The Drug Addix

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 The Adicts 

Originally called the Tooting Fruities the band mutated into the more punky sounding, if not commercially suicidal, the Drug Addix. They released one single before slimming down the name to become the Addix and released one further single before splitting up. They were also on the same bill as The Vicious White Kids at the historic Electric Ballroom gig.

Described in Zigzag 93 April 1979 as "a four piece raunch & roll band" the band were in essence hi octane rhythm and blues. Also not to be confused with the Suffolk Adicts who had changed their name to avoid confusion.

Gay Boys In Bondage / Addington Shuffle / Special Clinic / Glutton For Punishment

Chiswick Records 1978

George Lloyd (alias Art Noveau): Because of the ‘record everything’ strategy I spoke of I had four tunes recorded at Wally Brill’s Clifton Road Studios in Croydon on a cassette tape. I played them to Ted and he said “yeah, lets release it”. There was no real deal I can remember and I’m sure the returns didn’t even pay for the one pressing…but someone came up with that great cover and it’ll be a great conversation piece to show the grandchildren. I think Rick holds the publishing rights to most and Kirsty's estate possibly the one’s I co-wrote with her.

According to Record Collector in 1994, "The band recorded a four track demo which Chiswick promptly released as a single.  It whipped up a mini controversy because, in Kirsty's words, it was "quite rude".  One song, Gay boys in bondage, became a talking point for obvious reasons.  It was meant to be a parody of the Lou Reed School of Seediness, a piece of camp corn that lent itself to stage dramatics."  The band's mix of Sweet Jane type riffs and slide-guitar-propelled R&B fell between two audiences."

The band were Rick Smith (aka Sterling Silver) - Vocals, George Lloyd (aka Art Nouveau) - Guitar, Alan Offa -Bass Guitar, Ron Griffin - Drums and Mandy Doubt - Vocals. Mandy Doubt was in fact an 18 year old Kirsty McColl.

Kirsty McColl: All I did on the record was backing vocals. You can barely hear me... We weren't actually a punk band, but at the time punk was king and we called ourselves that just to get some gigs. Everyone expected an outrageous, Sex Pistols type of band but we weren't.  We were all slide guitar and R&B. I was just the token boiler on backup vocals...  Of course that annoyed me but you've got to start somewhere.  If you can't really sing and you can't play anything, you can't argue about it.

George Lloyd: Kirsty was full of false modesty. Obviously fishing for compliments. She did feature quite heavily on lead vocals…I have old demo tapes of songs I co wrote with her that solely featured her distinctive Croydon whine…I know this ‘cos I have the same type of ‘singing’ voice and was able to harmonise with her quite well.



Kirsty in action with the band at the Venue in London (photo: Terry Hurley) 

George Lloyd: She was Rick’s lover when in the band, which ,traditionally, is the kiss of death for any beat group. When their teenage, mile a minute, volatile, powder fuelled liaison started to lose its thrill they split and she left. I got the blame for it of course…the guitarist or the drummer (or both) always do….but she did seem to want to move towards dance routines and that kind of thing…well she was only a girl after all….didn’t see much of her after her ‘rise’ to fame and fortune…but she kept in touch with Rick and mutual chum Brian Neville (‘Pigbag’ sax player, legendary Frooties percussionist and various nefarious… but never hilarious crimes against music)….someone at work told me of her awful ending on the day she died. I was impressed at the massive hard won respect she had from the music industry at large and very sad to hear the news.

Influences….Everything we’d ever heard. I’d say the sentiment of the song lyric writing was close to Frank Zappa. Just an attempt at filthy humour and cynical irony sung over fast 4/4 chord bashes.

Other titles apart from the EP I can remember at this time were:

Marital Bliss
Shoot the Cat
Grill My Sausage
Sweet Little Richard
Motor On
Let’s Go Live In A Squat
Big Fat Lady
Get Up N Shake
Fool in Love
No Such Thing As A Bad Boy
Brown Eyed Handsome Man

According to the band in Zigzag 1979 they complained about the ..." low volume, the lousy quality" of the single and promised "The next one though, that'll be the one -wait for it". The next one was on Zigzag records.

Rick Smith: The “Too Blind to See Release” came out to great reviews and a entry into the Time Out top 10, but the week of it’s release ZigZag records promptly went bust!

It had been recorded in a single overnight session at Phonogram studios at Stanhope Gate. At the time budding young studio staff could make use of dead time to record artists that they talent spotted with a hope to a mutual leg up the ladder. The session was paid for with a gram of sulphate and a ¼ Oz of Moroccan, the talent spotting engineer who at the time was (along with Steve Lillywhite) a lowly tape op at the studio was Steve Brown who later produced the Cult and the George Michael album Faith.

The B side was recorded at Pukka studios next to Crystal Palace football ground (where the original 4 track demo that became the Chiswick release was recorded), but as George’s girlfriend at the time wouldn’t let him out that night he’s absent from the recording.

Too Blind To See / No Such Thing As A Bad Boy

Zigzag Records 1979

Where are they now...

Rick Smith: I don’t know where Alan Offa (Bassist) is these days, but I do know that Ronnie Griffin (Drummer) sadly died last year from an overdose of prescription drugs.

George Lloyd:  Rick now tour manages for major international rock acts. Alan Offa may be dead…always a ‘Addixive’ personality...heard a rumour that he started doing smack in a big way…I could be wrong……Ronnie Griffin was last seen daubing his estranged children with paint and proclaiming himself to be The Messiah, shortly before they wheeled him away. I guess I’m probably the worst sell out in that I work as an engineer for Network Rail…not very rock n roll but still get out a bit to play. I have all my own teeth, hair and am still skinny and pretty…56 is looming large but I’m newly and duly dumped by my latest wife and ready to rock another day!

Thanks to Alan at kirstymaccoll.com for letting me use some of his information and pictures. Update December 2007