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In
answer to your questions, here goes
I
formed London at the end of 1976 by putting ads in the
Melody Maker. The first to join was Steve Voice the bass
player and with whom I wrote some of our songs. Hed
been living in London for a few years but was originally from
Andover. Jon Moss was next but there was a problem, he was
being tried out as a drummer for the Clash at the time and
wasnt happy. I seem to remember that he didnt
really hit it off with Joe Strummer accusing him of crappy
pseudo-revolutionary rhetoric!! Jon wanted to leave but all
his friends were telling him hed be mad to walk out on a
name band like the Clash but he was adamant so we drove
down in Jons car to the Clashs rehearsal
studio in Chalk Farm and Jon packed up his drum kit. When
Strummer and Mick Jones got back they saw the empty room and
realised that theyd have to find a new drummer. The
last member to join London was Dave Wight, who came from
the North-East. and was an accomplished guitarist. We didnt
play any other kind of music before punk but the band were
musically pretty tight as opposed to other bands who were
literally starting from nothing. To be honest, although MCA
pushed us as a punk band we considered ourselves more new
wave than punk.. We just happened to emerge during
that exciting time, a bit like the Stranglers or the Buzzcocks
or XTC did.
I had never been in a band before and
my influences before punk wouldve been David Bowie/Lou
Reed/the Who/Rocky Horror Show/Mott the Hoople/Roxy Music/Sparks.Later
it was the Damned/Pistols/Generation X. The whole
period was incredibly exciting. Every night wed go to
a gig and I felt punk was very close to bands like the Small
Faces/Kinks/the Who in the 60s. There was a real
buzz in London during 1976/77 that the music was changing and
that the dinosaur bands like Pink Floyd, Yes and Led
Zeppelin had had their day. Another side of it that
attracted me was collecting the records. Picture sleeves
and limited editions became popular and it was fun to hunt them
down. I often used to go down to the Soho market (no longer
there) and search through the record racks. There was
always this other guy doing the same, later I realised he was
Paul Weller. I built up an incredible collection and then
about fifteen years ago, when I was really broke, I had to sell
them. I wish I hadnt.
To be honest Ive never bought a Culture
Club record in my life but I think that Boy George has a
terrific voice and they are incredibly well managed and promoted
by Tony Gordon and Jon Moss. Jon was always good on the
business side. Its quite possible that if George had
never met Jon we might never have heard of him. Jon was
also quite good at detecting a hit. I remember once being
in his house in Hampstead when he put on a white label disc of
Do You Really Want to Hurt Me? on his stereo. After
a minute I lifted the needle off and told Jon that it didnt
have a chance in hell of making it, that it was total crap.
Jon strongly disagreed. Six weeks later it was number one
in the charts!
Very soon after we formed, our manager
Simon Napier-Bell got us a three month UK tour supporting the Stranglers.
Their first album was selling well and they had a big single hit
with Peaches, (I remember being amazed that they hardly
ever played Peaches during that tour). This meant
that we were playing fairly big venues and as London were
the support band we went on first. For many people
throughout the country we were the first punk band theyd
ever seen. Their reaction was good until about halfway
through the tour the Pistols released God Save the Queen
and the tabloids went punk crazy stressing the violence thing,
particularly between Punks and Teds.
The audiences, fuelled by the media,
changed. There was quite a bit of violence at gigs and a
lot of gobbing. Steve and Dave would walk off stage with
guitars covered in it and Jons drum kit almost had to be
hosed down! It usually happened during the first number
which was always No Time. I remember one gig in
Birmingham where I walked on with a rolled-up umbrella. As
soon as the gobbing started I opened the umbrella up to protect
myself. I mustve looked like a punked up Penguin out
of Batman! When I walked off stage at the end of the
gig I couldnt close the umbrella. Itd gone rock
hard with spittle!
Simon Napier-Bell got us the deal with
MCA. He was really on the ball. He got us into IBC
studios in London in the middle of the night and we recorded our
first single Everyones a Winner in about twenty
minutes. He then had fifteen cassette copies made up and
got a motorbike courier to deliver them to all the main record
companies with a note saying This is London.
If you want to sign us call this number. It sounds
incredible now but by midday quite a few record companies had
phoned him. The two best offers were from Virgin and
MCA. Virgin actually came down to see us play the Nashville
in Kensington but signed the support band XTC instead! So
we went with MCA.
In my opinion, London was
musically more proficient than most bands at the time (with
the exception, perhaps, of the Stranglers and XTC) but I
wouldnt say we dumbed ourselves down to suit the
times. We just loved playing and Steve, Dave and Jon were
first class musicians. When we started we sounded a bit like the
early Who or Stones but the later numbers like Animal
Games and Swinging London were heavily influenced by
the Stranglers. By this time the material was being
written by all four of us and we had just done this huge tour
with them.
Our manager was Simon Napier-Bell who had
previously managed the Yardbirds and Marc Bolan.
While he was managing us he was also looking after Japan.
Later, of course he went on to manage Wham and George
Michael. He had some good ideas and he also produced
all our records. His assistant Danny Morgan had spotted us
playing our very first gig at the Rochester Castle in Stoke
Newington and Simon came to check us out at our next gig which
was at the Roxy. I think the incident about ringing
home to mum referred to Jon Moss who was still living with
his parents. Simon phoned him up one day and was surprised
to hear this well spoken woman pick the phone up. Simon was
always encouraging us to be oikish which wasnt
really in our characters so wed fight against it. We
were far more interested in our music than striking some fake
rebellious street-cred attitude.
We did play the Roxy on a few
occasions. It was a club we had been to many times
before. I remember seeing Generation X there on one
of the first nights. It was good because there were only
about eight venues in the whole of London where you could hear
that kind of music then. The audiences were always
friendly. It was very small, had a tiny stage, and people
stood right in front of you. There was a good atmosphere
and always the chance of members of the Pistols or
the Clash turning up. To the audience there was very
much a feeling that this was our club. You know,
exclusively for new wave and punk bands whilst somewhere like the
Marquee still had one foot in the old rock camp but to the bands
it was just another venue that we could perform in on the
circuit, so to speak. I saw some great gigs down
there. Sham 69 and Cherry Vanilla with Sting
on bass come to mind. We played the Vortex once I think but
this was later, well after the first wave of punk bands. It
was different to the Roxy, slightly bigger and more like a lounge
bar in a normal pub. We only played for about twenty
minutes though. There was a short somewhere in our backline
and we kept getting shocks off each other.
The London scene in 76/77
was fantastic. A different gig each night. The main
venues were the Hope and Anchor (where we played a lot), the
Marquee (where we did our last gig), the Nashville in Kensington,
where we often played with 999 (my favourite band at the
time), or XTC, the Rock Garden, Dingwalls (where we
supported Wayne County), the Roxy, the Camden Palace and
the Roundhouse (where we did two shows at the end of the Stranglers
tour). Also the Red Cow in Kensington (where I saw the Jam
in their early days). It was quite a close network then,
people tended to know everyone else. It was very friendly.
My favourite song is No Time
as it was the one that opened our show. I also liked Friday
on my Mind and, of course, Everyones a Winner as
that was our first single. Siouxsie Sue was an
excellent song written by Steve Voice. It was originally
called Susie Sue but Jon Moss suggested we change the
title to Siouxsie Sue. I was against the change but
the others liked it. The song had nothing whatever to do
with Siouxsie, it was just a little tale of punks that Steve
penned, it was a good number. Definitely popular with the fans
whod call out for it all through the set. I
liked our album Animal Games but on listening to it now on
the Captain Oi! CD I think it was a shame that we didnt
slow one or two of the numbers down a bit. It all sounds
too fast and frantic. When we started one of the things we
prided ourselves on was that we were the fastest band
around. The nearest anyone else got to our speed of
delivery was the Damned. Still, the album was very
representative of what we were doing at the time. It was
basically our stage act that we recorded immediately after the Stranglers
tour, so it was very tight.
Towards the end of 1977, Jon was
particularly worried that we werent making hit
records. Our live act was always good and our gigs packed
them in but this wasnt reflected in the record
charts. Jon had an offer to join the Damned in place
of Rat Scabies so off he went. There was a bit of a delay
because he had a bad car crash and was in hospital for a
while. When he came out he played one last gig with us at
the Marquee in Wardour Street, that was filmed by an Italian TV
company, and then immediately went off on tour with the Damned.
I went to see them play at the Roundhouse. Jon looked very
rock n roll but not very happy. I think he
quickly realised that the Damned wasnt for him and
it wasnt long before him and Damned guitarist Lu
broke away and formed their own band the Edge. After
Jon left London the rest of us tried out a few drummers
(including John Towe ex-Chelsea and Generation X)
but eventually decided to call it a day. I was kept on by
MCA Records as a solo artist and made four more singles and then
went to CBS Epic where I made my last record Hard Hearts Dont
Cry. Steve and Jon played on some of these singles, as
did Lu from the Damned.
The fans in London and the South were much
more hip, much more aware of who the NME were calling the
trendiest band that particular week and going along to support
them. The fans in the North were more friendly and
approachable. Some of our best gigs were in Glasgow,
Liverpool, Manchester, Coventry and Retford.
I very much enjoyed my time in London but
we were only together for a very short time, about a year.
At that time I very much wanted to write songs, make records and
be in a band, so all those ambitions were fulfilled. The
main thing I really got out of punk is anything is
possible. Before punk it was very difficult to get a record
made, then bands just started putting stuff out on their own
labels. The whole do-it-yourself culture is very much with
us today and it all began with punk. Look at
television. It is only my opinion but if it hadnt
been for punk you wouldnt have had things like Live Aid,
Big Breakfast Show, TFI Friday, Brookside, Reeves and Mortimer,
the Young Ones or Bottom etc. Punk opened
doors all over the place. These days people just find a way
to do what they want. Things are much better in that
respect. Its hard to believe that before punk the
only music shows on TV were TOTP and the Old Grey Whistle Test.
I remember we played
Coventry on the Stranglers tour and then came back
as headliners ourselves a few months later and were given this
fantastic welcome. That stands out in my mind as the best
gig we did but there were many others. The best thing about
London was always our live stage show. Part of the
act was Id come on with one of those sex shop blow-up dolls
and throw it into the audience where itd be tossed about
above everyones heads. That used to go down well but
at the end of the night someone always nicked the doll! We
called her Randy Mandy and we got through dozens of
them. I believe Simon Napier-Bell had to open an account
with one of the Ann Summers sex shops. The boot of
the hire car was always crammed with these plastic dolls with
their permanently open mouths!
I loved 999, Generation
X, the Damned, the Stranglers, Penetration, the Adverts, Elvis
Costello, Pistols, the Clash, the Drones, the Jam. With
the exception of Blondie and Johnny Thunders, I
wasnt particularly keen on the New York scene.
(On how punks changed over
77/78....) Yeah, they changed a lot. For a start their
appearance. Mohicans and safety pins came in in a big
way. Up until then the new wave image seemed to lean
towards the mod thing of the 60s which I quite liked.
Drainpipes, smart jackets, two-tone shoes, button down collars
etc
I dont keep in touch with any of London
anymore. Weve all drifted apart. The last time
I saw Jon Moss was at my wedding reception about 15 years
ago. These days I write comedy books and scripts. I
wrote for Frankie Howerd for eight years and also for the
TV show Birds of a Feather. More recently Ive
written a play called Topless which is performed on
the open top deck of a sightseeing bus driving through the
streets of London. We tried it out last year and it worked
pretty well so were going to bring the show back again this
summer. I dont know what Steve and Dave are
doing. I hope theyre still playing. They are
both very talented musicians.
Best
of luck and thanks for your interest.
Miles
Tredinnick (Riff Regan)
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