Home / Tag Archives: The Only Ones

Tag Archives: The Only Ones

The Only Ones

Longview, Texas garage area combo the Only Types was formed in mid-1965 by vocalist/bassist Jim Axberg, his sibling drummer John, and guitarists Steve Thornton and Randy Clendenen. Previously dubbed “the Proportions,” the group performed only a small number of gigs before Clendenen exited to create the Noticed, famed because of …

Read More »

The Lines

British post-punk band the Lines 1st documented in 1977 and released their last materials in 1983, quietly departing a set of albums — Therapy (Oct 1981) and Ultramarine (March 1983) — and a small number of singles and EPs within their wake. Pretty indifferent towards the press, associated with a …

Read More »

999

Among the longest-lived sets of the punk period, 999 formed in London in Dec 1976. Led by vocalist/guitarist Nick Money, a onetime college student in the Canterbury University of Art beneath the tutelage of Ian Dury and a previous person in the pub rock and roll units Kilburn as well …

Read More »

Fingerprintz

Now unfortunately relegated to footnote position, England’s Fingerprintz were mostly of the bands that lent trustworthiness towards the marketing-inspired expression “fresh wave.” Produced by Scottish-born vocalist/guitarist Jimmie O’Neill in 1978, the ‘Printz slowed up punk’s careening electric guitar rock, adding smart, rhythmic twists and transforms, and providing up deftly created …

Read More »

The Auteurs

Once the Auteurs released their debut album in 1993, the British press linked them with the massively popular Suede within a “glam revival.” As the music group could blast out guitar-drenched rockers like Suede, the Auteurs found life if they drew through the quiet aspect of such distinctively British guitar …

Read More »

The Adverts

Making use of their raw, enthusiastic immaturity, the Adverts were a bright, though short-lived, light from the punk era, distinguished by the actual fact that their bassist, Gaye Advert, was among the first female stars of punk rock and roll. Once they (hardly) learned one chord, the Adverts started playing …

Read More »

Black Tie Revue

Produced in 2003 by Pittsburgh natives and friends Anthony Badamo and Ian Glinka, Dark Tie Revue acquired a number of lineup shifts (especially in the drumming department, where they noticed a minimum of five different players before they released their initial EP), although core lineup — singer/guitarist Badamo, bassist Matthew …

Read More »

The Vibrators

Among punk rock’s longest working rings, the Vibrators emerged from the united kingdom punk picture in 1976 and quickly found out themselves posting the stage with such well known acts because the Sex Pistols. Their preliminary releases had been minor strikes in England, as well as the music group could …

Read More »

The Only Ones

Led with the raffish and slightly scuzzy romance-obsessed Peter Perrett, the only real Ones were among the punk era’s most underrated rings. Much less confrontational because the Sex Pistols, simply because politically indulgent because the Clash, or simply because stripped-down because the Ramones, the only real Ones performed not-so-fast guitar …

Read More »

The Rezillos

Although frequently aligned using the punk motion, the Rezillos’ (later on referred to as the Revillos) irreverent glam rock image and affection for campy girl group iconography arranged them distinctly aside from their peers. Created in 1976 in Edinburgh, Scotland, the group was a liquid and highly casual collective focused …

Read More »