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This Is Complete Trash CD Reviews

 

Vive Le Rock CD Review

VLR

First posted on March 12th 2012

Trash – This Is Complete Trash! (8/10) Spasms – Return of the Spud Gun Kids (7/10)

Only Fit For The Bin Records

A fan of obscure late 70s lost punk rock oddities? Two previously unacknowledged discoveries here via Bin Liner Records, each accompanied by arch sleevenotes that demonstrate the participants weren’t entirely blinded by ambition, nor have their memories been too cruelly scalded by regret. Naturally then, it’s going to be low-grade, clueless bedroom thrashing that was never released for a very good reason. Well, no. The Spasms disc, despite the graffiti’d brick wall cover, is far more expansive than you might imagine. There are evident post-punk influences (especially on ‘The Guilty Go Free’ and the excellent ‘The Stranger’), and some unexpected playfulness in terms of both lyrics and rhythm that place them, occasionally, somewhere between Squeeze and the Members. Trash are slightly rockier, absolutely in the best traditions of the New York Dolls, and more than competent at it. Their Polydor singles ‘Priorities’ and the Shel Talmy-produced ‘N-N-ervous’ are included, alongside an unreleased third; the genuinely enthralling ‘In On All The Secrets’.

Alex Ogg, written for Vive Le Rock magazine

First posted May 27th 2011

 

Record Collector CD Review

http://www.recordcollectormag.com/reviews/this-is-complete-trash

 Trash – This Is Complete Trash!

RC

Take no notice, they’re just being modest

Trash formed in October 1976 by students at the Food Technology College in St George’s Hill, Weybridge. As singer Simon Wright says in his sleevenotes, “The Food Technologists would have been a great name for a band,” but they went for Trash “partly because of the New York Dolls song, but possibly because we thought it would put us beyond further criticism.” How wrong they were.

Trash discovered punk when Wright and Jane Wimble, who shared lead vocals in the early days, caught the Pistols playing one of their infamous “unannounced” support slots at one of their college dances – and the die was cast. John Peel’s manager, Weybridge resident Clive Selwood, secured the band a deal with Polydor, and the label released Priorities in November 1977. N-N-E-R-V-O-U-S, produced by Shel Talmy, followed in June 1978, but when neither single sold (despite airplay from a “gerrymandered” John Peel), Polydor dropped them.

It was a shame, as Trash’s combination of punk, pub-rock and NY sleaze deserved a better crack of the whip. Rescued from the bin, this collects both singles, previously unreleased studio and live tracks, and a 1977 interview on Radio 210.

Only Fit For The Bin | OFFTB 013

Chronicle Sep9 1977

Hyped2Death CD Review

http://hyped2death.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=208

TRASH -This Is Complete Trash! CD (OFFTB 013)

H2D: Their classic first 45 (‘Priorities’), a less-impressive second, a fine, melodic, neverbeforereleased ’79 session, and some good-to-generic live tracks. None of it’s terrifically original, but who cares when the touchstones are the Heartbreakers, Saints, Birdmen, and various punky 60s sounds… 12 tracks and an informative 12-page booklet.

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Amazon User Reviews

http://www.amazon.co.uk/This-Complete-Trash/dp/B004JXMSLI

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Bucketfull Of Brains review

BoB

 

Trash In Print (Slight Return)

First posted on April 21 2014

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I popped into Record & Tape Exchange in Notting Hill Gate on Saturday afternoon (Record Store Day) and found a hardback book entitled ’77 – The Year of Punk & New Wave’ by Henrik Bech Poulsen (Helter Skelter, 2005). It is a ludicrously detailed look at the music of 1977 and devotes half a page to Trash, and here it is:

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Trash and Shel Talmy

First posted on May 25 2017

Ahead of the new Shel Talmy retrospective  Record Collector magazine ran a retrospective on his productions through the years. Bizarrely whilst including Talmy’s work with the Who, the Kinks and David Bowie they missed out his work with Trash! A letter has now been published in the June edition of Record Collector to redress the balance. Here it is:

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The Rolling Stones – Strolling On The Boulevards of Paris

The Rolling Stones, U Arena, Paris

Wednesday 25th October

View: Down the front in the Pit on Ronnie’s side (but close enough to see the flamingo pattern on Keith’s shirt…)

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This brand new 40,000 capacity arena in central Paris made a fitting setting for the three final gigs of the Stones No Filter European tour. Sympathy For The Devil was an innovative opener and the two blues songs Just Your Fool and Ride’ Em On Down provided an early opportunity for Mick Jagger to demonstrate his harmonica prowess. A faultless She’s A Rainbow – tonight’s web choice – belied its 50 years. Encore Gimme Shelter was a showcase for Sasha Allen, her duet with Jagger featuring less vocal histrionics than was the case with latter-day Lisa Fischer.

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The powerhouse at the centre of tonight’s rousing performance was the ever-crisp Charlie Watts on drums and effervescent Ronnie Wood on guitars. Jagger was in a mischievous mood, telling jokes about Theresa May and ending a stunning Street Fighting Man by playing Charlie’s cymbals. Guitarist Keith Richards nonchalantly smoked a joint before a moving Slipping Away featured the evocative line “Oh it’s just another show…” Not for tonight’s highly enthused and very multinational crowd. So until next year…

Review written for Record Collector Magazine

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Thanks to Laura Alberti for the photographs

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John The Finn

From Mick Brophy

Hi Simon,

You’ve done a great job on the MySpace site!

I think Keith’s wrong and John the Finn did not commit suicide, rather he was pushed under a train at Birmingham New Street.

When The Cheaters were about to do our first tour of Scandinavia, we though John, with all his languages, and being a seasoned crew member for all sorts of 70’s bands behind the iron curtain, would be perfect. I contacted Brian Devoile, who then tried to contact John for me. He was put through to the Police and given the 3rd degree, John having just died. Brian was seriously shaken about this – not just John’s death but the manner in which he was quizzed.

OK, maybe suicide. However John had friends in Turku, Finland, a band call The Fabrics who we tried to help out. The Cheaters did our first gig of the Finnish tour at Turku and the Fabrics came to say thanks. They told us his body had been returned to Turku for burial and expressed utter astonishment that we did not know of his clandestine political activities. Quote “Didn’t you know (impleid: he was a spy)”?

As soon as they said this you re-run what you know about the guy. Trash backdrop – revolutionary art – picked by John. The guy had no material needs whatsoever (he lived in our cellar for God’s sake). Brilliant linguist – fluent in many East Bloc languages. Went from East to West at random in vans full of difficult to search band and PA gear. And not forgetting Finland was THE cross-roads for spys of both sides during the cold war – the government ran a tightrope of pleasing both Russia and the West.

My guess – he was a courier. But for who?

Can anyone offer any further information ?

Cheers

Mick

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Never Made It!

Never Made It

Never Made It (NMI) was the brainchild of Clare Evans, who late in 2004 put up notices in record shops reading ”Artist seeks photos / videos / memorabilia for exhibition tribute to bands that never made it.”

Her aim was to ‘put the underdogs of the music industry in the limelight and celebrate all that was not to be’. Over a drink in Highgate’s Boogaloo bar it was quickly decided that Trash met Clare’s criteria and so Simon excavated as many photos and bits of memorabilia as he could find.

The next step was to make a documentary of three of the least successful bands in the exhibition – The Secrets, The Trespassers and Trash. Accordingly Simon and Mick were interviewed on camera by Clare at Simon’s office in early 2005.

On May 2nd 2005 the Notting Hill Arts Club staged the opening night of Clare’s Never Made It Exhibition. Photos and memorabilia were displayed throughout the club. Beautifully made badges and fanzines were on sale. Clare showed the 18-minute Never Made It documentary for the first time, to a great reaction from those present.

Coincidentally Nude magazine has run a series of features on unsuccessful bands titled “Beautiful Losers’, with issue 8 (Spring 2006) featuring Trash and Never Made It (www.nudemagazine.co.uk)

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Sleevenotes to “This Is Complete Trash” CD

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Tracks

In On All The Secrets (Trash)

What Do You Think About That? (Trash)

Previously unreleased. Produced by Nigel Gray. Recorded at Surrey Sounds Studios on March 11th 1979.

Simon Wright (lead vocals), Mick Brophy (rhythm guitar, harmonica, vocals), Neil Cossar (lead guitar), Keith Steptoe (bass, vocals), Simon Butler-Smith (drums)

Nervous

N-N-E-R-V-O-U-S (Trash)

Page 3 (Dumb Blondes) (Trash)

Publishing: Sara Bee Music Ltd

Released by Polydor as a single 2059 013 on June 2nd 1978.

Produced by Shel Talmy. Recorded at Roundhouse Studios, Camden on February 1st 1978.

Simon Wright (lead vocals), Mick Brophy (guitars, harmonica, vocals), Keith Steptoe (bass, vocals), Simon Butler-Smith (drums).

Priorities

Priorities (Trash)

Look (Trash)

Nnervous (Trash)

Publishing: Sara Bee Music Ltd

Priorities and Look Released by Polydor as a single 2058 939 in October 1977. Nnervous is a previously unreleased version.

Produced by Trash & Clive Selwood. Recorded at The Old Smithy, Worcester in September 1977.

Simon Wright (lead vocals), Mick Brophy (guitars, harmonica, vocals), Keith Steptoe (bass, vocals), Brian Devoil (drums)

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Hippy Hippy Shake (Chan Romero, published by Ardmore and Beechwood)

96 Tears (Rudi Martinez, published by Essex Music International)

Louie Louie (Richard Berry, published by Peter Maurice Music)

Previously unreleased.

Simon Wright (lead vocals), Mick Brophy (guitars, vocals), Keith Steptoe (bass, vocals), Steve Pearce (drums)

Demos recorded ‘live’ by Duncan, October 1976, the Assembly Hall, National College of Food Technology, Weybridge, Surrey.

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Menace (Trash)

Previously unreleased. Recorded live at Bones Club, Reading on February 15th 1978

Simon Wright (lead vocals), Mick Brophy (guitar, vocals), Keith Steptoe (bass), Simon Butler-Smith (drums)

Bonus Track: Radio 210 Interview – Mick Brophy and Tony Bellekom, Reading, Berkshire 1977

All tracks digitally remastered by Nick Duckett of Rhythm And Blues Records (www.rhythmandbluesrecords.co.uk).

Single tracks transferred from vinyl by James Perrett (www.jrpmusic.net )

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About these tracks

After 33 years I am amazed we could find a decent selection of Trash tracks in reasonable quality, and delighted that Only Fit For The Bin wanted to release the results. It is a short, sharp selection – we spared you the dodgy demos, sluggish slowies and creaky covers.

In retrospect I am impressed by how much we managed to achieve using very limited raw materials. We were young, energetic and unsophisticated and we turned these limitations into virtues. We got better as we played more gigs and did more recording, to the point where my favourite tracks are the final ones we recorded together.

Unlike most bands who formed in 1976 we were big fans of pre-punk rock’n’roll – listen hard and you’ll hear riffs from Heaven And Hell (the Who) and Happy (the Rolling Stones), the one-note guitar solo from the Feelgoods’ I’m A Hog For You Baby plus lyrical references to the Stooges and John Otway & Wild Willy Barrett. Our version of 96 Tears owed little to ? and the Mysterions but a great deal to live performances by Eddie and the Hot Rods. We used to medley it with our spirited rendition of Rescue Me but sadly I have been unable to find a listenable version of the latter in the pile of crappy cassettes that have provided the source material for this compilation.

Maybe next time? No – This Is Complete Trash!

 

Simon Wright, London, August 2010

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Thank you Jane Wimble, Clive Selwood, Nick Duckett, Marie-Clare Gaulthier, John The Finn, Geoff Horne, Jon Parry, Pete Hawkins, Clare Evans, Stewart Home, Rich Linton and anyone who had the good taste to see us live back in the day.

Keep up with Hot Trash News at http://www.myspace.com/trashpunk

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Thanks Stewart!

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This is what renowned cultural commentator Stewart Homes had to say about our second single on his website:

“N-E-R-V-O-U-S” by Trash. Another A1 production job, this time by legendary American maverick Shel Talmy, the man behind the early Kinks and Who sound. This is just fabulous, power pop doesn’t get any better! There were a lot of great British pop records that came out in the late-seventies and didn’t make the charts, and I particularly love this one.”

(www.stewarthomesociety.org/pol/amis.htm)

Singing

The Birth of Trash!

SimonJane+Mick

This is an extract from a letter I sent to Jane Wimble who was at the time living in Eastbourne. The letter is handwritten on lurid pink paper and also features an ecstatic review of the Stones at Knebworth Festival, thus dating it to late August 1976

“Mick and I have decided to form a band – or rather that I should replace Steve Smith in Crippen, making the band Mick, Keith and Steve Pearce – they don’t know yet.

We decided what songs we’re going to do – playlist as follows:

Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue (Ramones)

Beat On A Brat (Ramones)

Get Down & Get With It (Slade)

Substitute (Pistols/Who)

One Of The Boys (Mott The Hoople)

Rock & Roll Queen (Mott The Hoople)

Home (Roy Harper)

I’m to be vocalist since I’ve got the leather jacket. The fact that I can’t sing is immaterial. Likely name for this promising combo is The Pets.”

Needless to say we played none of these songs and were never called the Pets but this did become the first line-up of Trash to which Jane was added as co-vocalist. My thanks to her for hanging onto this letter for 31 years and through numerous house moves.

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The Trash Story 1976 – 1979

Growing up in suburbia during the mid-1970s was Dull, leavened by occasional flashes of excitement – Roxy Music at Guildford Civic, the Pink Fairies at Epsom Baths. So going to college seemed a really good idea, particularly when I realised our tiny Food Technology college in the middle of super-snotty St Georges Hill, Weybridge was full of people who were equally nuts about music. By October 1976 rehearsals were underway in the college hall: Mick Brophy (guitar, harmonica, backing vocals), Keith Steptoe (bass), Steve Pearce (drums) and co-lead singers Simon Wright and Jane Wimble. The Food Technologists would have been a great name for a band but instead we went for Trash, partly because of the New York Dolls song but possibly because we thought it would put us beyond further criticism (how wrong we were).

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None of us had been in a band before but by pooling our record collections we found songs simple enough to attempt, using the approach that 3 chords = good, 4 chords = jazz. This theory received massive confirmation when an unbooked Sex Pistols played support at one of our college dances. Jane and I followed them to the 100 Club Punk Festival and the Screen on The Green allnighter, hugely impressed by their back-to-basics approach. The Jam at the Red Cow, Elvis Costello at the Nashville, Buzzcocks at the 100 Club – we sucked it all in greedily. Mick began writing songs, and we started taking Trash more seriously. Jane bailed out at this point so by early 1977 we were a 4 piece. And then we were offered a record contract. It was the post-Pistols feeding frenzy and we looked the part – short hair, fast songs, little discernible talent. Clive Selwood – ex-head of Elektra UK and John Peel’s manager – was a fellow Weybridge resident. His daughter Bee had seen us terrorising some local hop and Clive wanted us sign to his production company Sara Bee. Clearly we needed experienced management, but we went for fellow-Food Tech Tony Bellekom. The prospect of full-time rock stardom was too much for Steve, so Brian Devoil (a mate of Tony’s) was brought in to replace him. Technically Brian was an improvement –Steve’s drum rolls had an exciting uncertainty to them – but Brian’s heart was not really in our hard, fast and simple music.

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A brace of gigs at the Nashville supporting 999 failed to flush out any better offers and we signed to Polydor via Sara Bee in August 1977. This coincided with a move to a communal house in Reading, near the free rehearsal facilities and ‘plus support’ possibilities offered by the University where Tony had Connections. Having either left or been thrown out of college we were free to gig more regularly whilst we worked on the all-important first single. Recorded at the Old Smithy, Worcester in September 1977 and produced by no-one in particular ‘Priorities’ escaped from Polydor in November 1977. Polydor’s art department had come up with the infamous ‘Porky And The Wingnuts’ front sleeve and someone had sped up the master-tape to make us sound more exciting. Good reviews from Record Mirror and Sounds plus a couple of plays from a gerrymandered John Peel were not enough to generate sales.

We retired to lick our wounds to a second, sleazier communal house in Reading. Located in Zinzan Street the intention may have been a carefree Monkees-like existence but the only furry connection was the rats that lived in the front room (with the slugs). Unsurprisingly Zinzan Street was demolished when we left. Living on the governments Musician Support Fund (ie signing on) left Mick time to write his magnum-opus, a Townshend-style rock opera called ‘Carrots’ which rarely emerged from the rehearsal room. We played gigs at Reading clubs like Bones – for some reason always supporting the Lurkers – before venturing further afield to High Wycombe (with Wire, who were startling) and even as far as Sheffield Poly where we were videoed by the Fine Arts Department – anyone got a copy?

A key feature of our live act was Marie-Clare, off-on paramour of Mick and full-time agent provocateur. Dancing in front of the stage and always wearing less than anyone else she proved a big draw in her own right. Marie-Clare was totally convinced of our talent – more so than us – and even edited the Trash fanzine ‘In On All the Secrets’, named after one of Mick’s catchier compositions and mailed to the entire Trash fan club every month.

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Brian left to go prog with Twelth Night, with whom he had some success. An advertisement in Melody Maker found Simon Butler-Smith, the son of a vicar in nearby Rotherfield Peppard. Not only was he a fantastic Keith Moon style drummer but we could practice at the Rectory and he had an attractive sister. His first gig was January 25th 1978. Our friend Nick Duckett reviewed us playing at a party in his garage, upgraded the venue to The Garage and sent it in as a review to the NME who published it in February 1978 – our first and last press. Nick concluded “if the band are able to overcome the obstacle of the fact that they seem to have no readily marketable image at present, they could well go far.” We took Nick’s words to heart and started appearing on stage wearing all white clothing and using only white light whilst performing in front of a backdrop based on an 1920 illustration by Lissitzky ‘Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge’. The backdrop was painted by roadie John The Finn, later to disappear in mysterious circumstances amidst rumours he was working for the CIA.

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There was much excitement at Trash Mansions in February 1978 when we received a telegram from Clive saying we were booked into posh Roundhouse Studios…with Shel Talmy producing. That’s the same Shel Talmy who had produced all the Who and Kinks singles in our battered record boxes. Mick took up a rough demo of our intended next single N-N-E-R-V-O-U-S and Talmy tore it to bits, re-arranging it to bring out the hooks and generally sprinkling some fairy dust over the song. This time we did the artwork ourselves , using the Lissitzky backdrop and contorting ourselves to fit it. However even Shel Talmy could not prevent the single vanishing without trace on release in June 1978. Polydor didn’t pick up their options so that was the end of Trash.

Or was it? I read in NME that the Who were looking for a band to play in the film Quadrophenia and sent in a cassette of the four Polydor recordings, renaming us The Dudes for the occasion. On September 25th 1978 we played three numbers in front of Roger Daltrey and John Entwistle in the Electric Ballroom in Camden High Street. We lost out to Crosscut Saw, despite including our most mod-dy cover (Fontella Bass’ Rescue Me, once a showcase for Jane Wimble). However we did get a note from Pete Townshend where he described N-N-E-R-V-O-U-S as ‘bloody great’.

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We gave it one last go. My parents lived near Surrey Sound Studios in Leatherhead, the studio where Nigel Gray had recorded all the early Police hits. In March 1979 I somehow blagged some free studio time. Mick was by now living in Manchester where he had formed a new band called the Cheaters, featuring demon lead guitarist Neil Cossar. Neil and his Dad-made amp accompanied Mick down the M6, thus expanding Trash to a five-piece for one night only. We rehearsed (or possibly just drank) at the Food Tech college in Weybridge where it all had began before recording two tracks ‘In On All The Secrets’ and ‘What Do You Think About That?’ in the middle of the night. I thought they were marvellous, the best stuff we’d ever recorded but the studio saw no future in them.

And then we were done.

Simon Wright

October 2007