Английская Википедия:Cockney Rejects
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:More citations needed Шаблон:Infobox musical artist
Cockney Rejects are an English punk rock band that formed in the East End of London in 1978.[1] Their 1980 song "Oi, Oi, Oi" was the inspiration for the name of the Oi! music genre.[2][3] The band members are supporters of West Ham United, and pay tribute to the club with their hit cover version of "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles", a song traditionally sung by West Ham supporters.[4]
Career
Cockney Rejects were formed in 1978 by brothers Jeff and Micky Geggus, with their brother-in-law Chris Murrell on bass and Paul Harvey on drums. Their first demo, "Flares n' Slippers", caught the attention of Small Wonder Records owner Pete Stennett, who introduced the band to Bob Sergeant. With Sergeant, they recorded their single "Flares n' Slippers", which sold out its first pressing. Murrell and Harvey were then replaced by Vince Riordan on bass and Andy Scott on drums, from fellow East End London band, The Tickets. This became known as Cockney Rejects' classic lineup, and its debut at the Bridge House in Canning Town in June 1979 is considered a turning point for the band. In September of that same year, the band signed with EMI and released their album Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 in February 1980.[5]<Шаблон:Citation needed
Their biggest hit single in the United Kingdom, 1980's "The Greatest Cockney Rip-Off", was a parody of Sham 69's song "Hersham Boys".[5] Other Cockney Rejects songs were less commercial, partly because they tended to be about hard-edged topics such as street fighting or football hooliganism. Other singles to appear in the UK were "Bad Man," "We Can Do Anything," "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles " and "We Are the Firm" — all from 1980.[6]
The violence depicted in their lyrics was often mirrored at their concerts, and the band members often fought to defend themselves (often from supporters of opposing football teams) or to split up conflicts between audience members.[7] Jeff and Mick Geggus had both been amateur youth boxers, and had fought at national level. Bass player Vince Riordan's uncle was Jack "The Hat" McVitie, a Cockney gangster who was murdered by Reggie Kray.[8][9]
Cockney Rejects expressed contempt for all politicians in their lyrics, and they rejected media claims that they had a British Movement following, or that the band members supported the views of that far right group.[5] In their first Sounds interview, they mockingly referred to the British Movement as the "German Movement" and stated that many of their heroes were black boxers.[2] Jeff Geggus' autobiography Cockney Reject describes an incident in which the band members and their supporters had a massive fight against British Movement members at one of Cockney Rejects' early concerts.[7]
EMI records released a definitive Rejects retrospective on 29 August 2011. Called Join the Rejects, the Zonophone years '79-'81, it was a three-disc collection of all their EMI recordings including all the Peel sessions and rare demos from the day. Also included was a colour booklet with a blow-by-blow account of the stories behind the music by Micky Geggus.
The Rejects movie East End Babylon and an album of the same name were released in 2013.
Tony Van Frater died in October 2015 from a heart attack at the age of 51.[10]
In February 2016, it was announced that former Cockney Reject bass player Vince Riordan had re-joined the band again.
The group were slated to perform their first Australian shows in February 2019, however a family emergency necessitated the postponement of the concerts to July. The concerts were later rescheduled to October and went ahead that month to critical acclaim.
Longtime drummer Andrew Laing died on 3 April 2023.[11]
Members
- Current members
- Jeff Geggus (Stinky Turner) – vocals (1978–present)
- Mick Geggus – guitar (1978–present)
- Vince Riordan – bass (1979–1983, 1987–1991, 2015–present)
- Joe Perry Sansome – drums (2017–2024)
- Former members
- Chris Murrell – bass (1978–1979)
- Paul Harvey – drums (1978–1979)
- Andy Scott – drums (1979–1980)
- Nigel Woof – drums (1980)
- Keith Warrington – drums (1980–1985, 1987–1991)
- Ian Campbell – bass (1983–1985)
- Tony Van Frater – bass (1999–2015; died 2015)
- Andrew Laing – drums (1999–2000, 2007–2017; died 2023)
- Les Cobb – drums (2000–2007)
Timeline
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bar:Jeff text:"Jeff Geggus" bar:Mick text:"Mick Geggus"
bar:Chris text:"Chris Murrell" bar:Vince text:"Vince Riordan" bar:Ian text:"Ian Campbell" bar:Tony text:"Tony Van Frater"
bar:Paul text:"Paul Harvey" bar:Andy text:"Andy Scott" bar:Nigel text:"Nigel Woolf" bar:Keith text:"Keith Warrington"
bar:Andrew text:"Andrew Laing" bar:Les text:"Les Cobb" bar:Joe text:"Joe Perry Sansome"
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width:11 bar:Jeff from:start till:01/11/1985 color:Vocal bar:Jeff from:01/05/1987 till:01/05/1991 color:Vocal bar:Jeff from:01/02/1999 till:end color:Vocal bar:Mick from:start till:01/11/1985 color:Guitar bar:Mick from:01/05/1987 till:01/05/1991 color:Guitar bar:Mick from:01/02/1999 till:end color:Guitar bar:Chris from:start till:01/03/1979 color:Bass bar:Vince from:01/03/1979 till:01/10/1983 color:Bass bar:Vince from:01/05/1987 till:01/05/1991 color:Bass bar:Ian from:01/10/1983 till:01/11/1985 color:Bass bar:Tony from:01/02/1999 till:29/10/2015 color:Bass bar:Vince from:30/10/2015 till:end color:Bass bar:Paul from:start till:01/03/1979 color:Drums bar:Andy from:01/03/1979 till:20/05/1980 color:Drums bar:Nigel from:20/05/1980 till:30/11/1980 color:Drums bar:Keith from:01/12/1980 till:01/11/1985 color:Drums bar:Keith from:01/05/1987 till:01/05/1991 color:Drums bar:Andrew from:01/02/1999 till:01/10/2000 color:Drums bar:Andrew from:01/02/2007 till:01/02/2017 color:Drums bar:Les from:01/10/2000 till:01/02/2007 color:Drums bar:Joe from:01/02/2017 till:end color:Drums
</timeline>
Discography
Albums
- Greatest Hits Vol. 1 (EMI, 1980)
- Greatest Hits Vol. II (EMI, 1980)
- The Power and the Glory (EMI, 1981)
- The Wild Ones (A.K.A. Records, 1982)
- Quiet Storm (Heavy Metal Records, 1984)
- Lethal (Neat Records, 1990)
- Out of the Gutter (Captain Oi Records, 2002)
- Unforgiven (G&R Records, 2007)
- East End Babylon (Cadiz Music, 2012)[12]
- Power Grab (Cadiz Music, 2022)
EPs and singles
- "Flares & Slippers" (7-inch, EP) (Small Wonder, 1979)
- "I'm Not a Fool" (7-inch single) (EMI, 1979) UK No. 65
- "Bad Man" (7-inch) (EMI, 1980) UK No. 65
- "The Greatest Cockney Rip Off" (7-inch. Limited Edition in Yellow Vinyl) (EMI/Zonophone, 1980) UK No. 21
- "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" (7-inch) (EMI/Zonophone, 1980) UK No. 35
- "We Can Do Anything" (7-inch) (EMI/Zonophone, 1980) UK No. 65
- "We Are the Firm" (7-inch) (EMI/Zonophone, 1980) UK No. 54
- "Easy Life" (7-inch, Live EP) (EMI/Zonophone, 1981)
- "On the Streets Again" (7-inch) (EMI/Zonophone, 1981)
- "Till the End of the Day" (7-inch) (AKA 1982)
- "Back to the Start" (7-inch) (Heavy Metal Records, 1984)[6]
- "It's Gonna Kick Off!" (7-inch, EP) (Cadiz Music, 2016)
- "Goodbye Upton Park" (7-inch) (Cadiz Music,2016)Шаблон:Citation needed
Compilation and live albums
- Greatest Hits Vol. 3 (Live & Loud) (1981)
- Unheard Rejects (1985 - collection of demo tracks recorded between 1979 and 1981)
- We Are The Firm (1986)
- The Best Of The Cockney Rejects (1993)
- The Punk Singles Collection (Dojo, 1997)
- Oi! Oi! Oi! (Castle, 1997)
- Greatest Hits Volume 4: Here They Come Again (Rhythm Vicar, 2000 - reissued as Back on the Street - Victory Records, 2000)
- Join the Rejects, the Zonophone years '79-'81 (EMI, )
Appearances
- Oi! The Album (1980)
- Total Noise (7-inch EP - 1983 - as Dead Generation)
- Lords Of Oi! (Dressed to Kill, 1997)
- Addicted to Oi! (2001)
References
External links
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