I'm going on vacation, so I'm going to take a break for a little while. So I will leave you with this great lp from the Now. They rerecorded all their old tracks and I must say they sound great. I left a link at the bottom so that you can go but this lp. Buy it while you still can. The Now, Peterborough's first punk rock band, formed late in 1976. Founded by Mike McGuire and Steve Rolls. Mike and Steve were at the time performing with The Faderz, who had only existed for a few months, before they had hooked into the London Punk scene in 1976. Joe MacColl and Paul Wicks (aka The Dangerous Dip or occasionally The Mysterious Dip) were recruited immediately to form The Now. Early gigs were self organised affairs, notably at the Peterborough Marcus Garvey Club. A community club, mainly catering for the city's West Indian community. Such gigs were usually with local reggae artists such as The Legions, any punk band who would dare come out of London (or other major cities), such as 999, The Killjoys and Eater, as well as new local punk bands such as Heavy Manners. This was a great challenge for The Now since putting Punk Rock into an East Anglian provincial environment (where there already existed a time warp sensibility), caused a lot of friction at that time. During this time The Dangerous Dip was replaced on the bass guitar by Faz Farrow. The Now were managed by Allen Adams who later went on to form the band The Destructors and later Destructors 666.The Now were far removed from what is traditionally known as 123 ‘Punk’ thrash. With intelligent songs, political lyrics and a real sense of small town frustration and anger The Now were unique. This was real urban punk rock, devoid of big city trends, tolerance and fashion. The Now played many gigs, and could often be found playing those early, then famous, London venues such as Roxy Club and The Vortex clubs in London.
The Now released two singles ‘Development Corporations’ / 'Why' on Ultimate Records in November 1977 and a deal with Lee Wood's Raw Records signed in mid-'78 produced two songs, 'Into The 80's' and 9 'O' Clock (actually recorded for Raw in late '77) which were re-mixed and scheduled for March 23rd release. This 7" single was delayed due to economic problems which would soon force the Cambridge based label to close down. When it eventually emerged on November 30, only 800 copies were pressed, with at least half of these being destroyed in a fire at Raw's warehouse. Both singles were, in the main, well received. The first single, Development Corporations, reached number 4 in the Sounds alternative chart and number 2 in the Time Out chart in 1977.
Around this time, The Now, went their own ways through mutual consent. In 2002 there was a great deal of interest around the original singles, particularly in Europe. As a result, a German record company, Last Years Youth, duly re-released both singles, containing a couple of previously unreleased versions of the original songs. It was a logical progression (albeit unusual) to use this exposure as an opportunity to record and release a definitive version of all of the early songs written by The Now. Fuzztone Fizzadelic was recorded during 2004 by the four original members of The Now, representing their original set list, as performed in 1977. In true punk rock style The Now rehearsed for 3 hours and had just 2 (short) days in the studio for recording and mixing. 27 years between writing and recording must be some sort of record. Fuzztone Fizzadelic was released in 2005
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REFERENCES - WIKIPEDIA http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Now THE NOWS WEBSITE http://www.the-now.com/public_html/The%20New%20Album.html
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DAMAGED GOODS RECORDS 2005
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***DOWNLOAD***

16 comments:
thanks for youre postings Frank, nice holiday to you
A great album, I bought this as soon as it came out and haven't stopped playing it. Try it and buy it.
Thanks, have a nice break. I have enjoyed you posts.
hey, i need some help if u dont mind
id like to know the name of this band an d the title, if posible
ill try with u and other blogs about more or less power pop. this is a, i suppose, 1980 ish song, possibly american (i really dont know)
maybe they are well known and i´m just an ignorant (i dont think they are very 'obscure'). maybe it´s not the kind you like (certainly is not punk), if u dont like sorry! :) maybe you just heard it in a comp...
http://rapidshare.com/files/248586815/song.rar (1.25 MB)
thanks and regards
HI ANGEL, I LISTENED TO YOUR SONG AND I THINK IF I REMEMBER RIGHT THAT IT'S A BAND CALLED PIPER, THAT WAS FRONTED BY BILLY SQUIRE,THE SONG IS CALLED CANT WAIT AND IF I'M NOT MISTAKEN THE ALBUM WAS TITLED THAT TOO. I THINK I HAVE IT I HAVE TO LOOK THROUGH MY RECORDS.THANKS FOR THE COMMENT
wow, i wish youre right!!!
ill try to look that somewhere, to confirm, if possible
if u have it please share!
thanks and regards
thanks,that's really good!a fresh old band instead of old dinosaurs(Chelsea,UK Subs and so on...)and they're better now...
HI ANGEL, HERE'S A LINK FOR THAT RECORD YOU WANTED. ENJOY!!
http://www.mediafire.com/file/lunykzjozuw/Piper-Can'tWait.rar
Thank You for the Boys record, I have been wanting to hear it for a long time.I am in your debt.
thanks a lot frank!
great post i'm looking for the now lp into the 80's demos and stuff anyone know where to find thanks
i made a mistake on the title of the ne lp i'm looking for. i'm looking for the now- here come the now lp on last years youth thanks
Great post Frankie. Many thanks for this one.
If you haven't got The Now into the 80's Demos its over on my blog if you need it.
AWESOME! i've been looking for this forever...thanks!
i was going to write that i posted The Now 1978 demos but Longy already did. i still posted it though if you want to hear my rips and see some really dark photos of my copy, haha.
http://hardcorepunkreviews.blogspot.com/2010/11/now-into-80s-1978-demos-12.html
oh Longy's file is deleted so for those of you who missed out, check that link in the former comment.
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