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Comsat Angels

 
Artist: The Comsat Angels
The Comsat Angels

Group Members:

Andy Peake, Mik Glaisher, Stephen Fellows, Kevin Bacon, Simon Anderson, Terry Todd

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Steve Fellows, Andy Peake, Kevin Bacon
  • Formed: 1978, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England
  • Disbanded: 1995
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Sleep No More," "Waiting for a Miracle," "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones"
  • Representative Songs: "Independence Day," "Eye of the Lens," "After the Rain"

Biography

Erroneously regarded as a synth pop band -- and, every now and then, as a band that peaked with a song placed in a scene of Real Genius -- the Comsat Angels were one of the finest bands of the post-punk/new wave era. Often as moody if less dramatic than Joy Division, their first and best albums -- 1980's Waiting for a Miracle, 1981's Sleep No More, and 1982's Fiction -- featured abstract pop songs with spare instrumentation, many of which were bleak and filled with some form of heartache. The albums were almost unrelentingly sullen, but they were always transfixing. The band then fell prey to various commercial pressures for several years. In the '90s they resurfaced with a pair of powerful albums that resembled logical extensions of their earliest work, and then they vanished again.

After numerous incarnations and name changes, the Sheffield-based Radio Earth -- guitarist and vocalist Stephen Fellows, drummer Mik Glaisher, keyboardist Andy Peake, bassist Kevin Bacon -- found themselves opening for Pere Ubu in Newcastle. After the gig, the quartet realized that they had been blown off the stage and intimidated by the headliners' sense of focus and ability to confuse. Following a rethink, they came back as the less self-conscious Comsat Angels (the name referenced a short story by J.G. Ballard). They took a loan from Glaisher's father to record and release the Red Planet EP in 1979; BBC DJ John Peel, who was sent a copy, liked what he heard, requested a few more copies and booked the band for one of his famous Peel Sessions.

An unintrusive deal with Polydor allowed the band to make three stunning albums and pay back Mr. Glaisher, but the label didn't know how to handle the band and the more influential music journalists shied away for whatever reason, though the coverage the band did receive tended to be glowing. Only "Independence Day," from the first album, managed to chart in the U.K. The albums were not distributed in the States, but the band did support Gang of Four during some 1982 dates and were shocked at the reception they received -- the result of spins on college radio stations.

The Comsats left Polydor for Jive. 1983's Land, produced by Mike Howlett, was a marked departure and a conscious aim for the top of the charts. It backfired. 1985's 7 Day Weekend, produced by Miles Davis associate and funk-pop producer extraordinaire James Mtume, fared worse. (A parallel: imagine a fourth Wire album that resembles Level 42 much more than Wire.) 1986's Chasing Shadows, released on Island, came to life with some help from high-profile fan Robert Palmer; it too was second-rate compared to the first three albums, despite being less compromised, and the band was pleased enough to refer to it as their fourth album. Fire on the Moon, finished the following year and not released until 1990, was the band's lowest point, a very bland hard rock album credited to Dream Command.

At this point, the Comsats came to a full realization that their efforts at pleasing others -- label heads and consumers alike -- had been fruitless. They signed with RPM/Thunderbird in the U.K. and Caroline in the States, and released 1992's My Mind's Eye, a toughened updated of the 1979-1982 period. Unsurprisingly, it was met with commercial indifference and spotty critical praise. Kevin Bacon, who had started to produce other artists, left the band after its release. Terry Todd came in as Bacon's replacement on bass, and Simon Anderson was added as second guitarist. In 1995, the band issued The Glamour, their hardest album. It would also be their last.

Fellows released an album of ambient guitar instrumentals in 1997 and also managed Gomez. Bacon produced more (Finley Quaye, Longpigs, Ziggy Marley) and put together some of his own electronic material. Glaisher and Peake continued to work together sporadically. The first three Comsat Angels albums were issued on CD in 1995 but went out of print shortly thereafter; Renascent, a heroic independent label in the U.K. that had previously updated the catalog of the Sound, remedied the matter in 2006. Land and 7 Day Weekend were issued on CD by Connoisseur in 2001. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Comsat Angels
Top
Comsat Angels
Origin Sheffield, England
Genres Post-punk
Years active 1978–1995
2009
Labels Polydor
Jive
Island
RPM
Caroline
Renascent
Associated acts Dream Command
Website Sleep No More
Members
Stephen Fellows
Mik Glaisher
Kevin Bacon
Andy Peake
Former members
Simon Anderson (approx. 1994–95)
Terry Todd (approx. 1993–95)

The Comsat Angels were a post-punk band from Sheffield, England, active from 1978 to 1995.[1] Their music has been described as "abstract pop songs with spare instrumentation, many of which were bleak and filled with some form of heartache."[2] They have been credited as being an influence to current post-punk revival bands, such as Blacklist, Editors and Interpol.[3] The Comsat Angels toured heavily in the UK and in western Europe, especially in The Netherlands. They also toured the United States twice.[4] Their music has been extensively reissued and recompiled since 1995 by various record labels.

Contents

Biography

Named after the J. G. Ballard short story The Comsat Angels,[5] the foursome's core lineup (lasting 1978–1992) consisted of:

They debuted with an EP, released in 1979, named "Red Planet".[6] This release attracted Polydor A&R man Frank Neilson and the band signed a three-album recording contract.[7] These three LPs, Waiting for a Miracle (1980), which included the single "Independence Day", probably their best known song, Sleep No More (1981) and Fiction (1982), are regarded by some as their best, but only sold modestly.[8]

In their early years, the group shared live stages with bands like Siouxsie & the Banshees, Yellow Magic Orchestra, Depeche Mode, U2 (an 18-date tour in 1981), Captain Beefheart, The Sound, Wall of Voodoo, and Gang of Four.[4] In 1982, they performed two songs on BBC Television's Old Grey Whistle Test television program.[8] A U.S. tour in 1982 had to be cancelled after a week, due to Bacon contracting appendicitis.[9]

Jive years

Having failed to live up to Polydor's expectations with the three first albums, the record label let the band go. After this, they went on to sign with Jive Records and recorded Land (1983), delving into a more commercial, new wave-oriented sound.[8] Fifth album 7 Day Weekend (1985) also followed a more pop-oriented trend. However, it also failed on the charts, resulting in the band being dropped by a second record label.[8] Their single "I'm Falling" was featured in its entirety in the movie Real Genius with Val Kilmer.[10] The movie never released an official soundtrack, but gave the band perhaps its widest audience.

Switch of record labels

The band found a fan and supporter in Robert Palmer, who was enjoying the height of his popularity at this point in the '80s.[11] Palmer saw to it that the Comsat Angels were signed to Island Records, and he co-produced their next album, Chasing Shadows (1986) and even sang on one song, "You'll Never Know."[12] This album's music is viewed as the band's return to their dark, brooding roots.[13] [14] [15]

The U.S.-based Communications Satellite Corporation threatened to take legal measures against the band for supposedly plagiarizing their name. Because of this, the band were renamed C.S. Angels in the United States.[9]

Dream Command album

For the follow-up, they talked Island into letting them build their own studio.[16] The band decided to try for AOR radio with their next recording, Fire on the Moon (1990).[8] The group changed its name to Dream Command for this record, likely because of pressure from the Communications Satellite Corporation and their record label.[17] Neither the band nor their label were happy with the album, which was released (in the U.S. only) in small quantities.[8] Few people in the UK even knew about it until The Comsats were mentioned in Q magazine's "Where Are They Now?" section.[18]

Another switch of record labels

Around 1990, they recruited Sheffield musician Nick Robinson as an additional guitarist. (He appeared on "I Wanna Destroy You", later released on the compilation From Beyond 2.)[19] This was another turning point for the band, as they set about writing and recording new material on their own terms and finally hooked up with RPM Records (and with Caroline Records in the U.S.),[2] who then released The Comsats' Radio 1 (BBC) sessions from 1979 to 1984 as Time Considered As A Helix Of Semi-Precious Stones. (The title was taken from a Samuel R. Delany short story).[20]

Shortly afterwards, RPM released a new Comsats single, "Driving", and album My Mind's Eye, in 1992. (The album was released in the U.S. on Caroline Records, under the band name C.S. Angels, with two bonus tracks.) The music press praised the album, citing several current shoegaze-type bands (e.g., Curve, Catherine Wheel) who were influenced by The Comsats' sound.[8] Melody Maker's review stated:

"My Mind's Eye could easily have been recorded by ghosts, such is the dexterity of the Comsat's approach and the haunted nature of their anguished restraint... Every snapping bassline and icebound guitar fragment has a place, a purity and a passion that chills... At the heart of their hurtling hailstorm lies Steve Fellow's punishing baritone. The man sounds like he's singing from a carriage on the soul train to hell, all sweat and worry as the songs rage around him like they've come for a debt."[8]

RPM also issued the Dutch radio sessions collection Unravelled before the final studio album The Glamour in 1995. The Glamour was the first studio album to feature new members Simon Anderson and Terry Todd (who appeared on Unravelled)[8] after the departure of Kevin Bacon, who was now concentrating on production work at the band's Axis studio in Sheffield.[8] No singles were released from The Glamour, and there were songs from these sessions (e.g., "Hyperprism" and "Evanescent") that were only included on the 2007 reissue of the album.

Post-breakup activity

The Comsat Angels disbanded in late 1995 following UK dates to promote The Glamour. Steve Fellows released an instrumental album, Mood X, his first (and so far only) solo release, on RPM in 1997. He also began managing the band Gomez that year after discovering them.[8] Currently, he is said to be working on a more traditional song-based solo album, as well as helping the band Little Glitches.[21] In July 2008, he posted five songs recorded in the mid-1990s on his Myspace page.[22] The rest of the Comsat Angels regrouped in the late 1990s under the new moniker Soup, with new vocalist Peter Hope, but soon disbanded.[8]

The band reformed for a gig on April 26, 2009 as part of the Sensoria music festival at the Sheffield O2 Academy.[23] They played tracks from their first three albums, which includes what many consider to be their masterpiece Sleep No More.[24][25][26] Mark Kermode introduced the band on stage, describing them not only as his personal favourite act of all time but as "the greatest band in the world." The band competed a UK tour of three cities (Glasgow, Manchester and London) during October 2009.[27]

Latter-day recognition

The Comsat Angels' albums were out of print for years, but British label Renascent Records reissued several of them in 2006 and 2007, adding out-takes and other tracks.[28] Martin Gore of Depeche Mode covered "Gone" on his 1989 EP, Counterfeit. In 1992, Silkworm covered "Our Secret" as the B-side of their "The Chain" 7-inch single. Joel RL Phelps, formerly of Silkworm, covered "Lost Continent" on his 1999 album Blackbird.

Jack Rabid, publisher of The Big Takeover magazine, has been one of the band's biggest supporters since the early 1980s.[29] [30] Mark Kermode, film critic for BBC Radio Five Live, championed the Comsat Angels when reviewing the Ian Curtis biopic Control, stating that Comsat Angels were "the band that Joy Division should have been".[31] In May 2008, Kermode interviewed British poet Simon Armitage on BBC Two's The Culture Show and the two discussed their love of the band.[32]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Waiting for a Miracle (1980, Polydor) (reissued in 1995 on RPM and in 2006 on Renascent)
  • Sleep No More (1981, Polydor) UK #51 (reissued in 1995 on RPM and in 2006 on Renascent)
  • Fiction (1982, Polydor) UK #94 (reissued in 1995 on RPM and in 2006 on Renascent)
  • Land (1983, Jive) (reissued on Connoisseur in 2001) UK #92
  • 7 Day Weekend (1985, Jive) (reissued on Connoisseur in 2001)
  • Chasing Shadows (1986, Island)
  • Fire on the Moon (as Dream Command) (1990, Island) (U.S. and Netherlands only)
  • My Mind's Eye (1992, RPM/Caroline [U.S.]) (U.S. version has bonus tracks "There Is No Enemy" and "Magonia") (reissued on Thunderbird in 2001 and in 2007 on Renascent)
  • The Glamour CD/ dbl. LP (1995, RPM) (reissued in 2007 on Renascent as double CD)

Singles and EPs

  • "Red Planet" 7" (1979, Junta) (black and ltd. red vinyl versions)
  • "Total War" 7" (1980, Polydor)
  • "Independence Day" 7" (July 4, 1980, Polydor)
  • "Eye Of The Lens" 7"/ dbl. 7"/ 12" (1981, Polydor)
  • "(Do The) Empty House" 7"/ dbl. 7" (1981, Polydor)
  • "It's History" 7" (1982, Polydor)
  • "After The Rain" 7" (1982, Polydor)
  • "Will You Stay Tonight?" 7"/ 12"/ 12" pic. disc (1983, Jive) UK #81
  • "Island Heart" 7"/ 12" (1983, Jive)
  • "Independence Day" (re-recording) dbl. 7"/ 12" (1984, Jive) UK #71
  • "You Move Me" 7"/ 12" (1984, Jive)
  • "Day One" 7"/ 12" (1984, Jive)
  • "I'm Falling" 7"/ 12" (1985, Jive) UK #90
  • "Forever Young" 7"/ 12" (1985, Jive)
  • "The Cutting Edge" 7" / 12" (1986, Island)
  • "Celestine" (as Dream Command) CD single (1990, Island) (U.S. only)
  • "Driving" 12"/ CD EP (1992, RPM/ Thunderbird)
  • "Shiva Descending" CD EP (1993, Crisis) (Holland only)
  • "Field Of Tall Flowers" 12"/ CD EP (1994, RPM/ Thunderbird)
  • "The Cutting Edge" (version from Unravelled) CD EP (1994, Crisis)

Compilations and live albums

References

  1. ^ Comsat Angels website [1]
  2. ^ a b Allmusic [2]
  3. ^ Lost in the ’80s: Comsat Angels (C.S. Angels) Tuesday, May 27th, 2008 by John C. Hughes [3]
  4. ^ a b Comsat Angels website [4]
  5. ^ Stephen Fellows interview, 2006 [5]
  6. ^ Comsat Angels website [6]
  7. ^ Polydor history at Last.fm [7]
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Comsat Angels website History
  9. ^ a b Comsat Angels website [8]
  10. ^ Internet Movie Database [9]
  11. ^ Robert Palmer's Wikipedia article [10]
  12. ^ Renascent website, the comsat angels, q&a [11]
  13. ^ Comsat Angels website [12]
  14. ^ Comsat Angels website [13]
  15. ^ Comsat Angels website [14]
  16. ^ Comsat Angels website [15]
  17. ^ Comsat Angels website [16]
  18. ^ Comsat Angels website [17]
  19. ^ Nick Robinson website [18]
  20. ^ Lost in the Last Attack: Recovering the Comsat Angel, 20 April 2006, by Whitney Strub [19]
  21. ^ Renascent website, the comsat angels, q&a, [20]
  22. ^ blog Old Songs, Stephen Fellows' MySpace page
  23. ^ Sensoria 2009 website [21]
  24. ^ Allmusic review of Sleep No More [22]
  25. ^ Sleeve notes from Renascent re-issue of Sleep No More
  26. ^ Springhouse forum, comment posted by Jack Rabid, December 9, 1997[23]
  27. ^ Comsat Angels website, [24]
  28. ^ Renascent website [25]
  29. ^ Jack Rabid's Top Ten, Feb. 5, 2006 [26]
  30. ^ Jack Rabid's Top Ten, May 13, 2007 [27]
  31. ^ Mark Kermode reviews Control [28]
  32. ^ The Culture Show archive [29]

External links


 
 
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