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Birmingham Music Scene
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Many famous Birmingham bands and musicians have contributed to the British
music scene for over a century. The city's diverse miscellany of musical
styles and influences have often been difficult to label with many smaller
scenes evolving or individual supergroups taking the limelight rather than
the city itself. By all accounts the city is without doubt a heavyweight
of the British music industry and continues to supply an endless array of
professional artists to a wide variety of bands from the underground to
the popular. |
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Rock.
In the 1950's Birmingham and the West Midlands promptly adopted the popular
American Rhythm & Blues music style, the (then fashionable) Teddy Boy image was
sweeping across Britain with American acts such as Bill Haley and the Commets,
Elvis Presley, Fats Domino, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and
Buddy Holly inspiring many bands who replicated the American Rock & Roll sound.
Local acts included Billy King and the Nightriders, Pat Wayne and The Deltas and
The Dominettes who often performed before ardent crowds in the social clubs and
dances of the Midlands.
By the early 60's the Merseybeat was in full swing and the influence of
Beatlemania across the world at that time was undeniable.
With the Liverpool bands already covered, Norrie Paramore of EMI Records
travelled to Birmingham and as a spin off to the Merseysound Paramore allegedly
coined the "Brum Beat" scene. Hoping to find the next Beatles Paramore signed
many Midland bands, some of whom were later to achieve much noteriety.
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Moody Blues
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The mid to late sixties saw an amalgamation of the Brum beat and the
already existent Rythm & Blues bands in the city, out of this melting pot
a diverse 'boxed set' of musicians and bands emerged, from traditional &
progressive Rock to the Hippy & Psychadelic movement. Often performing at
venues such as the infamous Las Vegas Coffee Bar, the Carlton Club,
Birmingham Town Hall, Mothers, the Cedar Club, the Elbow Room and The Moat
House these bands were to set the tone for the following decade.
Notable Birmingham bands of the 60's include: The Applejacks, Balls, Band
Of Joy, Black Sabbath, The Boulevards, The Brumbeats, Carter-Lewis And The
Southerners', The Chads, The Cheetahs, The Diplomats, Earth, Electric
Light Orchestra, The Fortunes (whose song "Caroline" was used as the
signature tune for the influential Pirate Radio station Radio Caroline),
Galliard, Gethsemane, Herbie's People, The Idle Race, The Ivy League,
Judas Priest, The King Bees, Locomotive, The Mayfair Set, Mike Sheridan
and The Nightriders, Moody Blues, The Moonrakers, The Move (whose "Flowers
in the Rain" was the first track played on Radio 1 when it began in 1967),
Penny Peeps?, The Rockin Berries, The Second City Sound, The Spencer Davis
Group, Tea & Symphony, Traffic, The Uglys, Velvett Fogg, Wizzard and The
Yamps.
Groups such as The Spencer Davis Group, Wizard, The Move, Black Sabbath,
Traffic (Steve Winwood later forming one third of supergroup Blind Faith),
E.L.O., and the Moody Blues later went on to achieve superstardom. |
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Birmingham is regarded by many as the birthplace of heavy metal
music. In the late 1960s Black Sabbath, The Move, Judas Priest
and Led Zeppelin (Robert Plant and John Bonham) cut their teeth
in the city's early bands such as the Band Of Joy, Balls and the
Rockin' Chevrolets. At this time America's Billboard magazine
declared Mothers in Erdington (a famous Rock venue), to be
"the number one rock venue in the world", later in an
interview with Fused magazine, John Peel also cited it as being
one of the "best nightclubs in Britain" of it's time.
Pink Floyd recorded much of "Ummagumma" at the venue
and The Who performed their musical hit "Tommy",
Traffic staged their debut gig there alongside early performances
from Black Sabbath.
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Judas Priest |
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During the 60's an American electronics company contracted
Birmingham-based tape recorder company, Bradmatic Ltd to help
develop and build the mellotron keyboard. The synth was one of
the first ever sample based keyboards and was used on famous
Beatles tracks such as "Strawberry Fields Forever" and
"Baby, You're A Rich Man".
Mike Pinder actually worked for
Streetly Electronics who made it before joining the Moodys and using it on
a number of sessions including "In search of the lost chord" (Other notable bands to use
the mellotron were the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd and the
Zombies). The keyboard is regarded as a major influence to the
many Prog Rock bands of the 60's and 70's with a unique flute
like sound. |

Mellotron
Photo
www.mellotron.com |
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Reggae.
Birmingham has one of the largest West Indian populations in the
UK and one of the largest Rasta populations in the world outside
of the West Indies. From this many talented musicians have
emerged such as mid 70's Roots Reggae band Steel Pulse whose
ground-breaking album "Handsworth Revolution" tackled
difficult subjects such as racism on Britain's streets. UB40
picked up the gauntlet in 1979 when they released their
"Signing Off" album with tracks such as
"King" and "One in ten", they were the first
mixed-race dub reggae band and later found commercial success.
Musical Youth formed in the early 80's out of early soundsystem
bands and also enjoyed much chart success. The 2 Tone scene
emanated from the West Midlands with bands such as The Beat, The
Specials and the Selecter who drew their influences from Mod,
Punk and Jamaican ska music. Artistes from the region include
Rasta MC Chesire Cat (who rapped on the Leftfield album
"Rhythm and Stealth".), Bitty Maclean, Pato Banton and
Dub Poet Benjamin Zephaniah. |

UB40's Recording studio in Digbeth |
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New Romantic & Indie.
In the 1980's supergroup Duran Duran began their careers at the
infamous Rum Runner nightclub on Broad Street, the venue played a
significant role in rock music in Brum. Dexys Midnight Runners,
GBH, Stephen "Tin Tin" Duffy and the The Bureau also
emanated from the city's music scene at this time. The late 80's
witnessed Napalm Death pioneer Grindcore music, it blended punk
and heavy metal. Grebo and Indie (sometimes refered to as
"Baggy" or "Madchester") also became popular
in the West Midlands with bands such as Pop Will Eat Itself,
Ned's Atomic Dustbin and The WonderStuff. The Charlatans,
Birdland, Dodgy, Denim, The Lilac Time, and Ocean Colour Scene
were other notable rock bands founded in the city and its
surrounding area in this period. |

Nick Rhodes of Duran Duran
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Electronic.
During the early eighties Birmingham and the Black Country
quickly adopted the Hip Hop and Graffiti Art scene that had
evolved out of 70's America. A pirate radio station called 'Fresh
F.M.' broadcast from the city around this time. Being one of
many, the station played hip hop, breakdance and Electro records.
A Birmingham Rap crew called Jump released two records, 'We Come
to Jam' and 'Feel It', as early as 1985 (one of the MC's rapped
on a breakfast show in 1980). Graffiti artist Goldie hailed from
nearby Wolverhampton and he combined efforts with other world
famous graffiti art "writers" to errect and carry out a
graffiti art battle on massive boards in the old Bullring, this
was filmed in Chanel 4's early eighties documentary
"Bombing" which heavily featured the regions Hip Hop
scene. Hip Hop and Acid Jazz nights have taken place in
Birmingham for many years and the most popular nights are now
Leftfoot and Substance which take place at the Custard Factory
and medicine bar in Digbeth.
Birmingham embraced Acid House and Rave music in the late 80's
with popular party's in venues such as the Digbeth Institute and
Coast to Coast. Supported by a plethora of local pirate radio
stations this scene later evolved into a Jungle and Drum 'n' Bass
underground with popular nights such as Quest and Amazon, The
Midland's Jungle clubs later suffered much negative press with
several shootings and a clampdown by West Midlands police.
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Apache
Indian:
MOBO Unsung, at The Academy
Photo by Pogus |
The 90's witnessed an explosion of House music nights supported
by local figures such as the late Tony De Vit, Steve Lawler,
Scott Bond, Phil Gifford, Jem Atkins and the Ryan brothers. Some
of the UK's most influential dance nights have since evolved such
as Miss Moneypenny's, Wobble, Fuel, Gods Kitchen, Gatecrasher
Club, Sundissential, Fun, Atomic Jam and the original C.R.E.A.M.
(Choose right easy and mellow). The city's cultural diversity
also contributed to the blend of bhangra and ragga pioneered by
Apache Indian in Handsworth.
Electronic and dance music continues to amplify with acts such as
Bentley Rhythm Ace, The Streets, Rockers Hi-Fi, The Editors,
Surgeon, Mistys Big Adventure, and Broadcast. Large alternative
electronic nights take place in the Custard Factory such as
Trigger and Earko with many pioneering new Dj's captivating
hundreds of revelers.
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Other Birmingham groups include
Neds Atomic Dustbin
The Wonderstuff
The Editors
Napalm Death
Sneaker Pimps |
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>>> Musicians.
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