Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Buzzcocks

 
Artist: Buzzcocks
Buzzcocks

Group Members:

John Maher, Steve Garvey, Steve Diggle, Pete Shelley, Howard Devoto, Philip Barker, Tony Barber, Garth Smith, Phil Barker

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Steve Garvey, Steve Diggle

Formal Connection With:

ShelleyDevoto, Flag of Convenience, The Teardrops, Pete Shelley, Howard Devoto, The T4 Project
See Buzzcocks Lyrics
  • Formed: 1975, Manchester, England
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Singles Going Steady," "Operators Manual," "Product"
  • Representative Songs: "What Do I Get?," "Orgasm Addict," "Ever Fallen in Love?"

Biography

Formed in Manchester, England, in 1975, the Buzzcocks were one of the most influential bands to emerge in the initial wave of punk rock. With their crisp melodies, driving guitars, and guitarist Pete Shelley's biting lyrics, the Buzzcocks were one of the best, most influential punk bands. The Buzzcocks were inspired by the Sex Pistols' energy, yet they didn't copy the Pistols' angry political stance. Instead, they brought that intense, brilliant energy to the three-minute pop song. Shelley's alternately funny and anguished lyrics about adolescence and love were some of the best and smartest of his era; similarly, the Buzzcocks' melodies and hooks were concise and memorable. Over the years, their powerful punk-pop has proven enormously influential, with echoes of their music being apparent in everyone from Hüsker Dü to Nirvana.

Before the Buzzcocks, the teenaged Pete Shelley had played guitar in various heavy metal bands. In 1975, he enrolled in the Bolton Institute of Technology. While he was at school, Shelley joined an electronic music society, which is where he met Howard Devoto, who had enrolled at BIT in 1972. Both Shelley and Devoto shared an affection for the Velvet Underground, while Devoto was also fascinated by the Stooges. While they were still in school, Shelley and Devoto began rehearsing with a drummer, covering everything from the Stooges to Brian Eno. The trio never performed live and soon fell apart. Shelley and Devoto remained friends and several months after their initial musical venture dissolved, the pair read the first live review of the Sex Pistols in NME and decided to see the band in London. After witnessing the band twice in February 1976, the pair decided to form their own band, with the intent of replicating the Pistols' London impact in Manchester.

Both musicians decided to change their last names -- Peter McNeish became Pete Shelley and Howard Traford became Howard Devoto -- and took their group's name from a review of Rock Follies, which ended with the quotation "get a buzz, cock." The Buzzcocks began rehearsing, picking up a local drummer and bassist Garth Smith. Shortly after their formation, Shelley and Devoto booked a local club, the Lesser Free Trade Hall, with the intent of persuading the Sex Pistols to play in Manchester. They succeeded in bringing the Pistols to Manchester, but the Buzzcocks had to pull out of their own gig when both the bassist and drummer left the group before the concert. At the Pistols show, Shelley and Devoto met Steve Diggle, who joined the Buzzcocks as their bassist, and the group found their drummer John Maher through an advertisement in Melody Maker. Within a few months, the band played its first concert, opening for the second Sex Pistols show at the Lesser Free Trade Hall in July of 1976. By the end of the year, the Buzzcocks had played a handful of gigs and helped establish Manchester as the second biggest punk rock city in England, ranking just behind London.

In October of 1976, the Buzzcocks recorded their first demo tape, which remained unreleased. At the end of 1976, the group joined the Sex Pistols on their Anarchy Tour. After the tour was completed, Shelley borrowed a couple hundred pounds from his father and the band used the money to record their debut EP, Spiral Scratch. The record was the first do-it-yourself, independently released record of the punk era. Spiral Scratch appeared on the band's New Hormones record label in January 1977; there were initially only 1,000 copies pressed. Shortly after the release of the EP, Devoto quit the group and returned to college; later in the year, he formed Magazine. Following Devoto's departure, Pete Shelley assumed the role as lead vocalist, Steve Diggle moved to guitar, and Garth Smith became the band's bassist. By June of 1977, the Buzzcocks were attracting the attention of major record labels. By September, they had signed with United Artists Records, who gave the band complete artistic control.

The Buzzcocks certainly tested the limits of that artistic control with their debut single, "Orgasm Addict." Released in October of 1977, the single didn't become a hit because its subject matter was too explicit for BBC radio, but it generated good word of mouth. Following its release, Garth Smith was kicked out of the group and was replaced by Steve Garvey. The Buzzcocks' second single, "What Do I Get?," became their first charting single, scraping the bottom of the Top 40. In March, the band released its first album, Another Music in a Different Kitchen. In September of 1978 the Buzzcocks released their second full-length record, Love Bites.

The rapid pace of the band's recording and performing schedules quickly had its effects on the group. Not only were the concerts and recordings wearing the band down, the members were consuming alcohol and drugs in high numbers. Early in 1979 they recorded their third album, A Different Kind of Tension, which displayed some signs of wear and tear. Following the album's release in August, they embarked on their first American tour, which wasn't successful. Nevertheless, the band was enjoying the peak of its popularity at home in Britain. Later in 1979, the singles collection Singles Going Steady was released in America.

All of the inner and outer tensions on the band culminated in 1980, when they drastically cut back their performance schedule, but they persevered with recording, cutting the EP Parts 1, 2, 3, which was released as three separate singles over the course of the year. During 1980, United Artists was bought out by EMI, who cut back support of the Buzzcocks. The group began working on its fourth album in early 1981, but was prevented from recording by EMI. The label wanted to release Singles Going Steady in the U.K. before the band delivered its fourth album. The Buzzcocks refused. Consequently, EMI didn't give the band an advance to cover the recording costs of the fourth album. Shelley decided to break up the band instead of fight the label. The Buzzcocks broke up in 1981.

Immediately after the split, Shelley pursued a solo career that initially produced the hit single "Homosapien" but soon went dry. Steve Diggle formed Flag of Convenience with John Maher, who quit the band shortly after its formation. Steve Garvey moved to New York, where he played with Motivation for a few years. In 1989, the group re-formed and toured the United States. The following year, Maher left the band and former Smiths drummer Mike Joyce joined the band on tour. By 1990, the reunion had become permanent; after Joyce's brief tenure with the band, the final lineup of the reunited Buzzcocks featured Shelley, Diggle, bassist Tony Barber, and drummer Phil Barker. The new version of the band released its first album, Trade Test Transmissions, in 1993. After its release, the band toured frequently. In spring of 1996, the Buzzcocks released their fifth studio album, All Set. Modern followed three years later, and a self-titled record for Merge appeared in 2003. Flat-Pack Philosophy arrived in 2006 on the Cooking Vinyl label. An anniversary set simply called 30 was released in 2008 on Cooking Vinyl. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Discography: Buzzcocks
Top

Complete Singles Anthology

Buy this CD

Love Bites

Buy this CD

Hamburg 81: Auf Wiedersehen

Buy this CD

I Don't Mind the Buzzcocks

Buy this CD

Modern

Buy this CD

Love Bites [2-CD]

Buy this CD

Another Music in a Different Kitchen [Bonus Disc]

Buy this CD

Different Kind of Tension [Bonus Disc]

Buy this CD

Secret Public's Best in Good Food

Buy this CD

Driving You Insane

Buy this CD
Show More Albums

Another Music in a Different Kitchen [Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Singles Going Steady [UK Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Orgasm Addicts

Buy this CD

Love Bites [Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

French et Encore du Pain: The Complete 1995 Paris Live

Buy this CD

Operators Manual

Buy this CD

BBC Sessions

Buy this CD

Entertaining Friends

Buy this CD

Paris: Encore du Pain

Buy this CD

Buzzcocks

Buy this CD

Flat-Pack Philosophy

Buy this CD

Inventory

Buy this CD

Trade Test Transmissions

Buy this CD

Live in Paris

Buy this CD

Live Tension

Buy this CD

Noise Annoys

Buy this CD

Spiral Scratch

Buy this CD

Live at Shepherds Bush Empire 2003

Buy this CD

Beating Hearts/Small Songs with Big Hearts

Buy this CD

French

Buy this CD

30

Buy this CD

Trade Test Transmissions [UK Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Trade Test Transmissions [UK Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Love Bites/Another Music in a Different Kitchen

Buy this CD

Reconciliation

Buy this CD

Ever Fallen in Love?: Buzzcocks Finest [Disky]

Buy this CD

Small Songs with Big Hearts

Buy this CD

Songs for Lonely Americans

Buy this CD

Ever Fallen in Love?: Buzzcocks Finest [EMI Gold]

Buy this CD

Orgasm Addict Live

Buy this CD

Songs in a Different Time

Buy this CD

Chronology

Buy this CD

All Set

Buy this CD

Different Kind of Tension/Parts 1, 2, 3

Buy this CD

Do It

Buy this CD

Product

Buy this CD

Live at the Roxy Club

Buy this CD

Auf Wiedersehen [Video/DVD]

Buy this CD

Another Music in a Different Kitchen/Love Bites [1989]

Buy this CD

Different Kind of Tension/Singles Going Steady

Buy this CD

Lest We Forget

Buy this CD

Peel Sessions Album

Buy this CD

Many Parts

Buy this CD

Singles Going Steady

Buy this CD

Different Kind of Tension

Buy this CD

Another Music in a Different Kitchen

Buy this CD

Time's Up

Buy this CD

Time's Up

Buy this CD
   
Show Fewer Albums
Wikipedia: Buzzcocks
Top
Buzzcocks

Background information
Origin Bolton, England
Genres Punk rock[1]
Pop punk[2][3]
New Wave[1][4][5]
Years active 1976–1981,
1989–present
Labels I.R.S. Records
Cooking Vinyl Records
ROIR Records
EMI
Associated acts Flag of Convenience
Magazine
Website www.buzzcocks.com
Members
Pete Shelley
Steve Diggle
Chris Remmington
Danny Farrant
Former members
Howard Devoto
Garth
Mick Singleton
John Maher
Barry Adamson
Steve Garvey
Mike Joyce
Tony Barber
Phil Barker

Buzzcocks are an English rock band formed in Bolton in 1976, led by singer–songwriter–guitarist Pete Shelley.[6]

They are regarded as an important influence on the Manchester music scene, the independent record label movement, punk rock, power pop, pop punk and indie rock.[2] They achieved commercial success with singles that fused pop craftsmanship with rapid-fire punk energy. These singles were collected on Singles Going Steady, described by critic Ned Raggett as a "punk masterpiece".[7] The widely covered "Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)" remains one of their best-known songs.

The name "Buzzcocks" was chosen by Howard Devoto and Pete Shelley after reading the headline "it's the buzz, cocks!" in a review of the TV series Rock Follies in Time Out magazine. The "buzz" is the excitement of playing on stage; "cock" is Manchester slang meaning "youngster". They thought it captured the excitement of the Sex Pistols and nascent punk scene.[8]

Contents

Career

Early years

Howard Trafford, a student at Bolton Institute of Technology (now the University of Bolton), placed a notice in the college looking for musicians sharing a liking for The Velvet Underground's song "Sister Ray".[9] Peter McNeish,[10] a fellow student at the Institute, responded to the notice. Trafford played electronic music[10] and McNeish had played rock.

McNeish assumed the stage name Pete Shelley, and Trafford named himself Howard Devoto, after a bus driver in Cambridge. In late 1975, Shelley and Devoto recruited a drummer and formed an embryonic version of Buzzcocks that did not perform in front of an audience and which dissolved after a number of rehearsals.[citation needed] The band formed as the Buzzcocks in February 1976 and performed live for the first time on April 1st 1976 at their college. Garth Davies played bass guitar and Mick Singleton played drums. Singleton also played in local band Black Cat Bone.[11]

After reading an NME review of the Sex Pistols' first performance, Shelley and Devoto travelled to London together to see the Sex Pistols in February 1976. Shelley and Devoto were impressed by what they saw and arranged for the Sex Pistols to come and perform at the Lesser Free Trade Hall in Manchester, in June 1976. Buzzcocks intended to play at this concert, but the other musicians dropped out, and Shelley and Devoto were unable to recruit other musicians in time for the gig. Once they had recruited bass guitarist Steve Diggle and drummer John Maher, they made their debut opening for the Sex Pistols' second Manchester concert in July 1976. A brief clip of Devoto-era Buzzcocks performing The Troggs "I Can't Control Myself" appears in the Punk: Attitude documentary directed by Don Letts. In September 1976 the band travelled to London to perform at the two-day 100 Club Punk Festival, organized by Malcolm McLaren. Other performers included: the Sex Pistols, Subway Sect, Siouxsie & the Banshees, The Clash, The Vibrators, The Damned and the French band Stinky Toys.

By the end of the year, Buzzcocks had recorded and released a four-track EP, Spiral Scratch on their own New Hormones label, making them one of the first punk groups to establish an independent record label trailing only The Saints's "(I'm) Stranded". Produced by Martin Hannett, the music was roughly recorded, insistently repetitive, and energetic. "Boredom" announced punk's rebellion against the status quo while templating a strident musical minimalism (the guitar solo consisting of two repeated notes). The demos recorded while Devoto was in the band were later issued officially as Time's Up. Long available as a bootleg, this album includes the alternative takes of all the tracks from the Spiral Scratch EP as well as early version of tracks that later appeared on the official debut Another Music in a Different Kitchen.

After a few months, Devoto left the group; he returned to college for a year, then formed Magazine. Pete Shelley continued as vocalist; his high-pitched, melodic singing stood in stark contrast to the gruff pub rock vocal stylings of many punk contemporaries. Diggle switched from bass to guitar, and Garth Davies rejoined on bass as Garth Smith or Garth. Garth appeared on the band’s first Radio 1 Peel Session, in September 1977, but due to his alcoholism he was quickly replaced with Steve Garvey, joining Dirty Looks in New York. This new line-up signed with United Artists Records.

Signing to UAI

Their first UAI Buzzcocks single, "Orgasm Addict", was a playful examination of compulsive sexuality that was (and remains) uncommonly bold. The BBC refused to play the song, but the single sold well. Later, more ambiguous songs staked out a territory defined by Shelley's bisexuality and punk's aversion to serious examination of human sexuality. The next single, "What Do I Get?" reached the UK top 40 charts.[12] "Lipstick", the B-side to "Promises," shared the same ascending progression of notes in its chorus as Magazine's first single, "Shot By Both Sides," also released in 1978.

Their original career consisted of three LPs: Another Music in a Different Kitchen, Love Bites, and A Different Kind of Tension, each supported by extensive touring in Europe and the U.S. Their trademark sound was a marriage of catchy pop melodies with punk guitar energy, backed by an unusually tight and skilled rhythm section. They advanced drastically in musical and lyrical sophistication: by the end they were quoting American writer William S. Burroughs ("A Different Kind of Tension"), declaiming their catechism in the anthem "I Believe", and tuning in to a fantasy radio station on which their songs could be heard ("Radio Nine"). In 1980, Liberty Records signed the band, and three singles were released. However, only one of these, the double 'A' side "Why She's A Girl From The Chainstore/Are Everything" made the Top 75.

In parallel with Buzzcocks, Pete Shelley, formed a more experimental and post-punk band, The Tiller Boys, along Eric Random and Francis Cookson, while Steve Garvey joined The Teardrops in 1978, along The Fall's Tony Friel and Karl Burns; both bands were releasing material in late 1970s and broke up at the same time Buzzcocks split up.

Breakup and reunions

After recording demos for a fourth album the group disbanded in 1981, when Shelley took up a solo career. Diggle and Maher formed Flag of Convenience, who released several singles between 1982 and 1989. Garvey formed Motivation and joined Blue Orchids, moving to New York, shortly afterwards, to continue with the first band. Maher joined Wah! by the time Buzzcocks broke up. Shelley and Devoto teamed up in 2002 for the first time since 1976, producing the album Buzzkunst, a play on the German word for 'Art'. The album was a mix of electronic music and punk.

John Maher now owns and runs John Maher Racing, a vintage Volkswagen performance tuning workshop located on the Isle of Harris, Scotland.[13] He has built and raced several Volkswagen Beetles. In 2005, Shelley re-recorded "Ever Fallen In Love" with an all-star group, including Roger Daltrey, David Gilmour, Peter Hook, Elton John, Robert Plant and several contemporary bands, as a tribute to John Peel. Proceeds went to Amnesty International. Shelley also performed the song live, with Plant, Daltrey, Gilmour, Hook and Jeff Beck at the 2005 UK Music Hall of Fame.[14]

Buzzcocks have reformed several times since 1989, featuring Shelley and Diggle with other musicians; initially with Maher and Garvey for a world tour, then briefly replacing Maher with Smiths drummer Mike Joyce. In 1992, Tony Barber joined on bass and Phil Barker on drums. This line-up toured on one of Nirvana's last-ever tours in 1994, and in 2003, toured with Pearl Jam. In April 2006, Barker left and was replaced by Danny Farrant. In March 2006, the band released their eighth studio album, Flat-Pack Philosophy, on Cooking Vinyl Records, the supporting tour found them playing on a leg of the mid-2006 Vans Warped Tour.

They made an appearance for Maxïmo Park's homecoming gig in Newcastle upon Tyne on 15 December 2007.

In April 2008, Barber left and was replaced by Chris Remmington.

In January 2009 the band embarked on a UK and European tour, the "Another Bites Tour", in which they played their first two albums in full, as well as an encore of their other hits.[15]

In July 2009, the Buzzcocks played in Serbia for the first time, at the EXIT festival in Novi Sad. Their song, "Why Can't I Touch It" was played in the second episode of the sixth season of TV series Entourage.

In December 2009 they will play as the main support act for The Courteeners[16].

TV show title

Buzzcocks' name was combined with the title of the Sex Pistols' album Never Mind The Bollocks to create the title of the long-running UK comedy panel game show Never Mind The Buzzcocks. Diggle claimed in his autobiography that he and Shelley had only granted the BBC use of their name under the impression that it would be a one-off, probably unsuccessful pilot, and that they are now mildly disgruntled that the name is more readily associated in Britain with the TV series than with their band.[17] Shelley himself appeared on the programme in 2000, where host Mark Lamarr introduced Shelley by saying without the Buzzcocks "there'd be no Smiths or Oasis, and this show would be called Never Mind Joan Armatrading!"

Members

Feb 1976
1976
20 Jul 1976 - Feb 1977
11 Mar 1977 - 7 Oct 1977
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Diggle – guitar
  • Garth Smith – bass
  • John Maher – drums
Nov 1977
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Diggle – guitar
  • Barry Adamson – bass (on loan from Magazine)
  • John Maher – drums
Nov 1977 - 6 Mar 1981
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals, keyboards
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Garvey – bass
  • John Maher – drums
1989
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals, keyboards
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Garvey – bass
  • John Maher – drums
1990-1991
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Mike Joyce – drums
  • Steve Garvey – bass
1992
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals, keyboards
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Garvey – bass
  • John Maher – drums
1992
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Garvey – bass
  • Steve Gibson – drums
1992-2006
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Tony Barber – bass
  • Phil Barker – drums
2006-present
  • Pete Shelley – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Diggle – guitar, vocals
  • Tony Barber – bass
  • Danny Farrant – drums

Discography

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Buzzcocks Get Philosophical On New Album". Chart. 2006-02-14. http://www.chartattack.com/news/40420/buzzcocks-get-philosophical-on-new-album. Retrieved 2009-08-09. 
  2. ^ a b The Buzzcocks, Pop Punk Pioneers
  3. ^ Buzzcocks: Biography : Rolling Stone
  4. ^ phillyBurbs.com | The Must-Have Music Guide
  5. ^ John Cooper Clarke - New Musical Express Review 1978 Review
  6. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas; Allmusic.com profile of Buzzcocks; URl accessed Jan 06, 2007
  7. ^ Raggett, Ned. "Singles Going Steady (review)". Allmusic. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:diftxqw5ld6e. Retrieved 2009-10-19. 
  8. ^ Gimarc, George (2005) Punk Diary: The Ultimate Trainspotter's Guide to Underground Rock 1970-1982, Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-848-6, p. 27
  9. ^ "Pitchfork: Buzzcocks interview". Pitchfork Media. 2009-01-29. http://pitchfork.com/features/interviews/7583-buzzcocks/. Retrieved 2009-04-15. 
  10. ^ a b Aidan O'Rourke (12 August). "Event Review: An Evening with Buzzcocks". Urbis Manchester. http://www.aidan.co.uk/article_urbis_buzzcocks.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-22. 
  11. ^ "Discography" (TXT). buzzcocks.com. 2004-02-24. http://www.buzzcocks.com/buzzcocksdiscography.txt. Retrieved 22 August 2009. 
  12. ^ "Chart Stats - Buzzcocks". chartstats.com. http://www.chartstats.com/artistinfo.php?id=2903. Retrieved 31 July 2009. 
  13. ^ John Maher Racing: VW Performance
  14. ^ "Music legends unite for Peel tribute single" (The Guardian, 23 September 2005)
  15. ^ http://www.buzzcocks.com/site/livedates.html
  16. ^ http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=8520432&id=30118565360
  17. ^ Diggle, S and Rawlings, T, Harmony In My Head (Helter Skelter, 2003, ISBN 1-900924-37-4 )

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Buzzcocks" Read more