| Chumbawamba |

Chumbawamba
playing live at Luton Library, May 1985
|
| Background information |
| Also known as |
Skin Disease
Antidote (with The Ex)
Scab Aid
Sportchestra (with several dozen other artists)
The Middle (as a hoax) |
| Origin |
England |
| Genre(s) |
Dance, Anarcho Punk, Rock, Folk, World, Punk Rock, Cabaret |
| Years active |
1982 - present |
| Label(s) |
MUTT
EMI
Agit-Prop Records |
Associated
acts |
Passion Killers (an offshoot of
Chumbawamba, particularly active in the 1980s)
Notsensibles (Burnley based punk band, for whom Boff illustrated an
album cover) |
| Website |
http://www.chumba.com/ |
| Members |
Boff
Whalley
Lou Watts
Jude
Abbot
Neil Ferguson |
| Former members |
Alice
Nutter
Danbert Nobacon
Harry Hamer
Dunstan Bruce
Paul Greco
Simon Commonknowledge
Mavis Dillon
Cobie Laan |
Chumbawamba are an English band who
started out playing punk rock but over a 25-year career have
gone on to play music in a wide range of styles, including pop
influenced by dance music and world
music, and now play acoustic folk music. The band is best known for
their song "Tubthumping". Their work is generally
influenced by an anarchist political stance and by an irreverant
attitude to authority.
|
Contents
- 1 Band
history
- 1.1 Early
years
- 1.2 Sky
and Trees and Agit-Prop Records
- 1.3 One
Little Indian Records
- 1.4 EMI
controversy
- 1.5 MUTT
Records
- 2 The
name
- 3 Line-up
- 4 Partial
discography
- 4.1 1980-1985
- 4.2 1986-1990
- 4.3 1991-1995
- 4.4 1996-2000
- 4.5 2000-2005
- 4.6 2006
- 5 Television
appearances
- 6 Chumbawamba
songs in film
- 7 Chumbawamba
songs in multimedia
- 8 Further
reading/references
- 9 See
also
- 10 External
links
|
Band history
Early years
Chumbawamba were formed in 1982 from two other bands based in Yorkshire, The
Passion Killers and Chimp Eats Banana.
Inspired musically by The Fall and the anarchist political
stances of Crass,
Chumbawamba's activities in the early years were based around a communal
house in Armley,
Leeds.
Stalwarts of the cassette culture scene, the band
was featured on many compilations. Chumbawamba were at the forefront of
the 1980s anarcho-punk movement, frequently
playing benefit gigs in squats and small halls for causes such as animal
rights, the anti-war
movement, and community groups. The band shared all touring revenue
equally between every member of the band as well as the crew that
helped them perform each night, a practice that they still adhere to.
The band's collective political views are often described as anarchist.
Sky and Trees and Agit-Prop
Records
By the mid-1980s Chumbawamba had begun to release material
using the vinyl format on their own Agit-Prop
record label, which had evolved from an earlier project, Sky
and Trees Records. The first LP, Pictures
of Starving Children Sell Records (1986) was a
critique of the then current Live Aid concert organised by Bob
Geldof, which the band argued was primarily a cosmetic spectacle
designed to draw attention away from the real political causes of world
hunger.
Their 1988 album "English Rebel Songs 1381 - 1914" was a
recording of traditional songs from that period, and was very different
from their preceding work.
One Little Indian Records
By the late 1980s and early 1990s, Chumbawamba had begun to
absorb influences from techno music and dance culture. The band moved away
from their original anarcho-punk roots and evolving a pop sensibility
with releases such as Slap! (1990) and the sample-heavy
Shhh
(1992) (originally intended to be released as Jesus H Christ!,
this album had to be withdrawn and re-recorded because of copyright
problems).
After signing to the independent One Little Indian record
label, Anarchy
(1994) lyrically remained as politically uncompromising as ever,
continuing to address issues such as homophobia (see song "Homophobia" [1], the music
video of which features the Sisters of Perpetual
Indulgence), the Criminal Justice Act and the
rise of fascism
in the UK following the election of a British National Party
councillor in south-east London in 1993.
Chumbawamba vocalist Danbert Nobacon pictured playing live at the
University
of Leeds, 1986, supporting Conflict
EMI controversy
Chumbawamba drew criticism from the band's original following
in 1997 when the members signed to the major label EMI in Europe,
particularly as much of their earlier output had explicitly attacked
this corporation; they had even been involved with a compilation LP
called Fuck EMI in 1989. However, the band argued
that EMI had severed the controversial link with weapons manufacturer
Thorn a few years previously, and that experience had taught them that,
in a capitalist environment, almost every record company operates on
capitalist principles; "Our previous record label One Little Indian
didn't have the evil symbolic significance of EMI BUT they were
completely motivated by profit." They added that this move brought with
it the opportunity to make the band financially viable (all members
were up until then working in other jobs to make a living) as well as
to communicate their message to a wider audience.
Chumbawamba's biggest chart hit, "Tubthumping",
features what, without the context of the accompanying liner notes
(removed from the US release of the Tubthumper
album for copyright reasons), appears to be one of the most apolitical
of any of the band's lyrics. It was also during this period that
Chumbawamba gained some notoriety when male vocalist Danbert
Nobacon poured a jug of water over UK
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott at the 1998 BRIT
Awards.
Chumbawamba released the album WYSIWYG
on EMI in 2000, and parted from the label in 2001.
MUTT Records
In 2002,
Chumbawamba formed their own record label, MUTT, for UK releases.
Under MUTT, Chumbawamba released their eleventh official
album, Readymades, as
well as Sic - Adventures in Anti-Capitalism, a paperback
book of political and musical writings by friends and acquaintances of
the band.
General Motors paid
Chumbawamba $100,000 to use the song "Pass It Along" for a Pontiac Vibe television
advertisement
in 2002. Chumbawamba gave the money to the anti-corporate
activist groups Indymedia and CorpWatch.
In 2004,
the band released an album of 'world music' influenced songs entitled Un,
which addressed such current concerns as the looting of the museums in Iraq (On eBay)
and Buy Nothing Day.
In 2005
Chumbawamba opted to take a hiatus from full-scale touring and
recording projects, but a trimmed-down acoustic line-up of Boff
Whalley, Lou Watts, Jude Abbot and Neil Ferguson continued to tour the
UK and Europe throughout 2005 and 2006. It was this line-up that
recorded the album A Singsong and a Scrap,
released late in 2005. The hiatus looks set to continue indefinitely,
with the band announcing on their web site in 2006 that there are no
plans to perform or record as a full band again.
In 2007,
Chumbawamba were confirmed to be playing at the Glastonbury
Festival.
According to the band's website, a new album is currently in a
brainstorming phase, with collaboration happening over the internet.
Meetings to solidify content are set for June. The band stated that
"the new album will be acoustic and probably won't sound like A
Singsong and a Scrap."
In 2006 Alice wrote the musical drama 'Love and Petrol' which
played for a week in Bradford during June. The band formed to play the
music for the gig decided to continue after the run under the name The
Sex Patels and quickly gained a strong following with their cover of
punk, reggae and ska played in an Indian style. In 2007 the band
consists of Harry Hamer (tabla, cajon box, percussion and backing
vocals), Phil 'Sid' Patel (acoustic guitar and cittern) , Jacqui 'Diva'
Patel (Lead vocals), Bryan Outlaw Patel (Lead vocals and percussion),
Mr Formby Patel (Sitar, Indian harmonium and bouzouki), Woody Wood
Patel (Saxes, clarinet, ocarina, whistle and percussion), Aki Patel
(bass guitar) and Tim Moon Patel (Sitar, Indian Harmonium, Santoor,
serangai, ghopijand, Japan Banjo, flute, piano, 'cello, viola and
violin) ( www.timmoon.co.uk ). Woody Wood and Mr Formby joined the band
after the theatre run, Woody replacing a temporary sax player and Mr
Formby coming in to enlarge the bands sound in 2007. The first album,
'Never Mind the Bollywoods' was an album to fit in with 'Love and
Petrol' and features vocals from actors in the stage show as well as
the rare version of 'I Could Be So Good For You' which only featured in
the stage show. A new album which is truly representative of the band
was recorded in 2007, but there is no release date set as yet. Details
of the band are at www.myspace.com/sexpatels .
The name
Over the years, the band have been asked many times what
"Chumbawamba" really means. While there are many speculations, the band
generally answer that it's a gibberish word, meaning nothing. According
to Chumbawamba's official FAQ :
- Chumbawamba doesn't mean anything. At the time we
formed (early '80s) there was a rush of bands with obvious names. It
was the time of ‘peace punk' and you couldn't get across a youth club
dance floor without bumping into a Disorder, a Subhumans, a
Decadent Youth or
an Anthrax t-shirt. We
liked the sound of Chumbawamba because it wasn't nailing ourselves
down. Thatcher On Acid were a good band
but it's lucky for them that Thatcher stayed in power for 11
years. If her influence had only lasted 18 months Thatcher On Acid's
sell by date would have come and gone a lot sooner. We wanted a name
which wouldn't date [2].
Other explanations which have been given include the following:
- On an episode of BBC2's pop music quiz Never Mind the Buzzcocks
there was a question about where Chumbawamba got its name. The answer
(according to Mark Lamarr) was that it got it from
what a monkey wrote on a type writer when an experiment took place
involving monkeys and type writers (as in the infinite monkey theorem, so
presumably it was to see if they will re-create the complete works of Shakespeare).
- In an interview on a German website[3] with Alice and Boff, the
members claimed that the "Chumbawamba" was the mascot of a football
team, Walford Town, which they found in the "Rothman's Yearbook", a
collection of old facts and figures about British football. Boff said
"...And we just thought it was funny, so we used the name". There has
never been a team in English football called Walford Town, although the
name has occasionally been used to represent the local team in the BBC soap opera
EastEnders.
- In Boff's autobiography he claims that the name was derived
from the chanting of African street musicians which he and Danbert
heard while busking in Paris. However, in a footnote he goes on to
state that this is in fact a lie, as is every other explanation that
the band have given over the years.
When the band members offer up such examples as those listed
above, they are playing a "game" of telling the media and various other
sources a different and more outlandish thing every single time they
are asked (This is jokingly referenced in the Chumbawamba documentary
"Well Done, Now Sod Off" but could well be true given the nature of
some claims and the differences between each story); ranging from the
"Monkey/Typewriter" experiment all the way up to such ones as the
"Dream Toilets" and ones as mundane as the football mascot.
Line-up
Jude Abbot, Neil Ferguson and Boff Whalley of Chumbawamba in 2005
The band's membership has varied over the years, with the
line-up and musical assignments in the early years being especially
fluid (members were known to switch instrument between, or even during,
gigs).
The longtime members have been:
- Alice Nutter - vocals and percussion
- Lou Watts - vocals and keyboards
- Danbert Nobacon - vocals and
keyboards
- Boff Whalley - vocals and guitar
- Harry Hamer - drums
- Dunstan Bruce - vocals
- Mavis Dillon (left 1995) - trumpet
- Neil Ferguson - bass (originally musical engineer)
- Jude
Abbot (1996-) - vocals and trumpet
Revolution, the first single released on Agit-Prop
Records
Partial discography
(Original releases dates and labels given. Some material has
been re-issued on other labels in the US.)
1980-1985
Cover of History Luddite, an early live Chumbawamba
release by Homebrew Tapes
- Cardboard Box, 1980 (Cassette only
release by proto-Chumbawamba group Chimp Eats Banana)
- "Three Years Later" - track on Bullshit Detector Volume 2
compilation LP, Crass Records, 1982 (Nb, Chumbawamba
guitarist Boff Whaley (Boffo) also has a solo track, "Garageland", a
cover of a song by The Clash, on this LP)
- "I'm Thick" - track on "Back on the Streets" compilation EP
Secret, 1982
(Chumbawamba recording as 'Skin Disease', a mock skinhead/Oi! band)
- Be Happy Despite It All, Sky and Trees,
1983 (Cassette only release, joint with The Passion Killers, featuring
hand coloured cover)
- Raising Heck with Chumbawamba, Peaceville
Records, 1983 (Cassette only release, live material plus songs by Simon Lanzon)
- It Could Be So Much More, Acid Rain
Products, 1984 (Cassette only release, joint with Flux Of Pink Indians,
recorded live at the Conway Hall, London)
- Let Us Show Them Our Hearts, Sky and
Trees, 1984 (Cassette only release, joint with The Passion Killers)
- Another Year of the Same Old Shit, Sky
and Trees, 1984 (Cassette only release)
- History Luddite, Homebrew Tapes, 1984 (Cassette only
release, live at Luton Library, May 1985)
- "Common Ground", Sky and Trees, 1984 (A benefit 'cassette
single' for striking miners)
- To Thine Own Self Be True, Sky and
Trees, 1984 (Cassette only release)
- In The Cellar, Sky and Trees?, 1984
(Cassette only release)
- It's Up To You, Sky and Trees?, 1984
(Cassette only release by the Passion Killers)
- The Unfairy Tale/The War Inside Our Heads,
Sky and Trees, 1984 (Cassette only release, Danbert Nobacon solo
material, much was re-recorded for release on vinyl the following year)
- The Unfairy Tale, Sky and Trees, 1985
(Danbert Nobacon solo release)
- "Revolution", single, Agit Prop, 1985
1986-1990
- "We Are The World", single, Agit Prop, 1986 (Joint release
with US
band A State of Mind)
- Pictures
of Starving Children Sell Records, Agit Prop,
1986
- Know Your Enemy, Doomsday Tapes, 1986 (Cassette only
release, live material recorded at the Bull and Gate, London)
- Feed The World, 1986 (Cassette only
release, live material recorded in Birmingham)
- "Destroy Fascism!", Loony Tunes, 1986 (Collaboration
with Dutch
band The
Ex under the name 'Antidote')
- Un Toast A La Democratie, 1986 (Cassette
only release, an early live incarnation of "Never Mind The Ballots")
- Never Mind the Ballots,
Agit Prop, 1987
- "Let It Be" single, no label stated apart from Anti-copyright,
1987, (Released under the name 'Scab Aid' following the Zeebrugge Ferry Disaster)
- There Comes A Time, 1987 (Cassette only
release, recordings of two shows)
- "Smash Clause 28!Fight the Alton Bill!", single, Agit Prop,
1988
- English Rebel Songs
1381-1914, Agit Prop, 1988; re-released One
Little Indian, 1994; re-recorded 2003.
- Sportchestra: 101 Songs About Sport,
Agit Prop (Chumbawamba collaborations with various other musicians
recording under the name 'Sportchestra')
- Slap!,
Agit Prop, 1990
- "Whoopee, We're All Gonna Die", EP, Rugger Bugger records, 1991 (3
members of Chumbawamba recording under the name 'Passion Killers')
- Jesus H Christ (unreleased due to legal
issues (see above). Bootleg copies are in circulation
however)
- "I Never Gave Up", Agit Prop, 1990
1991-1995
- Shhh,
Agit Prop, 1992
- "Behave", single, Agit Prop, 1992
- First Two, re-releases of Pictures
of Starving Children Sell Records and Never Mind
the Ballots, Agit Prop, 1992
- "Enough is Enough", single, One Little Indian, 1993,
featured MC Fusion #56 UK
- "Timebomb", single, One Little Indian, 1993 #59 UK
- Live In Armley, independently produced
live album, 1993
- English Rebel Songs 1381-1914 , Album ,
One Little Indian 1994
- Anarchy,
One Little Indian, 1994
- "Homophobia", single, One Little Indian, 1994
- Showbusiness!, One Little Indian, 1995
(A live album)
- Swingin' with Raymond,
One Little Indian, 1995
1996-2000
- Portraits of Anarchists (Book and CD
collaboration with photographer Casey Orr), AK Press/One
Little Indian 1996
- Tubthumper, EMI,
1997, US #3, 3x Platinum
- "Tubthumping", single, EMI, 1997, US #6,
US Modern Rock #1, UK #2
- "Tubthumping" (Tyler Dunphy Kardance
Mix), EMI and DJ Rockin, 1997
- "Amnesia", single, EMI, 1998 UK #10
- "Top Of The World (Ole, Ole, Ole)", single, EMI, 1998 UK #21
- The ABCs of Anarchism,
Seeland Records, 1999 (Collaboration
with Negativland)
- "Tony
Blair", one-track CD single sent out to the mailing list as a
"Christmas present", it was found by a record company employee who
banned Chumbawamba from releasing it, 1999
- WYSIWYG,
Universal, 2000
Cover of Chumbawamba's 2004 full-length release, Un;
MUTT records, 2004
2000-2005
- Readymades, MUTT,
2002
- "Her Majesty", one-track CD single
sent out to the mailing list to "commemorate" the Golden Jubilee of Queen
Elizabeth II; an expanded cover version of the Beatles track
from Abbey Road,
2002
- Dropping
Food On Their Heads is Not Enough: Benefit For RAWA,
Geykido Comet Records, 2002
- "Jacob's Ladder (Not In My Name)", Limited Edition anti-war
single, MUTT, 2003
- Shhhlap!, double CD of Shhh
and Slap!,
MUTT, 2003
- Revengers Tragedy, MUTT, 2003
- "Home With Me", single, MUTT, 2003
- "Salt Fare North Sea", single, MUTT, 2003
- English Rebel Songs
1381-1984, MUTT, 2003
- Un, MUTT, 2004
- "On eBay", single, MUTT, 2004
- A Singsong and a Scrap,
No Masters, 2005
- "Fade Away", single, MUTT 2005
2006
- Get On With It,
live album, MUTT 2006
Television appearances
- "Tubthumping" was performed on the Late Show with David
Letterman (CBS Network, USA). Shortly before
performing,the band decided to replace one of the choruses with a
stripped down chant of "Free Mumia Abu-Jamal". While it was
assumed by the band that this would be edited out of the broadcast
version, it was broadcast as performed.
- Chumbawamba performed a half hour set for the German
television program, Rockpalast in 1996.
- The band's 1997 performance in Katowice was
broadcast on Polish television.
- The band were officially banned from German television in
1996 (the same year they performed on Rockpalast) after Danbert Nobacon
stripped nude, wrote "PUNK" across his chest and danced in this manner
in front of The Smashing Pumpkins on a
live broadcast of a rock festival. It is unsure how serious the ban may
have been, as it appears to have been lifted 6 months to a year later,
when the band started appearing on German television again [this change
of heart perhaps influenced by the success of Tubthumping].
Chumbawamba songs in film
Cover of Tubthumper album.
A partial list of films featuring songs by the band.
- Home Alone 3 (1997)
- "Tubthumping"
- In God's Hands
(1997) - "Tubthumping"
- Senseless (1997) -
"Tubthumping"
- Air Bud 2
(1998)
- "Tubthumping"
- Dirty Work (1998)
- "Tubthumping", "Amnesia"
- The James Gang
(1998) - "Outsider"
- Varsity Blues
(1998) - "Tubthumping"
- Mystery, Alaska
(1999)
- "Amnesia"
- Soft Fruit (1999)
- "Tubthumping"
- Stigmata (1999)
- "Mary Mary (Stigmatic Mix)"
- Joe Somebody (2001)
- "Tubthumping"
- Revengers Tragedy
(2002)
- "Revengers Tragedy: Soundtrack"
Chumbawamba songs in multimedia
A partial list of multimedia contents featuring songs
by the band.
- FIFA
Road to World Cup: France '98 (EA Sports,
1997) - "Tubthumping"
- Dance Dance Revolution
2ndMIX (Konami, 1999) - "Tubthumping"
- Samba de Amigo
(Sega, 2000)
- "Tubthumping" (Cover by No Smoking)
- Taiko Drum Master
(Namco,
2004) - "Tubthumping"
- Donkey Konga (Nintendo,
2004) - "Tubthumping"
Further reading/references
- Footnote* - Boff
Whalley (Pomona Books, 2003)
(Boff's autobiographical account of the band's
history) ISBN
1-904590-00-4
-
Iain Aitch (30
January 2002).
General Motors gets tub-thumped. Salon.com.
Retrieved on 2007-07-22.
-
First
bands confirmed for Glastonbury 2007. NME
(10
January 2007).
Retrieved on 2007-05-18.
See also
- Anarchism and the arts
- The Ex
- Punk ideology
External links