Showing posts with label Lurkers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lurkers. Show all posts

Friday, 21 December 2018

New Guitars In Town


New Guitars In Town, released in January 1980 by Beggars Banquet, is a curiosity. An enigma wrapped inside a conundrum, but a curiosity nonetheless. The Boys had just released their third Safari album, the career-highlight To Hell With…, when drummer Jack Black and guitarist “Honest” John Plain hooked up with Lurkers guitarist Pete Stride and vocalist(s) Howard Wall and “Plug” Edwards, and brought in Merton Parka/Dexy’s Midnight Runners keyboard player Mick Talbot (soon to join Paul Weller in his sheet-shitting Style Council – “he broke up The Jam for this?”), and they recorded an album released under Stride and Plain’s names as New Guitars In Town. It’s a rousing, drunken collection of originals, enjoyable, punked-up covers (Sonny Bono’s ‘Laugh At Me’, Jim Reeves’ ‘He’ll Have To Go’, and Arthur Alexander’s ‘You Better Move On’), and tunes Plain co-wrote with his old band mates. The fact that two singles were released under the former band names (the title track EP, featuring the drunken singalong ‘Pick Me Up’ and non-LP ‘Little Ole Wine Drinker Me’ by The Lurkers and ‘You Better Move On’ c/w ‘Schoolgirls’ by The Boys) suggests that the album may actually have been cobbled together from extra tracks lying around by the respective bands, but as I said, it’s a curiosity!
So, on to the album, which can hold its head up high as among the best either band has recorded. By now, any vestiges of their “punk” sound, such as it was, have yielded to a rollicking lads’ night out atmosphere. A straightforward power punk reading of Bono’s chestnut is followed by The Boys’ single, highlighting their slightly more melodic, poppier sound, illustrating that short transitional musical period when punk was morphing into power pop and New Wave. Talbot’s barrelhouse piano tinkling rattles around ‘Cold Old Night’, with Stride and Plain’s dual guitar soloing recalling Thin Lizzy and Wishbone Ash’s similar sonic assault. Their arrangement of ‘He’ll Have To Go’ retains Reeves’ pitiless sorrow, but adds a garagey crunch that’s closer to The Boys albums and probably should have been the single. The tender (!) ballad (!) ‘Half The Time’ is atypical in both bands’ oeuvre, a tears in your beer weeper as “Time, gentlemen” echoes around the nearly empty pub at closing time.
The Lurkers’ credited title track (on the aforementioned single) is a career highlight, a stomping, storming power punk classic sporting stinging guitars and a shout-a-long chorus, and ‘Restless Kind’ harkens back to their punk pedigree, the hardest rocker in the set. The album ends with two of my favourites: singalong lads rock renditions of ‘You Better Move On’ and the drunken party anthem (Talbot’s barrelhouse piano is in fine form here), ‘Pick Me Up’. Two of the best things they’ve ever done (the latter particularly points the way to The Boys inebriated Christmas album the following year, released as The Yobs)
Jeff Penczak

Thursday, 15 November 2018

Fulham Fallout (Shadow Re-Up)

Though history rarely credits the Lurkers as much more than West London's answer to the Ramones, think carefully before you assume it's a put-down. The Ramones influenced many groups, after all, but how many of them responded by taking the New Yorkers' blueprint and making it wholly their own?
Formed late in 1976 the band were one of the pioneering punk bands that played live in the first few months of the now-legendary Roxy Club in London. Their debut single "Shadow", the first release on Beggars Banquet Records, was voted by John Peel's listeners as the twelfth best track of the year in 1977's Festive Fifty.
The band’s debut album, Fulham Fallout, is an astonishing accomplishment, a blur of high octane riffs and unforgettable hooks tumbling over one another without a care for manners or niceties. When the band is at its best (notably in their singles "Ain't Got a Clue," "I Don't Need to Tell Her," and "Shadow...") with production that really makes the guitar kick. It's sloppy and amateurish, but that's what makes it so great.
Fourteen tracks make up the original LP; this Captain Oi reissue adds a further dozen bonus tracks, drawn from B-sides, compilations, demos and more. "Be My Prisoner" appeared on Streets, a landmark 1977 compilation album of early UK punk bands from a variety of independent record labels.