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The Business
The Business hailed from Lewisham in South London and along
with Sham 69, Cockney
Rejects, and Angelic Upstarts,
was one of the prime movers in the post-Pistols British punk
sub-genre known as Oi!
The Oi! movement was marked by strenuously
collectivist politics, chanted, football-cheer choruses and an
unruly contingent of violent, rightwing hooligan fans.
The Business was fully prepared to take up Oi!'s
street-fighting-man mantle in the service of social justice and
hard-driving rock & roll, although the bands abilities
extended far beyond punk. With its
shout-along chorus and bashing rhythms, the group's signature Harry
May (a rant about a South London 'celebrity' and slightly
shady geezer) is among the most traditional Oi!-sounding tracks in
the Business repertoire.
The harmonies, relatively sophisticated rhythms, and infectious
melodies of Out In The Cold and Streets Where You Live
(which I swear has Paul Weller singing backing vocals!) reveal the
influence of roots-rock and power pop and might not sound out of
place on an early Jam album. Elsewhere, H-Bomb
sounds remarkably similar to Joe Jackson's
earlier Got the Time. Powerful, outspoken, and rebellious
as they may have been, the members of The Business were smarter
than your average Oi! boys.
The original Business line-up broke-up in 1981with original
members Steve Kent, Martin Smith and Nick Cunningham departing for
pastures new. Fitzsimmons recruited Steve Whale, Graham Ball, Mark
Brennan and John Fisher for the 1982 Manchester Oi! Festival but
Fisher and Ball soon left again. Adding Kevin Boyce on drums The
Business released the Smash The Discos EP which spent six
weeks in the British indie chart, peaking at Number 2.
The group's long-awaited debut album - Suburban Rebels -
came in May 1983. The album reached Number 2 on the indie chart
and Number 39 in the 'proper' charts. The following year, the Loud,
Proud and Punk - Live album was released to a five-star rating
from Sounds magazine. Long bouts of inactivity followed
while the various band members worked on side projects.
Original guitarist Steve Kent rejoined The Business in 1988 - a
year in which a flurry of Business recordings became available,
including Singalongabusiness, Welcome To The Real World
and In And Out Of Business. In October 1988 the group
contributed a track (Do A Runner) to a free EP. Recorded
live at the Lisieux Festival in France, this was the group's last
ever gig. Their final English gig had been at the Astoria in
London on April 2 1988.
Fitz re-formed the band in 1993 when offered the prospect of
lucrative American gigs. The 'new' Business also returned to the
recording studio for the albums Keep The Faith and The
Truth, The Whole Truth and Nothing But The Truth.
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Micky "Fitz" Fitzsimmons
Vocals
Steve Kent
Guitar
Martin Smith
Bass
Nick Cunningham
Drums
Steve Whale
Guitar
Graham Ball
Guitar
Mark Brennan
Bass
John Fisher
Drums
Kevin Boyce
Drums
Micky Fairbairn
Drums
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