| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
ChefMD® Healthy Recipe: Chili Chili Bang Bang: Poblano Salsa chefmd.com | Biff Mithoefer :: Yoga Profile at EverythingYoga.com everythingyoga.com | Snow - Still pow to be found. prohab.co.uk | Bang Fitness: Toronto Personal Fitness Training, Downtown Toronto Gym bangfitness.ca |
Biff Bang Pow! were an indie pop band from London, England, active between 1983 and 1991, centering around Creation Records boss Alan McGee.
[edit] FormationGlaswegian Alan McGee had previously been in the band Laughing Apple, who released 3 singles in 1981/82. After moving to London, McGee formed a new band, Biff Bang Pow!, taking their name from a song by one of his favourite bands, The Creation. The first release on Creation records, "'73 in '83" by The Legend! came with a flexi-disc featuring Laughing Apple's "Wouldn't You", a song that would later appear on the first Biff Bang Pow! album. The initial Biff Bang Pow! line-up was McGee on guitar and vocals, with Dick Green on guitar, Joe Foster on bass, and Ken Popple on drums, these recording the first 2 singles "50 Years of Fun" and "There Must Be A Better Life". [edit] New line-upDave Evans then replaced Foster (who went solo as Slaughter Joe), and guitarist/organist Andrew Innes (later to join Primal Scream) joined on a part-time basis. Debut album "Pass The Paintbrush...Honey" was released in early 1985, displaying a mixture of mod, psychedlia and new wave influences. 1986 saw arguably the band's strongest album "The Girl Who Runs The Beat Hotel", which expanded on the first album's psychedelic and sixties pop influences, and featured collaborations with artist/painter JC Brouchard. This album coincided with the peak of the first wave of indie pop and as this gave way to shoegazing and grunge, Creation Records also moved in that direction, with the label increasingly being associated with artists such as My Bloody Valentine and Ride. With Biff Bang Pow!, however, McGee continued with guitar pop, becoming increasingly melancholy with releases such as "Oblivion" (1987), "Love Is Forever" (1988), "Songs For The Sad Eyed Girl" (1990), and "Me" (1991), which proved to be the last album proper by the band. Two compilations, "L'Amour, Demure, Stenhousemuir" and "Debasement Tapes" were subsequently released. McGee's position as head of Creation Records perhaps meant that his band were never given a fair hearing by the music press, although they always maintained a loyal fanbase. [edit] Discography (all on Creation Records except where stated)(chart placings shown are from the UK Independent Chart)[1] [edit] Singles
[edit] Albums
[edit] References
| |||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |