Eater

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Eater

Background information
Origin Finchley, North London, England
Genre(s) Punk Rock
Years active Late 1976 – early 1979; 1996; 2006
Label(s) The Label
Former members
Andy Blade
Brian Chevette
Phil Rowlands (AKA ‘Social Demise’)
Ian Woodcock
Roger Bullen (AKA ‘Dee Generate’)
This article is about the punk band Eater, for the hard science fiction novel written by Gregory Benford, see Eater (novel).

Eater were an early British punk band from London who took their name from a Marc Bolan lyric.

Contents

[edit] Biography

The band was formed in 1976 by four high school friends; Andy Blade (vocals/guitar), Brian Chevette (guitar), Dee Generate (drums) and Ian Woodcock (bass). The band's name came from the song ‘Suneye’, taken from the 1970 album T. Rex:

“Tree wizard puretongue, The digger of holes, The swan king, The Elf lord, The eater of souls.

Lithon the black, The rider of stars, Tyrannosaurus Rex, The eater of cars”.

Later they recorded a cover version of T-Rex's "Jeepster."

Despite originating in north London, the band made its first public performance in Manchester, featuring The Buzzcocks as their support act. Eater’s live set at this gig, back in November 1976, was built mainly around speeded-up versions of Velvet Underground and David Bowie songs such as "Queen Bitch" and "Sweet Jane".

Closer to home, the band became one of the pioneering punk bands that played live in the first few months of the now-legendary Roxy Club. They topped the bill twice in January 1977, the second time they were supported by The Damned. They headlined again in February, this time supported by Johnny Moped, and twice more in March, supported first by The Lurkers and then by Sham 69.[1] They also supplied two of their tracks, ‘15’ (a version of "I'm Eighteen" by Alice Cooper) and ‘Don’t Need It’, to the seminal live various artists album Live at the Roxy WC2.

The band signed to small London independent label called ‘The Label’,

In 2001, the band’s second single, "Thinking of the USA" (originally released in June 1977), was included in a leading British music magazine’s list of the best punk-rock singles of all-time. [2] In 1999, the track also re-appeared on the five CD box set ‘1-2-3-4: A History of Punk & New Wave’ (MCA Records / Universal Music Group).

Eater released five singles and The Album LP before splitting up in 1979.

Blade made several attempts to create a solo career during the 1980s but failed to secure a deal. He shared an apartment with Billy Duffy who later joined The Cult.

Blade published a book about his times with Eater and beyond, called The Secret Life of a Teenage Punk Rocker in 2005.

Eater reformed to play the 1996 Holidays in The Sun Festival in Blackpool.

Eater also reformed shortly in 2006, playing a one-off gig at the 100 Club, supported by TV Smith of The Adverts. They also supported the Buzzcocks on their 30th anniversary of their original tour, at the Forum.

In their heyday 1976 – 1978, the band had been variously appraised:

  • “Run-of-the-mill dole queue punk rock”. [3]
  • “Basic boy-ish punk rock”. [4]
  • “The band’s original punkish abrasiveness giving way only slightly to a petulant pop sheen”. [5]
  • “They were basically young kids, striving to master their instruments and out to shock”. [6]
  • “All songs on their sole full-length release sound about the same, played with one stiff light-speed beat and a snotty vehemence to each track, adding up to a ridiculous classic. As fast and clumsy as the material is, there's an undeniable tunefulness at work, particularly in irresistible singalongs like "No Brains" and "Room for One," and the sprightly single "Lock It Up" even attempts some naïve vocal harmonies as they sneer at the upper classes”. [7]

[edit] Discography

[edit] Singles

  • Outside View / You (The Label, March 1977)
  • Thinkin’ of the USA / Space Dreamin’ / Michael’s Monetary System (The Label, June 1977)
  • Lock It Up / Jeepster (The Label, October 1977)
  • Get Your Yo-Yo’s Out E.P.: Debutantes Ball / No More / Thinkin’ of the USA / Holland (The Label, September 1978)
  • What She Wants She Needs / Reaching for the Sky (The Label, November 1978)

[edit] Studio album

  • The Album (The Label, January 1978)

[edit] Compilations

  • The History of Eater (February 1985)
  • The Compleat Eater (April 1993)
  • All of Eater (May 1998)

[edit] See also

[edit] External link

[edit] References

  1. ^ Thompson, D. (2000) Punk, Collector’s Guide Publication, Ontario, Canada, p. 61 - 62;
  2. ^ Mojo (October 2001) - 100 Punk Scorchers , Issue 95, London;
  3. ^ Steve Gardner (1996) “Hiljaiset Levyt: 100 Best Punk LP's”;
  4. ^ Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p. 61;
  5. ^ Thompson, D. (2000) Punk, Collector’s Guide Publication, Ontario, Canada, p. 78;
  6. ^ Joynson, V. (2001) Up Yours! A Guide to UK Punk, New Wave & Early Post Punk, Borderline Productions, Wolverhampton, p. 136;
  7. ^ Fred Beldin's review of 'The Album', the All Music Guide;