In cooperation with Atomic Music Group, USA
The Delta Bombers have smashed stages all over the world for 10 years. Driven by a hybrid of 50’s rock and roll fused with swampy blues, country, and rockabilly. The hard touring band’s haunting but powerful voice Chris Moinichen keeps the sounds fresh and always from a new angle. Andrew Himmler on Guitar, Gregorio Garcia on Bass and Micah Malcolm on Drums sway the dynamic up and down all night long with one mission: make it interesting. The goal of the band has always been to build something people who wear gabardine, denim, or mohawks could enjoy together. Based on their tour and festival history they are doing just that. The Bombers have set foot in over 26 countries and toured every corner of the USA with bands like Reverend Horton Heat, The Blasters and the Legendary Shack Shakers. Supported by four studio albums and non-stop touring of the USA and Europe, what started as a teenage dream has now come to fruition as a worldwide rock and roll expedition. The Delta Bombers continue to strive for the fringed ends of roots music always looking toward the next song and the next show. A show that should be witnessed by anyone who considers themselves a fan of American roots music, the Bombers are playing at a venue near you!
Insanity, insanity! Welcome back to DEMENTED ARE GO, “Welcome Back To Insanity Hall”! What is there to say about DEMENTED ARE GO that hasn’t already been said or invented? They are a band that has inflicted their twisted version of rock ‘n’ roll on the world for 3 decades, from the legendary Klub Foot via clubs, squats and festivals all over the world. They have built up a loyal following of Psychobillies, Punks, Goths, Geeks and Freaks who just can’t get enough of DAG’s sound. Always a live act not to be missed, their catalogue of releases over the years is proof that the band is always evolving and never restricted to one scene. The reason for the bands longevity and popularity is down to one man, Sparky. A one man riot who sold his soul for Rock‘n’Roll!
Uncompromising, unpredictable with a voice that sounds like he’s been gargling hot gravel he is instantly recognizable as one of rock ‘n’ rolls true leaders. How he has kept the band going for 30 years is beyond explanation.
Discography:
-In Sickness and In Health| (1986)
-Kicked Out of Hell (1988)
-The Day the Earth Spat Blood (1989)
-Orgasmic Nightmare (1991)
-Tangenital Madness On A Pleasant Side Of Hell (1993)
-Hellucifernation (1999)
-Hellbilly Storm (P.L.Y. 2005)
-Welcome Back To Insanity Hall (P.L.Y. 2012)
Line Up:
Sparky (vocals)
Grischa (doublebass)
Holger (guitar)
Gabeul (drums)
Online:
www.DementedAreGo.de
www.facebook.com/Official.DementedareGo
Formed in 1980, THE BLUE CATS released their seminal FIGHT BACK album and single WILD NIGHT in 1981. Their fusion of rockabilly and new wave was, and still is the prime example of what became known as neo-rockabilly.In the mid 1980’s they started working on the G-MEN project and songs that would form the basis of the next stage on their journey, BELTANE FIRE. After a hugely successful year on the alternative London club Circuit, they signed to Sony Music in late 1984 and in 1985 recorded album DIFFERENT BREED.In 1992 they recorded again as THE BLUE CATS, and the result was the critically acclaimed album THE TUNNEL. After spending another year on the road together they decided to go their separate ways to pursue individual projects.Early in 2011 Steve Whitehouse was recruited on double bass and the band hit the road again for an extremely successful run of European dates. The huge success of THE BLUE CATS 3rd period is now to be celebrated with a new album BEST DAWN YETon Bluelight Records. Over the last two
years or so, the band has been writing together again and now believes they have together a superb collection of the best songs they have ever worked on, as the first single BILLY RUFFIANS pulled from the new album clearly demonstrates.
Simultaneously with the new album Bluelight Recordswill re-release the classic status album THE TUNNEL from 1992. The new release is expanded with four bonus tracks taken from the G-MEN E.P. and all recordings on the CD are remastered from the original master tapes.
Website: www.bluecats-beltanefire.com
"What does the word HANCOX mean to you? If you hadn’t been living under a rock for the last 30 years, you would know HANCOX is synonamous with the romping good time brought to you by Pip Hancox and his band of merry lads from the legenadary psycobilly originals, the Guana Batz. What you might not now, untill now, is......
HANCOX is the solo project created by Guana Batz front man, Pip Hancox during the summer of 2011.
While still enjoying great success singing for the legendry psychobilly band all over the globe, Englishman ,Pip along with members of his US Guana Batz line up, decided that an outlet for a slightly different style but still with same energy and excitement would be a great addition to his love for live performances and a chance for audiences to enjoy what this line-up can produce unrestrained by the mold formed many years before.
The band, all now located in Southern California, consist of Pip Hancox on vocals, longtime Guana Batz drummer/bass player Jonny Bowler on stand up bass, highly accomplished So Cal guitarist Gino Meregillano, and from the Billboard topping band Finch, Alex Pappas on drums.
With the many varied influences and backgrounds combined into one band, not to mention two members hailing from the London nightlife, while the other two cut their teeth in the So Cal music scene, a very unique and powerful sound and feel has been created and captured with their first release debuting in December 2012".
THE LONG TALL TEXANS
Back in Brighton 1982 it wasn’t that easy to get your hands on a double bass, even if you did you’d be lucky to get more than a free grope in a music shop because those things were bloody expensive. Well out of the range of 16 year old Mark Carew. This story would have ended there, with our hero stood hands in empty pockets gazing longingly at a lovely curvy double bass in front of a shop window before mooching sadly off into obscurity.
Lucky for the last 30 years of double-bass abusing music there was a saviour at hand in the shape of Kevin McCormick aka ‘Spider’. He’s remembered first and foremost for not only owning a double bass and then lending it to Mark but as a ‘Colourful, great fun, a cheeky chappy, endearing, the sort of guy who’d take the piss out of you and you’d still love it.’ So our story begins with a lent bass and Mark Carew learning to slap some notes on that borrowed instrument.
Fast forward a year or so and Mark has become proficient enough on that bass to team up with guitarist Mark ‘Boggles’ Denman and drummer Bill Clifford. Together they formed a trio they called The Long Tall Texans. It wasn’t long after the band reached those lofty heights of, well being a band, that drummer Bill quit the trio and rock n roll. Nobody seems to know exactly why but one rumour was that he decided on a career at the local hamburger emporium.
Truth or fiction, it was a bad move for Bill but where one door shuts another opens. Anthony (Theo) Theodotou drumsticks in hand happened to walk in through this one. That line-up were immortalised on wax for the first time when two tracks, ‘900 Miles’ and ‘One More Time,’ performed live at the school Boggles taught at, were included on a locally released album entitled ‘Sounds Of The Southern Scene’.
Roll on to 1985 and The Long Tall Texans are recording again, this time in the presence of neo-rockabilly legend Boz Boorer. Boz was already famous as a Polecat and was soon to increase that status by becoming Morrissey’s right-hand man. Their fledging efforts resulted in the Ballroom Blitz EP released on Boz’s own Northwood label and are now available again on Anagram’s ‘The Long Tall Texans Story’ double CD.
The band’s popularity flourished as they belted out high-octane psycho-rockabilly to an ever increasing army of fans who couldn’t get enough of their good time party music. Their first long-player, ‘Sodbusters’, released on Razor, was a hugely anticipated debut, record-buyers eagerly lapped up its genre-mashing slap bass tunes. The Long Tall Texans were by now a regular feature at that now legendary psychobilly venue The Klub Foot as well as the UK club circuit and beyond. More albums, EPs and compilation tracks followed as did Radio 1 airplay and the distinct possibility of the ‘big time’ which would have been sorely deserved. Each album had pushed the perceived genre boundaries further and the more the Texans shoved the more people appeared to love it.
Though never really totally enslaved within the psychobilly bubble the genre’s demise in the UK at the end of the 1980’s coinciding with the closure of the Klub Foot came just at the wrong time for the band on the brink. Undeterred by the minor home-based setback the Long Tall Texans set their sights on the still thriving European scene. This went well but then they took another blow, Boggles decided to hang up his guitar shortly after the release of ‘Singing To The Moon’. The album had been getting attention well beyond the realms of the rocking crowd so his departure was bad timing event number two.
But hey, what’s a band to do? Get a sax player that’s what. Paul, ‘Who’s the fucking hippy’ Mumford suddenly appeared stage-left looking as if he had just come from a tunnel hanging out with Swampy and mates at the Newbury bypass demo. Looks certainly were deceptive though and despite initial misgivings from some sectors of the psychobilly scene he fit right in and the band we into another era of their music. The next album ‘Aces And Eights’ featured Mumford’s sax heavily and continues to be a firm fan favourite.
The Long Tall Texans continued to tour the world during the 1990s though their recorded output slowed down from those halcyon days of the mid to late 80s. In fact ‘Aces And Eights’ was the last album for a decade so when ‘Adventure’ was unleashed in 2005 it took several people by surprise. Song-writing was largely shared by original Texan and wordsmith Boggles and newly enlisted guitarist Garry Castleman. As you would expect with the Texans and after such a period of ‘maturing’ the album, minus the sax, Mumford jumping ship back at the end of the 1990s, had a different feel from anything before. But once again it was embraced, not least with Mike Davies spinning the title track on the hugely influential Radio 1 Punk Show.
From the beginning of the new millennium a big upsurge in interest in psychobilly and related music had emanated from the USA largely due to Hellcat Records’ decision to expose the kids to Nekromantix and Tiger Army. It didn’t take long for those kids to do some digging, aided greatly by the new-fangled Internet, and discover the music’s roots and more importantly discover the Long Tall Texans. Inevitably the trio were soon being romanced by promoters across the pond and were gracing stages in the USA before you could say get up and go, and so it has continued.
So here we are in 2013 it’s only taken them eight years this time, here’s the brand new album. Once again largely penned by Garry Castleman though his band duties have been long relieved by guitar-twanger extraordinaire ‘Brother’ Matt live and on record. Of course it’s Mark Carew on vocals and bass and Theo still cracking the drum kit, burgers eh?
You would be disappointed had the trio not upped their game again, and so they have. Not only their game but the tempo too, in a way they have gone full circle back to their psychobilly roots. Full circle taking me back to the start of these notes. Kevin ‘Spider’ McCormick not only lent Mark his first double bass, he also wrote a couple of cracking songs too, even demoed them with co-writer Neal Post. Although both excellent and of their time, written back in the height of psychobilly frenzy of the early 1980’s, they never went past that demo stage.
Tragically Spider died in a motorcycle accident soon after writing them and ‘Posty’ lost his life to illness, neither men saw out their 20s. ‘If it wasn’t for Spider, God bless his soul, the band would never have happened’ is Carew’s message.
The Long Tall Texans as a way of tribute and thanks have resurrected those songs, Mark had kept the original tape all these years, he dug it out and between them the Texans breathed life into those two tracks ‘Kamikaze Killer’ and ‘I Used To Feel Funny (But I’m Alright Now)’. The results are a stomping tribute to Spider and Posty and blend in well with the contemporary tunes from Garry’s poison pen. The Texans have once again delivered their take on psychobilly, just as they did with ‘Sodbusters’ way back when, just different again, back full circle.
Call it rockabilly, call it psychobilly, call it what you bloody well like, it is undeniably The Long Tall Texans. It’s been a while, so why now? Well of course, the answer is simple.
The Devil made them do it.
Simon Nott