The Times
In 1977, Edward Ball formed Television
Personalities with fellow Chelsea school mate Dan Treacy. They
were a ham-fisted pastiche of a punk band, whose ironic swipes at
the scene made them anti-heroes, the archetypal cult band.
Ball soon split from Treacy and followed his vision with The
Teenage Filmstars and ultimately The Times, a guise which
continued well into the 90's.
Their
debut album, Pop Goes Art, was released in 1982 in tandem
with the Television Personalities' Mummy, You're Not Watching
Me.
While the album is more Herman's
Hermits than The Who, it contained a
number of indie-pop masterpieces like Biff! Bang! Pow!,
Miss London and I Helped Patrick McGoohan
Escape.
Biff! Bang! Pow! was also the B-side of The Times'
debut single, Red With Purple Flashes - both titles were
tributes to 1960's legends The Creation,
whose pop-art antics and freakbeat 45's captured Ball's
imagination.
This tallied neatly with the ideas behind Whaam! Records,
formed by Treacy and manager Clive Solomon with a label/design in
the style of Roy Lichentstein.
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