Alternative TV

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Biography

It was the old, old story. Bored bank clerk falls in love with punk rock, writes a few pages about it, Xeroxes a fanzine, sells it at gigs, creates a monster, starts a new fashion. The first issue of Sniffin' Glue featured the Ramones and Blue Öyster Cult; the Punk Reviews page hit the Flamin' Groovies and the Stranglers, and the intro hinted at treats to follow: the Nazz, Roogalator, the Raspberries, and the Count Bishops. There really wasn't much punk around in those days.

The magazine grew with the scene it championed, and for a year, it ruled the British fanzine roost. But the bank clerk, Mark Perry, was sick of writing -- he wanted to step out and be written about himself. His last band, the New Beatles, had done nothing; his next, Alternative TV, could scarcely do any worse.

Featuring Perry on vocals, ex-Generation X drummer John Towe, Mickey Smith (bass), and former Nobodies guitarist Alex Fergusson, the band formed in March 1977, rehearsing at Throbbing Gristle's studios in Hackney -- both "Love Lies Limp" and "Alternative to NATO" were written and recorded there -- and on May 6, 1977, ATV made their live debut in Nottingham.

The first lineup splintered almost immediately. Smith was replaced by New Beatle Tyrone Thomas, and on June 5 ATV opened for Wayne County's Electric Chairs in Brighton. Six gigs later, Towe quit, but not before ATV released their first single, "Love Lies Limp," as a free flexidisc with the final, August 1977 issue of Sniffin' Glue.

Towe was replaced by Chris Bennett, and in this form the band continued to gig, at the same time as preparing the ground for their debut album. They are caught rehearsing in The Punk Rock Movie, the cinéma vérité documentary of punk's first savage summer; more exposure came in December, when the "How Much Longer" single appeared on Perry's own Deptford Fun City wing of Miles Copeland's Illegal setup. The Image Has Cracked, the group's live and studio debut album, appeared the following spring.

Singles "Action Time Vision" and "Life After Life" followed, together with the archive Towe-era "Life," but ATV were changing first, as Perry rocketed on toward the Throbbing Gristle sound which by now captivated him (the official bootleg Live at the Rat '77, incidentally, was recorded by Genesis P-Orridge).

By the time of Vibing Up the Senile Man (Part One), the second ATV album, and its accompanying single, "The Force Is Blind," only Perry remained from the original band; only bassist Dennis Burns remained from any of those who had followed. And, of ATV's original, punk-era press disciples, even Sounds found the album unlistenable.

Unperturbed, Perry took the new album out on the road, but an end of sorts was in sight. In March 1979, on-stage at Chelmsford, ATV called it a day. Side one of the valedictory Scars on Sunday album preserves highlights from this final show; side two introduces the Good Missionaries, the band that would pick up exactly where ATV left off, only without the encumbrance of such an historically resonant name.

But of course it wasn't the end really. The first ATV reunion, with Fergusson back on board, occurred as early as 1981; another kept Perry amused through the second half of the decade and, in 1999, Perry celebrated the release of his 20th album, under the born-yet-again name of Alternative TV. ~ Dave Thompson, Rovi
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Alternative TV

Mark Perry in NYC 2003
Background information
Origin London, England
Genres Punk rock
Post-punk
Years active 1976–79, 1981, 1985–98
Labels Deptford Fun City
N.B.
Cherry Red
I.R.S.
Noiseville
Anagram
Chapter 22
Overground
Members
Mark Perry
Kevin Mann
Lee McFadden
Steve Carter
Past members
Mark Perry
Alex Fergusson
Tyrone Thomas
Chris Bennett
John Towe
Dennis Burns
Alan Gruner
Ray Weston
Dave Gerorge
'Protag'
'Nag'
Steve Cannell
Alison Philips
James Kyllo
Clive Giblin
Bob Leith
Karl Blake
Tony Barber
Jools Holland
Genesis P-Orridge
Steve Jameson
Kif Kif
Stefie Sharpstrings
Sam Dobson
Brian James
Pete Brown
Terry Edwards
Ed Ball
Susie Webb
Yvette Eady
Mika Mizushima
Mike Cook
Roddy Frame
Annie Stubbs
Siobhan Davigneau

Alternative TV (sometimes known as ATV) were an English rock band, formed in London in 1976. Their punk rock and post-punk sound was influential for several musical artists.

Contents

History

Alternative TV were formed by Mark Perry, the founding editor of Sniffin' Glue punk fanzine, with Perry and Alex Fergusson.[1] Early rehearsals took place at Throbbing Gristle's Industrial Records studio with Genesis P-Orridge on drums; recordings from this period appeared, long afterwards, on the Industrial Sessions CD.

The band's debut on record was "Love Lies Limp", a free flexi disc issued with the final edition of Perry's Sniffin' Glue fanzine. On this single Perry and Fergusson were accompanied by John Towe (ex Generation X) and Tyrone Thomas. Towe left to join the Rage and was replaced by Chris Bennett. This line-up was the most straightforwardly "punk" version of ATV, although they combined short fast songs with extended pieces such as "Alternatives To NATO", in which Perry read an anarchist political text and envisaged the possibility of a Soviet invasion of Britain. Shortly afterwards they released the "How Much Longer" / "You Bastard" 7" in December 1977. The A-side was a pointed critique of punk style: "How much longer will people wear/Nazi armbands and dye their hair?"

At the end of 1977, Perry sacked his chief collaborator and co-writer Fergusson. The latter went on to form the short-lived Cash Pussies and, a few years later, Psychic TV along with Genesis P-Orridge. He was replaced in ATV by Dennis Burns.

A dub influenced single, "Life after Life," was released as well as a debut album, The Image Has Cracked. The band's second album, Vibing Up the Senile Man, saw the band take a more explicitly experimental direction however, which alienated both the music press and audiences. A recording of one gig which ended in a violent stage invasion can be heard on the cassette-only release Scars on Sunday. Around the same time, a live LP, split with commune-dwelling hippy band Here and Now was released (a document of their tour together), marking the band's movement further away from the ever more predictable punk/new wave scene. Alternative TV soon evolved into the avant-garde project, The Good Missionaries (taking the name from a track on the 'Vibing' album), releasing one album, Fire From Heaven in 1979. Perry released a solo album, Snappy Turns, and joined the experimental duo The Door And The Window on their debut album Detailed Twang before he, Burns and Fergusson briefly reformed Alternative TV along with former members of Fergusson's Cash Pussies in 1981. The reconstituted ATV released one album, Strange Kicks, a venture into light pop songs unlike any of their previous work, produced by Richard Mazda.

From 1981 to 1982 Perry had a new project, The Reflections, a band with Nag from The Door And The Window, Karl Blake (of The Lemon Kittens) and Grant Showbiz among others. They produced an album, Slugs And Toads, and a single, "4 Countries", before disintegrating.

Perry reformed ATV in 1985. This line up started with Karl Blake, Steve Cannell and Allison Philips. Protag and then Clive Giblin featured later on guitar and ATV released further records on and off over the following decade or so with varying line-ups, Perry being the only constant member. Another line up followed with James Kyllo and Steve Cannell which lead to the releases of "Sol" and "Dragon Love".

Lost Moment Records released the 2001 studio album, "Revolution", followed in 2003 by the official bootleg album "Viva La Rock'n' Roll – consisting of live performances recorded in the UK, France, Germany and the US. In 2004 Mark finally gave in to logic and recorded the Ramones classic "Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue" for a Lost Moment Single and an Argentinian Ramones tribute CD, and the world heard at last his version of the song that his pioneering fanzine took its name from. Cleopatra Records released a compilation of the Lost Moment output for the US market in February 2006, entitled "In Control".

Mark Perry is currently (Dec 2006) in the process of forming the new Sniffin' Glue Records label, which will feature a third Long Decline album as its first release.

Cover versions

The Chameleons Regularly closed their gigs with a cover of Splitting In 2.

Savage Republic Covered Viva La Rock 'N' Roll on their 1988 LP Jamahiriya Democratique Et Populaire De Sauvage

Discography

Albums

  • The Image Has Cracked (1978, Deptford Fun City, LP, DLP01)
  • What You See Is What You Are (1978, Deptford Fun City, LP, DLP02) (live LP, shared with Here & Now)
  • Vibing Up The Senile Man (Part One) (1978, Deptford Fun City, LP, DLP03)
  • Live At The Rat Club '77 (1979, Crystal Records, LP, CLP1)
  • Action Time Vision (1980, Deptford Fun City, LP, DLP05)
  • Scars On Sunday (1980, Weird Noise, CAS, WEIRD001) (split with The Good Missionaries)
  • An Ye As Well (1980, Conventional, CAS, CON14) (split with The Good Missionaries)
  • Strange Kicks (1981, I.R.S., LP, SP70023)
  • Peep Show (1987, Anagram Records, LP, GRAM32) (reissued on CD 1996, Overground, OVER54CD)
  • Splitting In 2 – Selected Viewing (1989, Anagram, LP, GRAM40) (compilation)
  • Dragon Love (1990, Chapter 22, LP, CHAPLP51)
  • Live 1978 (1993, Overground, CD, OVER29)
  • The Image Has Cracked – The Alternative TV Collection (1994, Anagram, CD, CDPUNK24) (compilation)
  • My Life As A Child Star (1994, Overground, CD, OVER39CD) (reissued 1995, Feel Good All Over, CD, FGAO16)
  • The Radio Sessions (1995, Overground, CD, OVER44CD)
  • The Industrial Sessions 1977 (1996, Overground, CD, OVER49CD)
  • Vibing Up The Senile Man – The Second Alternative TV Collection (1996, Anagram, CD, CDMGRAM102) (compilation)
  • Punk Life (1998, Overground, CD, OVER70CD)
  • Black and White: Live (2009, Bongo Beat, CD)

Singles

  • "Love Lies Limp" (1977, S. G. Records Unltd, 7" flexi)
  • "How Much Longer" (1977, Deptford Fun City, 7", DFC02)
  • "Life After Life" (1977, Deptford Fun City, 7", DFC04)
  • "Action Time Vision" (1978, Deptford Fun City, 7", DFC07)
  • "Life"/"Love Lies Limp" (1978, Deptford Fun City, 7", DFC05)
  • "The Force Is Blind" (1979, Deptford Fun City, 7", DFC10)
  • "The Ancient Rebels" (1981, I.R.S., 7", PFP1006)
  • "Communicate" (1981, I.R.S., 7", PFP1009)
  • "Welcome To The End Of Fun" (1986, Noiseville Records, 12", VOO1T)
  • Love/Sex EP (1986, Noiseville Records, 12", VOO2T)
  • "My Baby's Laughing (Empty Summer's Dream)" (1987, Anagram, 12", ANA36)
  • The Sol EP (1990, Chapter 22, 12", 12CHAP46)
  • "Best Wishes" (1994, Feel Good All Over, 7", FGAO6)
  • "Purpose In My Life" (1995, Feel Good All Over, 7", FGAO22)

References

External links


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Mentioned in

Splitting in 2 (1989 Album by Alternative TV)
In Control (2006 Album by Alternative TV)
Action Time Vision: The ATV Anthology (2003 Album by Alternative TV)
Vibing Up the Senile Man (1979 Album by Alternative TV)