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The Vibrators
One of the great myths in rock & roll is that only serious,
dedicated musicians can make great records; a philosophical tract
dictating that great rock & roll is not the province of
bandwagon jumpers, poseurs, fakes and commercially minded trend
groupies . . .
The reality is that great rock & roll can be made by
anyone, even accidentally. Case in point, The Vibrators. If you
saw a photograph of this "punk" band a few months before
they signed a label deal with Columbia in 1976, you would have
seen long hair, and bell-bottom trousers - they were bloody
hippies!
But, by the time they released their debut LP, Pure Mania,
in 1977, they had short hair, fake leopard skin pants, safety
pins, cheap sunglasses, all the accoutrements a good born-again
punk band needed.
Did that make them inherently bad? Not really, a tad
disingenuous perhaps, but no worse than a punk band (e.g.,
Generation X) that professed to being real punks all the while
secretly harbouring the desire of being as commercially viable as
the dinosaur bands they purportedly loathed.
Although the existence of Pure Mania is a good
illustration of accidental inspiration, it also proves that
moments like this can happen only once in a dross-filled career.
Such was the case with The Vibrators who went on to record nearly
a dozen records over a 15-year period, none of them worth
mentioning.
Pure Mania, on the other hand, remains as good now as
it did when it was released. This is due to the fact that the band
simply adapted a formula that eschewed the rage and fury of The
Sex Pistols and The Clash for the relative accessibility of The
Ramones and The Damned.
So, while The Pistols sang No Future, Pure Mania
is jump started by a track called Into the Future. Even
the songs about emotional desolation (No Heart) are more
catchy than frightening or ominous.
Sure, Pure Mania is a fake through and through, but
hating it for that reason alone makes you the boring old
fart. Besides, the speedy guitars, irresistible hooks and snappy
songs are infectious.
Their follow-up album, V2 (1978), narrowly missed the
UK Top 30, but the only single to be taken from that album, Automatic
Lover, was the only Vibrators' single to reach the UK Top 40.
It earned the band a TV appearance on Top Of The Pops.
The Vibrators' final single on Epic, Judy Says (Knock You
In The Head), was released in June 1978.
Despite numerous line-up changes, The Vibrators are still
touring to this date as a three-piece, with Knox and Eddie the
only original members.
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Band |
Ian 'Knox' Carnochan
Vocals, guitar, keyboards
John Ellis Guitar, synth, vocals
Pat Collier
Bass
John 'Eddie' Edwards
drums |
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