Bad Manners

This article is about the ska band. For the film of the same name, see Bad Manners (film).
For the 1997 film, see Bad Manners (1997 film).
Bad Manners

Bad Manners performing in California in 2007
Background information
Origin London, England
Genres Ska, 2 Tone
Years active 1976present
Labels Magnet, Portrait, Blue Beat, Pork Pie, Moon, Bad
Members Buster Bloodvessel
Lee Thompson
Simon Cuell
Andy Perriss
Tony 'Rico' Richardson
Adrian Cox
Matty 'Bingo' Bane
Colin Graham
David Turner
Ross Moore
Justin Dodsworth
Dave 'Essex' Welton
Mike Jones
Past members Winston Bazoomies
Louis 'Alphonso' Cook
David Farren
Brian Tuitt
Martin Stewart
Paul 'Gus' Hyman
Chris Kane
Andrew Marson

Bad Manners are an English ska band led by frontman Buster Bloodvessel. Early appearances included Top of The Pops and the live film documentary, Dance Craze.[1]

They were at their most popular during the early 1980s, during a period when other ska revival bands such as Madness, The Specials and The Selecter filled the charts. Bad Manners spent 111 weeks in the UK Singles Chart between 1980 and 1983,[2] and they also achieved chart success with their first four studio albums with Gosh It's... Bad Manners, Loonee Tunes! and Ska 'n' B being their biggest hits.

Formation

Fronted by Buster Bloodvessel (born Douglas Trendle), the band was formed in 1976 while the members were together at Woodberry Down Comprehensive School near Manor House, North London. They commemorated the 1981 closure of the school on the back sleeve of their Gosh It's... Bad Manners album.

Career

After becoming popular in their native London, Bad Manners signed to Magnet Records in 1980, and became regular guests on television shows such as Tiswas. The band also appeared on The British Music Awards (1981) and Cheggers Plays Pop. In 1985, they also appeared on The Time of Your Life, hosted by Noel Edmonds. Being closely associated with the 2 Tone movement (though never signed to 2 Tone Records itself), they were one of six bands featured in the 1981 documentary film Dance Craze.

Some of their more notable hits include "My Girl Lollipop", "Lip Up Fatty", "Can Can", "Special Brew" and "Walking In The Sunshine". One of the main reasons for their notoriety, was their outlandish huge-tongued and shaven-headed frontman, Buster Bloodvessel. His manic exploits got them banned from the British BBC TV chart show Top of the Pops.[3] The band was also banned from Italian TV after Bloodvessel mooned a concert audience, after being told that the Pope was watching on TV.[4]

Bad Manners left Magnet Records in 1983, and Telstar Records released a compilation album, The Height of Bad Manners, which reached number 23 in the UK Albums Chart.[2] The album was assisted with a television advertisement promotion, and it brought the band back to the attention of the media and the British public - but no further chart hits.

The group then went on to sign a contract with Portrait Records in the United States and Mental Notes was released in 1985. For two years the band toured continuously all over the world but decided to disband in 1987.

Break-up and reformation

Buster reformed the band with original members Louis Alphonso, Martin Stewart and Winston Bazoomies. Another original member, Chris Kane, also remained in the band, but left in 1990. In 1988, the band licensed the name and logo of Blue Beat Records, and set up office in a 50 ft barge in the back garden of Buster's former home in Spring Hill, London. After Blue Beat closed in 1990, Bad Manners were without a recording contract, but still continued to tour. In 1992, they signed a deal with Pork Pie Records and Fat Sound was released in Europe. The album was initially intended to be released in the UK on Blue Beat.

In 1996, Buster Bloodvessel moved to Margate, and opened a hotel on the seafront called Fatty Towers, which catered for people with huge appetites.[5] While living in Margate, he was a regular spectator at Margate F.C., and Bad Manners sponsored the club for one season. Fatty Towers closed in 1998 and did not re-open despite a facelift. After its closure, he moved back to London.

Bad Manners released Heavy Petting on Moon Ska Records in the United States in 1997. Six years later, Buster set up another record label and the band released Stupidity on Bad Records in 2003.

Bad Manners appeared on Never Mind The Buzzcocks in the 2004 Christmas Special, performing festive songs to Phill Jupitus' team. (Jupitus is a fan of the band, and Buster Bloodvessel had appeared as a panellist on the show earlier that year).

Buster Bloodvessel is the only original member left in Bad Manners, but the harmonica player, Winston Bazoomies, is an 'honorary member' of the band and he has a Facebook fanpage set up in his honour and he currently lives in North London.

Martin Stewart left Bad Manners in 1991, and performed and recorded with The Selecter for fifteen years. Louis Alphonso lives in Paris while David Farren left in 1987, after the band's contract with Portrait Records finished. He designed the original band logo, and painted the front cover of the Gosh It's... Bad Manners album. He currently performs in a tribute outfit called The Rollin' Stoned. Chris Kane is a session musician living in Wanstead. He became a music teacher during the 1990s and also performed with The Jordanaires. Brian Tuitt also left the band in 1987 and works and lives in Kent, while Andrew Marson, another band member who left the same year, has worked as a carpenter in and around London. Paul Hyman lives in Enfield and works in the stock exchange, a job he has had since he left Bad Manners.

Bad Manners headlined their own annual music festival known as Bad Fest in 2005 and 2006 at RAF Twinwood Farm. This festival featured ska, mod-related and punk rock bands from the 1980s to the present.

In 2011, Cherry Red Records released the band's first four albums, Ska 'n' B, Loonee Tunes!, Gosh It's... Bad Manners and Forging Ahead on CD for the first time with added bonus tracks. The albums were issued on their sister label, Pressure Drop. That same year, Bad Manners performed a world tour and played a number of shows in the United States, France, Canada, Slovakia, Germany, Japan, Australia and Spain, with a number of festive dates in the United Kingdom.

In December 2012, the band released their first single in thirteen years. "What Simon Says" was released via download just before the festive season, and the music video featured Bad Manners fans from across the world but none of the band members themselves.

In December 2012, founding members of the band met for the first time in decades at the Ship public house in Soho, London. Paul Hyman, Martin Stewart, Brian Tuitt and Chris Kane met with band historian and harmonica player David Turner, and Christopher 'Dell' Wardell, a music writer and promoter from Darlington. The meeting was successful and on 18 July 2013, seven of the original nine members reunited at The Brownswood public house, near Finsbury Park, that is within striking distance of their old school, Woodbery Down Comprehensive. The meeting was again organised by Wardell and Turner. The 'Bad Manners Originals' who attended the reunion were; Andy Marson (alto sax), Paul Hyman (trumpet), Alan Sayag (harmonicas), Chris Kane (tenor sax), David Farren (bass), Martin Stewart (keyboards) and Brian Tuitt (drums). The meetings were arranged after Wardell's 'Where Are They Now ?' band article, which was a feature about the current whereabouts of all of the original Bad Manners band members, published in The Northern Echo in 2012.

The band are currently in their 40th anniversary year, and can still be seen out touring regularly across the UK.

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album Record Label UK[2] Certification
1980 Ska 'n' B Magnet 34 UK: Silver
1980 Loonee Tunes! Magnet 36 UK: Silver
1981 Gosh It's... Bad Manners Magnet 18 UK: Silver
1982 Forging Ahead Magnet 78
1985 Mental Notes Portrait
1989 Return of the Ugly Blue Beat
1992 Fat Sound Pork Pie
1997 Heavy Petting Moon Ska
2003 Stupidity Bad

Singles

Title Released UK Singles Chart[2] Weeks in chart[2]
"Ne-Ne Na-Na Na-Na Nu-Nu" February 1980 28 14
"Lip Up Fatty" June 1980 15 14
"Special Brew" September 1980 3 13
"Lorraine" December 1980 21 12
"Just a Feeling" March 1981 13 9
"Can Can" June 1981 3 13
"Walking in the Sunshine" September 1981 10 9
The R'n'B Party Four (EP) November 1981 34 9
"Got No Brains" May 1982 44 5
"My Girl Lollipop (My Boy Lollipop)" July 1982 9 7
"Samson and Delilah" October 1982 58 3
"That'll Do Nicely" April 1983 49 3
"Blue Summer" August 1985
"What the Papers Say" December 1985
"Tossin' in My Sleep" March 1986
"Skaville UK" May 1989
"Gonna Get Along Without You Now" July 1989
"Christmas Time Again" November 1989
Fatty's Back in Town (EP) September 1995
"Millennium Knees Up" December 1999

Compilations and reissues

References

  1. Chris Woodstra. "Bad Manners | Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 39. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  3. Walters, Sarah (4 September 2008). "Tongue and groove with Buster...". CityLife. M.E.N. media. Retrieved 2 December 2008.
  4. Archived 8 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. "The Journal - All manner of mayhem". Journal-online.co.uk. 19 September 2008. Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  6. "Chart Log UK: New Entries Update; Combined Singles (200) Chart Date: 13.08.2011". Zobbel.de. Retrieved 2012-09-20.

External links

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