Fatal Microbes

Fatal Microbes
Origin England
Genres Punk rock, post-punk
Years active 1978-1979
Labels Small Wonder, XNTRIX
Associated acts Flux of Pink Indians, Omega Tribe, Rubella Ballet
Past members

Fatal Microbes were an English punk rock band formed in 1978. The main line-up of the band consisted of Honey Bane on vocals, Gem Stone on drums, Pete Fender on guitar, and Scotty Barker on bass.[1]

The band's name is regarded as an reference to the theme of disgust and toxicity, explored and embraced by many punk rock acts in the late 1970s and early 1980.[2][3]

History

In 1979, Small Wonder and XNTRIX Records co-released a split 12" EP entitled "Violence Grows", which also featured the Epping-based Poison Girls (whose singer, Vi Subversa, was also mother to Gem Stone and Pete Fender). In the same year, Fatal Microbes released a 7" single featuring "Violence Grows" on the punk rock record label Small Wonder Records.[4] The single was championed by British DJ and radio presenter John Peel.[5]

Honey Bane later had a career as a solo artist, a film and stage actress, and a model. Pete Fender subsequently went on to form Rubella Ballet with Gem Stone (bass) and Sid Ation (drums).[6] Fender later released a 7" EP, "Four Formulas", under his own name on XNTRIX records. Fender and It had originally met when they formed the band Punktuation in 1977. With an average age of 13 years, they were amongst the youngest punk bands in the country at the time.[7]

The band's songs were included in the compilation album for Rip It Up and Start Again compilation, released in 2006 through V2 Records.[8]

Former members

Main line-up
Other former members

Discography

Singles

References

  1. Glasper, Ian (2006). The Day the Country Died. Cherry Red Books. pp. 59–60. ISBN 1901447707.
  2. Rousselle, Duane and Ruth Kinna and Süreyyya Evren (2013). Blasting the Canon: Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies. Punctum Books. p. 145. ISBN 0615838626.
  3. Fraser, Gregory and Chad Davidson (2013). Analyze Anything: A Guide to Critical Reading and Writing. A&C Black. p. 74. ISBN 1441191151.
  4. "20 best: Post-Punk 7"s ever made". Fact. 31 October 2010. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  5. Michalski, Thomas (13 September 2013). "Another Idea of Punk: Rubella Ballet". Network Awesome. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  6. "Rubella Ballet". Maximum Rocknroll (275). 2006.
  7. Spitting Blood: Brighton Real Music News fanzine
  8. Ensminger, David (27 November 2011). "Simon Reynolds Redux: A Conversation from the Past About Post-Punk". PopMatters. Retrieved 3 January 2015.

External links


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