The Nosebleeds

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 Ed Banger InterviewSlaughter & The Dogs  

An old old interview that I've kept until I had enough info and pics to it justice. Definitely one of my favourite interviews. I sent Ed 14 or so questions and he sent me a separate email for each question in capitals and in no particular order. I don't care though. Like I say one of my favourites and a genuine person comes through and I wish him all the luck in the world.

March 9th 2000 Edmund Garrity Interview.

Early days...
Me and Toby and Pete, were at school together in Wythenshawe and had been jamming Slade T Rex and Bowie songs in Toby's kitchen. Occasionally I'd nip over to Mike Rossi's house and get chords for Bowie songs as Mike was a big Ronson fan and we'd talk about forming bands. Mike said he was doing something with Wayne so me Toby and Pete formed Wild Ram and Mike and Wayne formed the Dogs so where ever the Dogs played we'd get a gig a couple of weeks later and we would all go and watch each others sets and nick bits that would appear in our next shows. So a bit of friendly rivalry built up between us with the Dogs always being one step in front. When Vini Riley joined us we started to do some Iggy Pop with tracks from
Raw Power. I think we moved ahead of them there, until they landed the support slot with the Pistols and we ended up being there roadies for the night just to be part of it. So after that gig we decided to have a stronger name after I'd been bottled on the head side stage and someone had punched Pete giving him a nosebleed so we came up with Ed Banger and the Nosebleeds (1976)
Bandwagoners...
After spilling our blood for the punk cause damn right we regarded ourselves as true punks but we still got labelled bandwagon jumpers. Virtually every band after the Pistols suffered the same but in a sense everybody but the Pistols were bandwagon jumpers you know what I mean.

Places to play..
Early on there was the Oaks who had on Johnny Thunders, New York Dolls, the Banshees, Wayne County, the Dogs and EB & the Nosebleeds. Then Rafters on Oxford Rd and the Electric Circus opened up and Manchester Poly started putting on punk bands. A lot of punks hung out at the Ranch club -a real mix of punks , drag queens and other fetish groups pretty cool eh! There was a tendency for gangs of disco cavemen to hang about outside to give the freaks a good kicking unfortunately I got kicked half to death one night and another bottle smashed on my head. I was beginning to regret being called Ed Banger. still got the lump on my head to this day. A real momento of 70s punk, top man. I was into having a good time so I never stopped to analyse anything but looking back it was a real cool time to be around all those happening bands.

Camaradrerie...
I was always close to the Dogs and all the other bands got on with each other as we'd all gig together in Manchester. The Buzzcocks were the outsiders being from Bolton and a bit arty farty.

Click image above to view larger readable one.

Playing The Roxy London..
I remember it being a classic toilet gig ,the smell of vomit, weed, glue, and graffiti everywhere -  perfect - we got there late for the gig. As it was just a single doorway entrance on some side street, we must have passed it 5 times or more so when we eventually got in Sham 69 were on stage Mr Pursey doing one of his legendary rants between songs to about ten people. Most of them were other bands waiting to go on there was a definite feeling of sleaze in the air with the sight of two leather clad mini skirted punketts sticking there tongues down each others throats in the middle of the dance floor - superb. There was some top dub reggae played by the dj between bands and by the time we went on there was another twenty odd people in the place which made look quite full with the venue being the size of the average front room. So we blasted through our set at double speed with Mr Pursey leading the crowd in community pogoing finishing the set with a frantic version of
Music School and proceeding to the bar to get steamed with our new found friends. Overall a right dump of a place but an important place in punk history.

 

Slaughter & The Dogs..
They were on the crest of a wave when I joined them, about to go top 50 with
Ready Now and a sell-out tour a head of them. Then Wayne jumped ship for love in the afternoon so it didn't seem to be a sinking ship to me. My first gig was at the Lyceum in London after two hurried rehearsals and it went down a storm. As I remember maybe there was few people miffed at Wayne departure but I never encountered any animosity form the Dogs army; in fact they all made me feel quite at home they were just glad the Dogs were going to carry on. Obviously the next album was going to quite important and as it turn out a real bummer punk wise due to us being on a bit of a rockstar trip. If only the lads had listened to me when I suggested putting out a tape of one of our rehearsals which was fast and raw. I even came up with the title DJM Rabid Dogs, but what blew it was when I said think of all the nights out on the piss we could have instead of spending a fortune in the studio. I don't think the company would have had it but in hind sight it would have been just what the fans would have wanted. The album cost 15,000 to record that's about 1500 top nights out we blew on a pile of shite, but we made up for that with the single I'm The One and had a sell out tour booked of the back of it when Mike decided to disappear to New York. So I went back to Manchester and reformed Ed Banger. The trouble with the Dogs was there was no continuity. On there first major tour, after just one date Brian Granthem did a runner, then after that Wayne disappeared a couple of times and finally Mike did one to New York, so they all had a go at cutting there own throats.

What did you bring to the Dogs
What I brought to the music was not much on that album. I didn't really have time to settle in before we were in the studios with the songs mostly wrote by Mike and Howard. It wasn't to the second single
I'm The One where we hit on the right formula and I got a bit of say in the writing, by which time Mike decided to wander off. But I had a great time with them and we all got on really well so it was worth the trip. I bumped into Mike and Wayne a few years ago in a rehearsal studio in Stockport, when they were getting ready for Holidays In The Sun, Wayne was his moody self and Mike was a friendly as ever but you could feel the tension between them both. But maybe that's why that combination works so well they're both fighting to be number one and they spur each other on. So good luck to them and long may it continue.

Favourite Slaughter song...
Yeah bootboys was one of my favourites, a cartoon drawing of yob culture. The chorus I sang was ""where have all the bootboys gone hammy jacko bugs and john"" ""where have all the bootboys gone it looks like I'm the only one"" the one""

Nosebleeds end

Me and Vini Riley didn't like the way the band was being run so we opted out and started our solo projects. There was a whole set full of Nosebleeds songs ready to record but we never got there. There's a tape knocking about of a live session we did for Piccadilly Radio in Manchester and there's a video we did with a video workshop with live footage and interviews about the rise and fall of the Nosebleeds. Someone should put it out.

From the Rise and Fall of the Nosebleeds Video

Stephen Morrissey and Billy Duffy ( The Smiths and The Cult)
I wasn't aware of them following us about, but they might well have. Yeah they did one gig at the Mayflower Club in Manchester  before deciding it was a waste of time trying to follow in mine and Vinys footsteps. Obviously a talent less bunch of no hopers who would only notch up 10s of millions of sales pathetic. They were considered for Slaughter but were found not to be up to it ha ha. The Sweethearts yes they definitely were a right pair.

Memories
Having a pint with the Pistols backstage at the Lesser Free Trade Hall talking about Man City getting bottled and Johnny Rotten being a concerned citizen saying I'd better get some stitches in that and Jonesy saying bollocks to that have another beer cool. Giving Tony Wilson a hard time live on Granada TV when we did
Music School on a local show. Kicking Paul Morley (70s NME tosser) in the mush when he tried to heckle us at the Electric Circus. Getting completely blitzed with the rest of the boys in Slaughter before we were due to do live recording and video shoot. The company dragged us in the next day and told us 'that piss up cost you five grand we hope you enjoyed it', then they said they had the tapes destroyed. We went down the pub and had another little drink.

Giving Tony Wilson a hard time!

Who did you rate and not rate?
There wasn't anybody I didn't like. The pistols were the best. I always found the more performance based bands more to my liking -Johnny Thunders, New York Dolls, Wayne County, John Cooper Clarke and the Dogs. As I said I liked everybody that was about at that time. The Clash, Sham, Banshees, V2, The Drones, The Buzzcocks, The Fall etc.........

Worst time and best times
Worst gig was pre Slaughter at the Lyceum as Ed Banger supporting Penetration where for some reason the audience took an instant dislike to us. (after I'd said ""your all a bunch of southern softies"" - we disappeared under a hail of cans and bottles) so after driving all that way down there for an 8 bars set, the van then broke down on the way home. Spent the night freezing our bollocks off by the side of the road. Then it took most of the next day to get the van fixed. On top of that it cost a small fortune for the repairs and we'd not been paid for the gig. So yeah that rates as a pretty shite gig. Best gig - Lyceum again with Slaughter. After only two days rehearsal we did a stormer of a gig from my point of view which went down a treat to a packed house. After what had gone on at my previous visit, it was quite a turn around!

Looking back..
Fantastic memories - it was a special moment in time and to have been part of it was pretty damn cool man! Punk is still going strong today so its stood the test of time. Bandwagon jumpers like Tony Wilson saying punk was dead in 79 proves what a complete tosser he is, but lets not end on that note so lets say " Carry on punk!".
 

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