The Bollweevils (indie band)

For the punk band of the same name, see The Bollweevils.

The Bollweevils were a British indie band formed in Sheffield, England, active between 1985 and 1993.

History

Although first formed in 1985, The Bollweevils did not come together properly as a live act until 1988. The first full line-up included Sarah Griffiths (vocals), Mark Johnson (lead guitar), Steve McKevitt (bass), Dave Lloyd (rhythm guitar), and Chris Coyle (drums).

From their first gig The Bollweevils received favourable reviews.[1] However, it was not until late in 1989 that the band signed a recording contract with the independent record label, Vinyl Solution. In March 1990, their first single was released on the Decoy label, the self produced and critically well-received[2][3][4] four track Talk To Me EP. ABC's Stephen Singleton agreed to help record the second single, but it was not finished until 1991 and neither the band nor the record company were happy with the results. The tracks were duly re-mixed in June with punk/dance producer Alan Scott, but the Life's A Scream EP was never released in that form.

In August 1991, the band added a second guitarist, Mark Shaw formerly of Circus Circus Circus, and Pete Darnborough (from Leeds techno-goths MDMA) took over on drums. Another EP was recorded in September with Jim Beattie (ex Primal Scream) as producer. "Mouth" was released in November. At the beginning of 1992 a final song, "Missing Out", was recorded for Vinyl Solution, but once again it was a single that was never released.

A Bollweevils compilation CD, Life's A Scream, was released in Japan in 1992, on the Toy's Factory label. It contained all the tracks from the first three recorded EPs.

The Bollweevils disbanded in 1993.

Post break-up

Discography

References

  1. "This is what electricity tastes like" - Paul Lester, Melody Maker, 30 June 1988
  2. "...perfumed music with grizzled undertones", Mick Mercer, Melody Maker, 17 March 1990
  3. "The juxtaposition of perfect pop voice with gleeful rawk bliss out is a finely balanced one...black bullets in a sherbet bag", Cathi Unsworth, Sounds, 14 April 1990
  4. " Talk To Me EP is a brittle, engaging piece of fizzing pop edged with some attractively poignant vocals", Steve Lamacq, NME, 5 May 1990

External links

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