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Purple Hearts (UK band)

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Purple Hearts
From Record Mirror February 1980 - "Purple People Eaters"
From Record Mirror February 1980 - "Purple People Eaters"
Background information
Origin Romford, England
Genre(s) Mod revival
Years active 1979-1982
Label(s) Fiction Records
Safari Records
Website purplehearts
Former members
Jeff Shadbolt
Simon Stebbing
Bob Manton
Nick Lake
Gary Sparks

Purple Hearts were often considered one of the best English mod revival groups,[1] the NME calling them "one of the few mod bands to actually cut it on rock’n’roll terms”.[2]

Contents

[edit] Career

The mod revivalists, the Purple Hearts started in 1977, when teenagers Jeff Shadbolt, Simon Stebbing, Bob Manton, and Nick Lake formed the band in Romford, Essex as The Sockets, before they even knew how to play their instruments (taking a cue from the then prevailing DIY aesthetics of the punk rock movement). They formed for the sole purpose of getting a support slot at a Buzzcocks gig at the East London Polytechnic, to debut their tongue-in-cheek rock opera, Reg. The amused audience took the amateurish teenage punks to their hearts and the group decided to soldier on, even after they had accomplished their original goal.[citation needed] Several gigs followed, including an appearance on a float in the Romford Carnival.

In 1978, their drummer Nick Lake broke his leg and was replaced by Gary Sparks, the band switched their name to Purple Hearts, after an amphetamine-barbiturate mixture popular with the mods of 1960s. Accordingly, they changed their sound from the rough-edged punk rock which was already beginning to fall out of favour to a more mod-influenced sound, which, thanks largely to The Jam, was beginning to capture public attention.

Their biggest hit was their first single, "Millions Like Us" (1979), which peaked at #57 in the UK Singles Chart.[3] They following year they issued their debut album, Beat That![4] But the mod revival craze of 1979 was rapidly dissipating and they departed Fiction Records, over artistic differences. This precipitated an extended hiatus, with bassist "Just" Jeff Shadbolt joining The Rage with Buddy Ascott from The Chords. Simon Stebbing made records for Midnight Records as a member of 'Hearts on Fire', who released two 12 inch EPs, and an album, Dreams of Leaving.

Purple Hearts resurfaced to release a live album, Head on Collision Time recorded live at the 100 Club, and their second studio effort, Popish Frenzy in the mid 1980s. They gigged intermittently through the late 1980s before once again petering out. They re-convened at the Mods Mayday '99 show, recorded for the Detour Records live compilation album. In 2003 Stebbing produced a rarities compilation, Smashing Time, also released on Detour Records. More recently he formed Speakeasy for an EP on Biff! Bang! Pow! Records, whilst helming his bands RT4, and current line-up, RT3, along with the former Hearts drummer Gary Sparks.

Simon Stebbing is currently an Information Technology teacher and is recording some solo work that he describes as "post-modernist progressive doom metal".

The band have re-formed in 2009 and have confirmed dates at the 100 Club in London, Camber Sands & the 'Revved Up 2009' Scooter Rally in Northern Ireland[5].

[edit] Discography

[edit] Singles

  • "Millions Like Us"
  • "Frustration"
  • "Jimmy"
  • "Life's a Jigsaw"
  • "Plane Crash"
  • "Friends Again"

[edit] Albums

  • Beat That!
  • Head On Collision (live album recorded at the 100 Club in London)
  • Pop-ish Frenzy
  • Head On Collision Time Again

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Mod Revival - The story of the Mod Revival, by Chris Hunt, published in the New Musical Express Mod special edition, April 2005
  2. ^ Beat That album review by Adrian Thrills, published in the NME, issue dated March 29, 1980
  3. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 443. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  4. ^ Amazon.co.uk - Beat That! - retrieved 5 September 2007
  5. ^ - Purple Hearts News - retrieved 28 April 2009

[edit] External links

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