The Story of The Members
by
Adrian Thrills
The Members were one of the wittiest and most imaginative guitar bands to
emerge in the aftermath of the 1977 punk explosion. Having got together in the
sleepy suburbs of Bagshot and Camberley, they were too far removed from the new
wave's fashionable London cliques to take their place alongside such pioneers as
The Clash and the Sex Pistols.
When they did break through, with Sound Of The Suburbs in 1979, they did so not
by singing about high-rise living, dole queues and anarchy, but with a song that
wryly reflected their somewhat more mundane suburban roots.
This May the band release a definitive best of album that traces the group's
history from early, punk-inspired releases on the independent Beggars Banquet
and Stiff labels through to their chart heyday with Virgin and beyond. It spans
six years and six different labels, and features the original (and best) version
of Sound Of The Suburbs - a punk classic now available for the first time in 25
years.
With their style built around guitarist Jean-Marie 'JC' Carroll's nimble, twangy
riffs and frontman Nicky Tesco's cutting reflections on suburbia, The Members
were the new wave's great satirists. They sang not about the 'big issues', but
about a series of pathetic
characters and trivial, everyday frustrations that anyone could relate to. In
doing so, they became a part of a great British pop tradition which dated back
to Ray Davies, of The Kinks, and now stretches forward to encompass Mike
Skinner, of The Streets. As Nicky
Tesco once told me, 'we stand for the social underdog'.
The Members were also noteworthy as one of the first British guitar bands to
fully incorporate reggae into their music. Just as blues had been a key
influence on white rock in the Sixties, reggae was the alternative genre of
choice for the punk generation. And while the
late Seventies contained plenty of shining examples of the punky-reggae party -
The Clash covering Junior Murvin's Police And Thieves, The Special AKA launching
2-Tone - The Members were one of the prime movers in the era's cross-cultural
interplay. As Neil Spencer,
writing in NME, said of them in 1978: 'Of the many rock bands co-opting reggae
into their act, few do so with as much love and style as the The Members.'
'My rhythm guitar playing is definitely reggae-based,' JC told me when I
interviewed The Members for NME in 1978. 'It's not the same as blasting an
audience with full-on rock riffs. It gets them moving in a different way. But,
having said that, we're trying to play reggae in our own style. We're not
singing about Jah Love. We're singing about living in Britain.'
The Members made their first live appearance at The Roxy Club, in London's
Covent Garden, in September 1977. The show was, by all accounts, a calamitous
outing in which Nicky Tesco's attempts to harangue the audience met with an
indifferent response. Within months, though, the band were in a studio with
Eddie And The Hot Rods producer Ed Hollis and Adrian's brother Steve Lillywhite
(who was responsible for getting them the break), cutting a track, Fear On The Streets,
which surfaced on Streets, a punky compilation put together by Lurkers manager
Nick Austin for the first official release on Beggars Banquet.
With an unstable early line-up eventually solidifying around Tesco, JC,
guitarist Nigel Bennett, bassist Chris Payne and drummer Adrian Lillywhite, The
Members began to make their mark in London. With punk being squeezed out of the
pubs, gigs weren't easy to come
by. When I first met them, in the summer of 1978, they were combining live shows
with day jobs as bank clerks, sales reps, aircraft technicians and draftsmen and
driving to their gigs in Ford Escorts.
Onstage, things were rather more exciting. The band usually opened their set
with a high-octane instrumental, Electricity, a track that combined impressive,
dub-like textures with experimental sound effects and often finished with JC
rubbing a microphone stand along the frets of his Fender Music Master. As a live
act, The Members were strikingly diverse, blending punky energy, reggae rhythms
and
thoroughly English harmonies. Bennett's guitar playing, more orthodox than JC's,
added a fluent, classic rock sheen while Payne and Lillywhite provided an
ever-solid rhythmic foundation.
The lively Tesco, too, soon developed into one of the era's more accomplished
frontmen: on a good night, the group thrived on the creative tension between his
charismatic showmanship and JC's ambitious musical visions, and The Members
quickly established a loyal
following. By the end of 1978, they had become one of the hottest tickets on the
London circuit.
The band's set gradually took shape, with covers such as Norman Whitfield's I
Wanna Get Next To You - sung by Rose Royce in the movie Carwash - augmented by
an increasingly impressive set of originals. The band's first single, the
anthemic Solitary Confinement, came
out as a one-off on Stiff in 1978. Produced by Larry Wallis, of the Pink Faries,
it spoke of the tedium of living in a London bedsit and travelling to a mundane
office job on a tube train. According to JC, the song was written about his
experinces flat-hunting after moving up to the capital from Camberley. 'I found
a place in West Hampstead that cost me £12 a week. It was pretty rough, with
mice running around the floor. But I had a masterplan. I was going to write a
hit single out of it.'
If Solitary Confinement - later updated by the Newtown Neurotics as Living With
Unemployment - didn't give the band that elusive hit, their second single,
February 1979's Sound Of The Suburbs, did the trick. It was produced by drummer
Adrian's brother Steve Lillywhite - later to attain legendary status with U2 -
and it put The Members in the Top 20. This album contains the definitive cut of
the song, the version that was issued as a clear vinyl seven-inch single, sold
250,000 copies and featured a Staines railway station announcer reading out a
series of destinations in the Surrey commuter belt.
The success of Sound Of The Suburbs set The Members up for their debut album, At
The Chelsea Nightclub, released on Virgin in April 1979. Painstakingly
assembled, it took the band further away from their punky roots, with tracks
such as Stand Up & Spit and Don't Push emphasising their reggae leanings. There
was also, in a title track cut live at Hammersmith Odeon, a hint of the band's
incendiary stage power. The song itself was a hilarious attack on the shallow
socialising of the Chelsea set in nightspots where 'half a pint of lager costs
60p'. They should be so lucky.
For their next move, The Members abandoned rock completely and gave full vent to
their love of reggae. Offshore Banking Business, a non-album single, featured a
loping riff, reggae brass and even a Jamaican-style talk-over section - 'a
lesson in home economics' entitled Pennies In The Pound - from Nicky Tesco.
Lyrically, the song was also one of the first recorded cases of rock 'n' roll
insider trading, with
JC using the knowledge garnered working in a bank to fuel a scornful
condemnation of global financial corruption.
The band's second album, 1980 - The Choice Is Yours, was softer and more
measured than At The Chelsea Nightclub. Produced by Rupert Hine, it contained
new tracks such as Goodbye To The Job and Physical Love, plus a cover of Larry
Wallis's Police Car, a live
favourite. But while the overall mood was now darker, suggestions of their old,
more irreverent style remained on the album's opening single, Romance.
The Members, however, were growing up fast. After leaving Virgin in 1981, they
broadened their sound by introducing a full-time horn section, Steve 'Rudi'
Thompson (ex-X Ray Spex) and Simon Lloyd (Bananarama and Icehouse) and embracing
funk and rap as well as reggae. A one-off single, Radio, was released on Island
before the band enjoyed an American hit by reaching out to the burgeoning MTV
generation with Working Girl.
The band's third album, produced by Martin Rushent and Dave Allen, was
originally released only in the States. On tracks such as Chairman Of The Board
and We The People, it showcased a maturing group who were becoming more socially
aware in their lyrics. The
album was eventually released by Albion Records in the UK as Going West.
Best remembered for their punky anthems, their invigorating use of reggae and
dozens of great nights out, The Members never really achieved the widespread
recognition that their musical vision deserved. But they were a group who moved
on from the three-chord
limitations of punk to leave us with a batch of songs that have stood the test
of time remarkably well. The tracks assembled on the forthcoming "Greatest Best
of In Living Memory" reiterate their impish brilliance.
As JC said: 'We play English rock with a touch of reggae - and we do it so that
people can enjoy themselves'.
ADRIAN THRILLS
(February 2005)