The Cortinas (punk band)

The Cortinas

The Cortinas in Bristol 1977 - Left to Right: Jeremy Valentine, Nick Sheppard, Dexter Dalwood, Mike Fewings & Daniel Swan
Background information
Origin Bristol, England
Genres Punk rock
Years active Early 1976 to Mid 1978
Labels Step Forward, CBS
Associated acts The Clash,
Head, The Color Tapes, Fish Food, The Sneetches, The Spics.
Past members Dexter Dalwood
Mike Fewings
Nick Sheppard
Daniel Swan
Jeremy Valentine

The Cortinas were a Bristol-based punk rock band, originally active between 1976 and 1978. Guitarist Nick Sheppard went on to play with the Clash. In 2001, the band's debut single, "Fascist Dictator" (originally released in June 1977), was included in a leading British music magazine's list of the best punk-rock singles of all-time.[1]

Biography

Named after a car, the Ford Cortina, the band moved from R&B towards covering songs by punk forerunners like the New York Dolls and The Stooges.

The band developed a large and enthusiastic following in their hometown. Unfortunately, their growing popularity began to attract a great deal of crowd trouble.[2]

The band were also frequent visitors to London and became one of the pioneering punk bands that played live in the first few months of the Roxy Club. They supported The Stranglers in January 1977 and then headlined twice the following month. The Cortinas headlined the Roxy again in March and April, supported by The Models on both occasions.[3] In June 1977 they had their first headlining show at the Marquee Club. Later they played as support act for Blondie and Chelsea.

The Cortinas' first two singles both appeared on Step Forward, the label run by The Police manager Miles Copeland and Mark Perry.

On 16 July 1977, a few weeks after releasing "Fascist Dictator", the band recorded a session at Maida Vale 4 studio, for John Peel at BBC Radio 1. The track listing was "Defiant Pose", "Television Families", "Having It", and "Further Education".[4]

Later the Cortinas signed for CBS Records and released one album, True Romances. One critic described the album as "disappointing" but rescued from "bland oblivion" by "cheeky tracks such as "Ask Mr. Waverly" and "I Trust Valerie Singleton".[5] Another called it a mix of "rock'n’roll, R&B and pop-rock" and therefore "much more mainstream in style and delivery" than the Step Forward singles.[6] This was a view echoed by Wilson Neate of Allmusic: "Having begun life under the spell of '60s R&B and garage rock, the Cortinas soon emerged as Bristol's premiere punk band, injecting a speedy, shouty, confrontational edge into their sound for their first two singles ("Fascist Dictator" and "Defiant Pose"). By the time of their 1978 debut album for CBS, however, they had re-embraced their formative influences and added a more pop-friendly dimension... True Romances sounds more befitting of a bunch of middle-aged pub rockers than five teenage punk rockers".

Post band careers

Discography

Studio album

Singles

Compilation

See also

References

  1. Mojo (October 2001) – 100 Punk Scorchers , Issue 95, London;
  2. Larkin, C. (1992) Indie & New Wave Music, Guinness Publishing, Enfield, p. 70;
  3. Thompson, D. (2000) Punk, Collector's Guide Publication, Ontario, Canada, p. 61 – 62;
  4. John Peel Sessions on BBC Radio 1;
  5. Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p. 36;
  6. Joynson, V. (2001) Up Yours! A Guide to UK Punk, New Wave & Early Post Punk, Borderline Productions, Wolverhampton, p. 95;
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