BRIEF
BIOGRAPHY
Sham 69 is an English
punk rock band, originally from Hersham, Surrey, and was a huge musical
and lyrical influence on the Oi! and streetpunk genres of the 1970's.
The band allegedly derived their name from a piece of football-related
graffiti that singer Jimmy Pursey had seen on a wall that originally said
Hersham '69 (the Her part was worn out).
Early history
The November 12, 1976 issue of NME notes that Sham 69 was rehearsing in
1976, although only Pursey would remain from this early lineup twelve
months later. Sham 69 lacked the art school background of many British
punk bands of the time, and brought in football chant backup vocals and
a sort of inarticulate political populism. The band had a large skinhead
following (left wing, right wing and non-political), which helped set
the tone for the Oi! movement. Their concerts were notoriously plagued
by violence, and the band ceased live performances after a 1978 concert
at Middlesex Polytechnic was broken up by National Front-supporting white
power skinheads fighting and rushing the stage.
Sham 69 released their first single, "Ulster", on Step Forward Records
in August 1977, and its success in the independent charts prompted Polydor
Records to sign the band. Their major label debut was "Borstal Breakout"
in January 1978, followed by UK singles chart success with "Angels With
Dirty Faces" (reaching number 19 in May 1978) and "If The Kids Are United"
(number 9 in July 1978). They were taken from the group's debut album,
Tell Us the Truth, a mixture of live and studio recordings. The group
had further chart success with "Hurry Up Harry" (number 10 in October
1978), which came from their second LP and first full studio album, That's
Life. The band's popularity was enhanced by their performances on Top
Of The Pops.
They eventually started to move away from punk rock, to embrace a sound
heavily influenced by classic British rock bands such as Mott the Hoople,
The Who and The Faces. This was demonstrated by their third album, The
Adventures of the Hersham Boys.
Sham 69 originally broke up after their fourth album, and Pursey moved
in a heavy metal direction after working with the remaining members of
the Sex Pistols for a short time, under the name Sham Pistols. Dave Treganna
joined the 1980s glam punk/goth band The Lords of the New Church, with
Stiv Bators of The Dead Boys and Brian James of The Damned. In 1981, Pursey
collaborated with Peter Gabriel on the single "Animals Have More Fun"
which was commercially unsuccessful.
Later history (1987 onwards)
Pursey resurrected Sham 69 in 1987 with a different lineup. "If The Kids
Are United" was used in a McDonald's advertising campaign, long after
the rights to the band's songs had been sold. By that time, Pursey was
a vegetarian, and he appeared in the British media condemning the use
of his song by what he considered a multinational abuser of animals and
humans.
The band gained media attention when "If The Kids Are United" was played
during UK Prime Minister Tony Blair's entrance at the 2005 Labour Party
Conference. As a result of this, the band was invited onto BBC TV's flagship
current affairs programme, 'Newsnight' to sing a version of the song.
Pursey sang altered lyrics, including "Mr. Blair / We know you care /
So bring them home / Don't leave them there", referring to the troops
remaining in Iraq after the 2003 invasion.
In 2006, Virgin Radio listeners voted overwhelmingly for the band to record
a song to support the England national football team in the FIFA World
Cup. The song was based on the Sham 69 hit "Hurry Up Harry", with the
lyrics "We're going down the pub", changed to "We're going to win the
cup!" The resulting single, "Hurry Up England" reached number 10 in the
UK Top 40, becoming the band's first such hit for over 26 years.
In late 2006 the band, after much deliberation, parted company with Jimmy
Pursey for reasons too complex to explain here. The task of original guitarist/songwriter
Dave Parsons and longest serving drummer at 22 years Ian Whitewood was
to find a strong and forceful singer. Then along came Tim V a 'cockney'
growler who is from the back streets of Londons's Eastend. Tim who has
been on the scene since the start has no truck with half measures and
gives 110%. Now on Bass guitar is Rob Jefferson a exemplary powerhouse
on the Bass guitar which reinforces that strong sham sound. The band set
about making a powerful action by playing various festivals across Europe
playing alongside such acts as MOTORHEAD and holding their own. The band
then went on to record their first album in over 8 years to much great
acclaim both in America and the USA. The band also added to gig history
by doing more shows in 2007 than they ever did in 15 years and as such
they covered virtually half the globe taking in Japan/USA/Europe. The
future looks good for this line up of SHAM 69 and as all things change
this SHAM 69 is not for turning!!!!!
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