Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Spear of Destiny

 
Artist: Spear of Destiny
Spear of Destiny

Group Members:

Bobby Rae Mayhem, Nigel Preston, Volker Janssen, Pete Barnacle, Marco Peroni, Stan Stammers, John Lennard, Zeus B Held, Mark Thwaite, Alan St. Clair, Kirk Brandon, Neil Pyzer, Chris Bell, Dolphin Taylor, Chris Bostock, Lasettes Ames

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Steve Barnacle, Kirk Brandon, Pete Barnacle

Formal Connection With:

Crazy Pink Revolvers, Theatre of Hate
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Live at the Lyceum 12-22-85", "The Epic Years", "Grapes of Wrath
  • Representative Songs: "Never Take Me Alive", "Land of Shame", "Mickey

Biography

Spear of Destiny was formed by Kirk Brandon and Stan Stammers from the wreckage of Theatre Of Hate, and named, with characteristic grandeur, for the weapon with which the Roman centurion Longinus pierced the body of the crucified Christ. Much of the group's debut album was already in place before Lasette Ames and Chris Bell joined; released on the band's own Burning Rome label, The Grapes Of Wrath echoed Theatre Of Hate's final demos with astonishing precision.

This original quartet did not survive for long. Barely was the album on the streets than Ames and Bell quit, the latter citing both personal and religious reasons (he subsequently resurfaced in Gene Loves Jezebel). Theatre Of Hate's Nigel Preston, fresh from a stint with Sex Gang Children, and Diodes saxophonist John Lennard were drafted in for live work, but by the time Spear began work on their second album, 1984's One Eyed Jacks, both had been replaced, by former Tom Robinson Band/Stiff Little Fingers drummer Dolphin Taylor, Case sax player Nick Donnelly, and Neil Pyzor and guitarist Alan St Clair, from Howard Devoto's first post-Magazine line-up.

This, the definitive Spear aggregation, toured constantly -- three outings during 1984 saw them saturate the UK, and incite Melody Maker to enthuse, "this time next year, [this band] should be

huge... that they aren't already is down to nothing more than... criminal bad luck" - the bad luck which denied three successive 45s, "Rainmaker", "Prisoner Of Love" and "Liberator" even a Top 50 berth. The failure of One Eyed Jacks*did much to knock Brandon back, dealing a blow from which he would not recover even after 1985's World Service, a less cohesive, but occasionally superior album just missed the top ten. Two further indelible singles, "All My Love" and "Come Back" were barely noticed, and when attempts to record a new album on the Manor Mobile collapsed in bad-tempered disarray, Brandon sacked the entire group. (This material was subsequently released within Spear's Psalm series of archive collections).

Spear Of Destiny vanished for much of the next two years, and when the band did return, it was with a completely new line up of Brandon, bassist Chris Bostock, drummer Pete Barnacle, former Adam and the Ants guitarist Marco Pirroni and keyboardist Volker Janssen. Ironically, it was now that Spear finally achieved the destiny which had evaded them for so long. Released on Virgin's 10 subsidiary, Outland spawned Spear Of Destiny's biggest hits yet, "Stranger In Our Town", "Never Take Me Alive", "Was That You" and "The Traveller". The group also toured with U2, an outing which culminated at Wembley Stadium in June, 1987. But before the group could capitalize on their sudden success, tragedy struck. Literally on the eve of an appearance at the Reading Festival, Brandon was diagnosed with Reiter's Syndrome and ordered to bed. He spent a year flat on his back, barely able to move at a time when Spear Of Destiny's commercial stock had never been higher. Outland was their biggest seller yet; their first tour ofAmerica was beckoning... and the brightest spot on the horizon was the possibility that Brandon might be able to learn to walk again.

He struggled back into action just in time to see Spear Of Destiny fall apart. Their 1988 album, The Price You Pay and single, "So In Love With You", foundered in the face of his inability to promote them, and while Brandon bravely tried to relaunch the group in 1990, reuniting with Stan Stammers, alongside drummer Bobby Rae Mayhem and guitarist Mark Thwaite, his future drifted even further out of reach when sundry legal problems meant he couldn't even continue using the band's name. Two largely unsatisfying albums document this era, the comeback SOD's Law, released in 1992, and Live At The Lyceum (1993).

Abandoning Britain, Brandon relocated to Philadelphia, where he hooked up with the two American musicians who would become the backbone of his future activities, guitarist John McNutt and drummer Art Smith. Demos recorded by this team, under the tentative name Elephant Daze, would subsequently be issued on the Psalm Three archive collection; they went unreleased at the time, however, and Brandon returned to Britain, bringing his new bandmates with him. For a time, the team toured as Theatre Of Hate; for a little longer, they worked under the unlikely name of 10:51, releasing the single "Children Of The Damned" and album Stone In The Rain. Brandon finally took the Spear name back for himself in 1998, when he began work on a new album, Religion.

Since that time, both Brandon and Spear Of Destiny have worked constantly -- 2003's Morning Star album was followed by Imperial prototype in 2007, while 2006 brought Tons Of Sods, a collection of rerecorded classics hailing from radio sessions that same year. The band's UK tour that same year spawned the Reanimation live DVD, while Brandon has also supervised a major reissue campaign, not only restoring the band's most crucial albums to bonus-track stacked life, but also compiling the essential 4CD Kirk Brandon Anthology box set. ~ Dave Thompson, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Spear of Destiny (band)
Top
Spear of Destiny
Origin London, England
Genres Post-punk, Alternative rock, Indie rock
Years active 1983– present
Labels S.S., Burning Rome, Epic Records, Virgin Records, Eastworld, Do-Little
Associated acts Theatre of Hate
Dead Men Walking
Crazy Pink Revolvers
Boy Boy Nova
Plastic Eaters
Stiff Little Fingers
Tom Robinson Band
Howard Devoto
Bush
Website Kirk Brandon’s Website
Spear of Destiny on Myspace
Stan Stammers' Website
Members
Craig Adams
Kirk Brandon
Mike Kelly
Adrian Portas
Former members
Pete Barnacle
Steve Barnacle
Chris Bell
Stevie Blanchard
Chris Bostock
Mark Celvallos
Mickey Donnelly
Robin Goodridge
Volker Janssen
Lascelles James
John Boy Lennard
John McNutt
Marco Pirroni
Neil Pyzer
Art Smith
Alan St. Clair
Stan Stammers
Dolphin Taylor
Mark Thwaite
Mick Proctor
Graham Wilkinson

Spear of Destiny are a British rock band, established in 1983 by singer and songwriter Kirk Brandon (born 3 August 1956, Westminster, London) and bassist Stan Stammers (born 19 May 1961). It had an ever-changing line-up through the years.

Contents

Biography

Brandon had previously been in The Pack, and from 1980 to 1982 in the post-punk Theatre of Hate with its album Westworld and single "Do You Believe In The Westworld?", which was a UK Top 40 hit in 1982, whilst the album made the Top 20.

As had happened with Joy Division and New Order, the band were criticised for using the name Spear of Destiny, with its potential Nazi overtones. Any such links were fiercely denied, particularly since the band were politically left-leaning.

Spear of Destiny recorded one session for John Peel (recorded 22 November 1982, transmitted on BBC Radio 1 on 29 November 1982). Between 1980 and 1982, Theatre of Hate recorded three.[1]

"The band played a punk-influenced form of power rock, which often had an anthemic feel."[2]

The critical consensus[who?] is that Spear of Destiny's second album, One Eyed Jacks (1984), is their best album. (It reached number 22 in the UK Albums Chart[3] However, arguably, Spear of Destiny’s reputation in the mid-1980s depended to a greater extent on their live performances.

In 1985, their album, World Service reached the UK Top 20. Founder member Stan Stammers left in 1986. In the wake of the release of the fourth album, Outland (1987) and its Top 15 hit "Never Take Me Alive", the band began achieving some chart success and staging sell-out concerts, including a support slot to U2 at Wembley Stadium. However, ill fortune struck on the eve of the band’s appearance at the Reading Festival, as Brandon contracted Reiter disease which obliged the band to put all their plans on hold for nearly a year.[4] After recovery, Brandon and Spear of Destiny never regained their momentum. Indeed, the band have failed to chart with any of the albums they have released after the 1980s.[3]

To date, Spear of Destiny have had 10 UK Singles Chart entries. Four reached the Top 50 but only one made the Top 20 - "Never Take Me Alive" (1987).[5]

Aside from Brandon and Stammers, past members of the band in the 1980s included former Gilliam drummer Pete Barnacle, former JoBoxers bassist Chris Bostock, former Adam and the Ants guitarist Marco Pirroni, and former Tom Robinson Band and Stiff Little Fingers drummer Dolphin Taylor.[6]

Brandon once played in an early incarnation of Culture Club. In the mid 1990s, Brandon embarked on unsuccessful legal action against Boy George over allegations of a homosexual relationship, revealed in George's autobiography. The judgement went against Brandon and he was ordered to pay a significant part of the legal costs.[7] Brandon is married.

Brandon is also a member of the supergroup, Dead Men Walking.

Discography

Albums

Studio

[3]

Live

  • Live at the Lyceum 22.12.85 (released 1993)
  • Radio One Live In Concert (1987, released 1994)
  • The Preacher (1983, released 2000)
  • Kings of London (2000, released 2001)
  • Live at the Colchester Arts Centre (2002)

Compilation

  • S.O.D. - The Epic Years (1987) - UK #53
  • The Collection (1991)
  • Time Of Our Lives: The Best Of (1995)
  • The Best of Spear of Destiny (1998)
  • The Best of Spear of Destiny (2004)

[3]

Singles

Title Release date Album UK Singles Chart[3]
"Flying Scotsman"/"The Man Who Tunes The Drums" February 1983 Grapes of Wrath -
"The Wheel" May 1983 Grapes of Wrath 59
"Prisoner Of Love"/"Rosie" January 1984 One Eyed Jacks 59
"Liberator"/"Forbidden Planet" April 1984 One Eyed Jacks 67
"All My Love"/"Last Card" May 1985 World Service 61
"Come Back"/"Cole Younger" July 1985 World Service 55
"Mickey"/"Up All Night" (Original version) July 1985 World Service -
"Strangers In Our Town"/"Somewhere Out There" January 1987 Outland 49
"Never Take Me Alive"/"Land Of Shame" March 1987 Outland 14
"Was That You?"/"Was That You?" (Live at the Hammersmith Odeon) July 1987 Outland 55
"The Traveller"/"Late Night Psycho" September 1987 Outland 44
"So In Love With You"/"March Or Die" September 1988 The Price You Pay 36
"Radio Radio"/"Life Goes On" November 1988 The Price You Pay -
"Black Country Girl"/"Babylon Talking" September 1992 Sod's Law -
"Uphill Backwards"/"Never Take Me Alive" (1999 version) 1999 Volunteers -

See also

References

  1. ^ John Peel Sessions on BBC Radio 1;
  2. ^ Joynson, V. (2001) Up Yours! A Guide to UK Punk, New Wave & Early Post Punk, Borderline Productions, Wolverhampton, p. 358;
  3. ^ a b c d e Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 519. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  4. ^ Thompson, D. (2000) Alternative Rock, Miller Freeman Books, San Francisco, p. 650;
  5. ^ Chart runs in the UK Singles Chart since 1952;
  6. ^ Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p. 519 - 520;
  7. ^ Larkin, C. (2003) The Virgin Encyclopedia of 80s Music, Virgin Books, London, p. 439;

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 "Spear of Destiny (band)" Read more

 

Mentioned in