when they left the room
I dubed a copy).
And on a final note the Stone Roses asked Paul Sampson to produce their first
album but Paul's manager who also managed the Primitives (in the studio
recording Pure) didn't tell him until it was too late. What a shame.
Gary (Fuzzbomb@aol.com) for the indiepop mailing-list in June 1997
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