No More Heroes bookMusic: the Toads etc. For anyone interested in British Punk between the years 1976 to 1980 then
Alex Ogg, a freelance writer who has published several music
books, has now produced his latest work No More Heroes which is available from
Cherry Red Records.
Here's a copy of the press release:
"Punk rock: it's a well-worn subject, but this new book extends the searchlight
beyond the King's Road, Roxy and West London - though that crucial scene is by no
means neglected. It also encompasses some of the truly fantastic music (and sometimes
truly less than fantastic records) that emerged in the wake of the Sex Pistols. The
idea has been to give the progenitors their due, but to listen to the reverberations
around the UK, from Exeter to Inverness. Participants (musicians, fanzine writers,
observers) recount first-hand stories of flea pit gigs, desperately financed singles and
local rivalries - punk as it was understood and lived on the ground. The enduring impact
of punk belonged to the shires of Britain as well as the celebrated urban gene pool of
the capital, where it played out, with a mixture of indomitable personal courage and
amoral teenage mischief-making, amongst the alienated of shitsville UK. In the process punk
is revealed as a much broader church than other histories have depicted, an entry point for
young men and women (and a significant helping of old codgers) from differing backgrounds,
with widely ranging sensibilities and aspirations."
"The book assesses each of the major 'punk artists', candidly, on their output,
following their development to the present day. There's an effort to redress perceived
wisdom about the value of those careers as the 70s turned into the 80s, when many of the
original punk bands actually made their best records. While many names will be familiar
others will not. Hence time is devoted to punk's splintered personality post-1977. From
those bands that took it as an inviolate template, to those who embraced it as a rebirth
for the original spirit of rock 'n' roll to those, finally, who judged it the end of rock
music and a jumping off point for something completely new. There is no unifying view or
theory behind these accounts, instead the book serves as an attempt to capture the beautiful
chaos engendered by competing voices as the walls came tumbling down. The idea is to be
inclusive and celebratory rather than cynical. Therefore opinions are sought from outside
the tight huddle of usual suspects and would-be elitists, drawing on bemused and bewildered
non-participants to events, as well as those who served in the trenches. There is no attempt
to locate the 'meaning' of punk, nor to run a slide rule over qualifications for its status.
The author has instead, in the majority of cases, let the protagonists make their own cases.
Where possible the bands concerned have exercised the right of reply, leading to a more balanced
account of their own history. Some 200 interviews were completed in the course of researching
the book, leading to a plethora of first-hand insights and anecdotes."
"A secondary aspect of the book is the comprehensive documentation of the releases, both
contemporary and retrospective, of the bands of the era. It's an attempt to address the jungle
of retrospective CDs and box sets, the sheer volume of which indicates the continued fascination
around this period in British musical history."
- Over 300 individual band/artist biographies
- Use of several unpublished photos
- Forewords by Captain Sensible and David Marx
- Complete discographies featuring capsule reviews and source notes
What's more important, of course, is that the book mentions the Toads - fame at
last! All I've got to do now is try to blag a free copy ;-)
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