 |

Crass
pictured at Bristol,
September 1981
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Epping, Essex, England |
| Genre(s) |
anarcho-punk, hardcore
punk, art
punk |
| Years active |
1977 – 1984 |
| Label(s) |
Small
Wonder Records, Crass Records |
| Former members |
Penny
Rimbaud
Gee
Vaucher
Steve Ignorant
N.A.Palmer
Phil
Free
Pete Wright
Eve
Libertine
Joy
De Vivre
Mick Duffield
John
Loder
Steve Herman
|
- For information about the anarchist
writer, see Chris Crass
Crass was an English anarchist punk rock band, formed in 1977
and based around Dial House, an open house community
near Epping,
Essex.
Whereas the Sex Pistols might have
mentioned 'anarchy' for shock value (thereby furthering the common
misconception that it is simply a synonym for chaos), Crass actually
promoted genuine anarchism as a legitimate political ideology, way of
living, and as a resistance movement, popularizing the seminal peace punk
movement and touching on such overtly far left political issues as anti-consumerism,
direct
action, animal rights, feminism, anti-war, anti-corporatism,
environmentalism,
LGBT
rights, anti-globalization, reproductive
rights, anti-racism,
squatting,
and the separation of church
and state.
Taking literally the punk manifesto of "Do
It Yourself", Crass combined the use of sound
collage, graphics,
song, film, and subversion to launch a
sustained and innovative critical broadside against all that they saw
as a culture built on foundations of war, violence, sexism, prejudice, capitalism, religious
hypocrisy and unthinking consumerism. They were also critical of
what they perceived as the flaws of the punk
movement itself, as well as wider youth culture in general. Crass were
amongst the progenitors of the anarcho-pacifism that became common
in the punk music scene (see also anarcho-punk).
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Origins
of the band
- 1.2 Crass
Records
- 1.3 Penis
Envy, Christ - The Album and a change of strategy
- 1.4 Direct
Action, 'Thatchergate' and internal debates
- 1.5 Dissolution
- 1.6 2002
onwards: The Crass Collective/Crass Agenda/Last Amendment
- 2 Influences
- 3 Members
- 4 Discography
- 5 Videos
- 6 Compilations
- 7 References
and bibliography
- 8 See
also
- 9 External
links
|
History
Origins of the band
The Crass logo, designed by Dave King
The band came together when Dial House founder and former
member of avant-garde
performance
art groups EXIT and Ceres
Confusion Penny Rimbaud (real name Jerry Ratter)
began jamming
with Clash
fan Steve
Ignorant (real name Steve Williams), who was staying at the house at
the time. Between them they put together the songs "So What?" and "Do
They Owe Us A Living?" as a drums and vocals duo.
For a (very) short period of time they called themselves Stormtrooper,
before choosing the name Crass, a reference to the David
Bowie song "Ziggy Stardust" (specifically the
line "The kids was just crass").
Other friends and members of the household began to join in, including Joy De
Vivre, Pete
Wright, Andy Palmer, Steve
Herman and Eve Libertine (originally "the Band's
first fan"),
and it was not long before Crass performed their first live gig as part
of a squatted
street
festival at Huntley Street, North London. Here they had intended to
play a set of five songs; however, the "plug was pulled" on them by a
neighbour after three.
Guitarist Steve Herman shortly afterwards left the band to be replaced
by Phil Clancey, who adopted the alias Phil Free.
Other early Crass gigs included a four date tour of New York
as well as regularly playing alongside the UK Subs at the
White Lion pub
in Putney.
These latter performances were often not well-attended; "The audience
consisted mostly of us when the Subs played and the Subs when we
played."
Crass also played at the legendary Roxy punk
club in London's Covent Garden area. By the band's own
account this was a debacle, ending in the group being ejected from the
stage, and immortalised by their song "Banned from the Roxy"
and Rimbaud's essay Crass at the Roxy.
Eve
Libertine performing with Crass at the Wapping Anarchist Centre, London, December
1981
Following this incident the band decided to take themselves
more seriously, particularly paying more attention to their
presentation. As well as avoiding drugs such as alcohol
or cannabis before gigs, they also
adopted a policy of wearing black, military
surplus-style clothing at all times, whether on or off stage. They
introduced their distinctive stage backdrop, a logo designed
by Rimbaud's friend Dave King (later of Sleeping Dogs Lie). This
gave the band a militaristic image, which led some to
accuse them of fascism.
Crass countered that their uniform appearance was intended to be a
statement against the "cult of personality", so that,
in contrast to the norm for many rock bands, no member would be
identified as the 'leader'.
The aforementioned logo represented an amalgamation of several
"icons of
authority" including the Christian Cross, the swastika and
the Union
Flag combined with a two headed snake consuming itself (to symbolise
the idea that power will eventually destroy itself).
Using such deliberately mixed messages was part of Crass' strategy of
presenting themselves as a "barrage of contradictions", which also
included using loud, aggressive music to promote a pacifist
message, and was in part a reference to their own Dadaist and
performance art backgrounds.
The band eschewed any elaborate stage
lighting during live sets, instead preferring to be illuminated by
simple 40 watt household light bulbs (the technical difficulties of
filming under such lighting conditions in part explains why there is
such little live footage of Crass in existence).
The band pioneered multimedia presentation techniques,
fully utilising video technology and using back-projected films and video
collages made by Mick Duffield and Gee
Vaucher to enhance their performances.
Sleeve art for Crass' The Feeding Of The 5000 12"
record, illustrating the band's logo
Crass Records
-
Main article: Crass
Records
Crass' first release was The Feeding Of The 5000,
an 18 track 12" 45
rpm EP on the Small Wonder label in 1978.
Workers at the pressing plant initially refused to handle it due to the
allegedly blasphemous
content of the song "Reality Asylum". The record was eventually
released with this track removed and replaced by two minutes of
silence, ironically titled "The Sound Of Free Speech". This incident
prompted Crass to set up their own independent record label, Crass
Records, in order to retain full editorial control over their material.
"Reality Asylum" was shortly afterwards released on Crass Records in a
re-recorded and extended form as a 7"
single. Later pressings of the album (also on Crass Records) restored
the original version of the missing track.
As well as their own material, Crass Records released
recordings by other performers, the first of which was the 1980 single
"You Can Be You" by Honey Bane, a teenage girl who was
staying at Dial House whilst on the run from a children's home. Other
artists included Zounds, Flux Of Pink Indians,
Omega
Tribe, Rudimentary Peni, Conflict,
Icelandic
band KUKL
(who included singer Björk),
classical singer Jane Gregory, Anthrax, Lack of
Knowledge and the Poison Girls, a like-minded
band who worked closely with Crass for several years.
Crass Records also put out three editions of Bullshit
Detector, compilations of demos and rough
recordings which had been sent to the band, and which they felt
represented the DIY punk ethic.
The catalogue numbers of Crass Records releases were intended
to represent a countdown to the year 1984 (eg, 521984 meaning "five
years until 1984"), both the year that Crass stated that they would
split up, and a date charged with significance in the anti-authoritarian
calendar due to George Orwell's novel
of the same name.
Penis Envy, Christ
- The Album and a change of strategy
Crass at the Digbeth Civic Hall, Birmingham,
1981
Crass released their third album Penis
Envy in 1981. This marked a departure from the
'hardcore punk' image that Feeding of the 5000 and
its follow up Stations of the Crass
had to some extent given the group. It featured more complex musical
arrangements and exclusively female vocals provided by Eve
Libertine and Joy De Vivre (although Steve Ignorant
remained a group member and is credited on the record sleeve as not
on this recording).
The album addressed feminist issues and once again attacked the
institutions of 'the system' such as marriage and sexual repression. One track, a
deliberately saccharine parody of a 'MOR' love song
entitled "Our Wedding", was given away as a flexi disc
with 'Loving', a teenage girl's romance magazine having been offered it
by an organisation calling itself "Creative Recording And Sound
Services" (note the initials). A minor tabloid controversy resulted once the hoax
was revealed, with the News of the World going so far as
to state that the album's title was "too obscene to print".
The band's fourth LP, 1982's double set Christ
- The Album, took over a year to record,
produce and mix, during which time the Falklands
War had broken out and ended. This caused Crass to fundamentally
question their approach to making records. As a group whose primary
purpose was political commentary, they felt
they had been overtaken and made to appear redundant by real world
events. Subsequent releases, including the singles "How does it Feel to
Be the Mother of A Thousand Dead" and "Sheep Farming in the Falklands",
and the album Yes Sir, I Will,
saw the band strip their sound back to basics and were issued as
"tactical responses" to political situations.
They also anonymously produced 20,000 copies of a flexi-disc featuring
a live recording of "Sheep Farming...", copies of which were randomly
inserted into the sleeves of other records by sympathetic workers at
the Rough Trade records distribution
warehouse as a means of spreading their views to those who might not
normally hear them.
Direct Action, 'Thatchergate'
and internal debates
Detail from front cover artwork from Stations of the Crass,
illustrating an example of the stenciled graffiti used by the band
From their earliest days of spraying stencilled anti-war, anarchist, feminist and anti-consumerist
graffiti
messages around the London Underground system and on
advertising billboards [1], [2], the band had always been
involved in political as well as musical activities. On December 18th,
1982, Crass co-ordinated a 24 hour squat of the Zig Zag club in West
London primarily for a concert that night for approx 500 attendees to
prove "that the underground punk scene could handle itself responsibly
when it had to and that music really could be enjoyed free of the
restraints imposed upon it by corporate industry").
Bands playing at the Zig Zag (in running order) were Faction,
D an V, Omega Tribe, Lack of Knowledge, Sleeping Dogs, The
Apostles, Amebix,
Null & Void,
Soldiers of Fortune, The Mob, Polemic Attack, Poison
Girls, Conflict, Flux of Pink Indians,
Crass and DIRT.
In 1983 and 1984 they were part of the Stop
the City actions instigated by London Greenpeace
that were arguably fore-runners of the anti-globalisation
actions of the early 21st century.
Explicit support for such activities was given in the lyrics of the
band's final single release "You're Already Dead", which also saw Crass
abandoning their long time commitment to pacifism. This led to further
introspection within the band, with some members feeling that they were
beginning to become embittered as well as losing sight of their
essentially positive stance.
As a reflection of this debate, the next release using the Crass name
was Acts of Love, classical music settings of
50 poems by Penny Rimbaud described as "songs to my other self" and
intended to celebrate "'the profound sense of unity, peace
and love that exists within that other self."
A further post-Falklands war hoax that originated from members of Crass was
known as 'the Thatchergate tapes'. This was a cassette featuring a faked
conversation using edited recordings of Margaret
Thatcher and Ronald Reagans' voices, in which they
appeared to allege that Europe would be used as a target for intermediate
range nuclear weapons in any conflict between the United
States and the Soviet Union. Copies were leaked to the
press, and although put together totally anonymously, the British Observer
newspaper was somehow able to link the tape with the band.
Dissolution
Crass all but retired from the public eye after becoming a
small thorn in the side of Margaret Thatcher's government
following the Falklands War. Questions in Parliament and an
attempted prosecution under the UK's Obscene Publications Act
for their single "How Does It Feel..."
led to a round of court battles and what the band describe as
harassment that finally took its toll. On July 7, 1984 the band played their final gig at Aberdare in Wales, a benefit for
striking miners,
before retreating to Dial House to concentrate their energies elsewhere.
Guitarist Andy Palmer had announced that he
intended to move on from the band in order to further his art
college studies, and the reported group consensus was that replacing
him would be "like having a corpse in the band".
This catalysed the affirmation of Crass' consistently stated intention
to split up in 1984. Steve Ignorant went on to join the band Conflict,
with whom he had already worked on an ad hoc
basis, and in 1992 formed Schwartzeneggar (sic). From
1997-2000, he was a member of the group Stratford Mercenaries. He has
also worked as a Punch and Judy professor and as a solo
performer. Eve Libertine continued to record with her son Nemo Jones as well as performance artist A-Soma. Pete Wright concentrated on building
himself a houseboat
and formed the performance art group Judas
2, whilst Rimbaud continued to write and perform both solo and with
other artists.
2002 onwards: The Crass
Collective/Crass Agenda/Last Amendment
In November 2002 several former members of Crass collaborated
under the name The Crass Collective to arrange
Your Country Needs You, a concert of "voices in
opposition to war" held at the Queen
Elizabeth Hall on London's
South
Bank that included a performance of Britten's War
Requiem as well as performers such as
Goldblade, Fun-Da-Mental, Ian
MacKaye and Pete Wright's post-Crass project Judas 2. In October 2003,
the Crass Collective changed their working title to Crass
Agenda, and they continue to perform regularly. During 2004 Crass
Agenda were at the forefront of the campaign to save the Vortex
Jazz Club in Stoke Newington, North London, which has
now relocated to Hackney. In June 2005
Crass Agenda was declared to be 'no more', subsequently changing the
name of the project to the 'more appropriate' Last
Amendment.
A "new" Crass track (actually a remix of 1982's "Major General
Despair", with new lyrics), "The Unelected President", is also
available [3].
Influences
The philosophical and aesthetic influence of Crass on numerous
punk bands from the 1980s were far reaching, even if few bands mimicked
their later more free-form musical style (as on Yes
Sir, I Will and their final recording, 10 Notes on
a Summer's Day). The band has stated that their musical
antecedents and influences were seldom drawn from the rock
music tradition, but rather from classical music (particularly Benjamin
Britten, on whose work, Rimbaud states, some of Crass' riffs
are directly based),
Dada and the
avant-garde such as John Cage as well as performance art
traditions.
Pencil and watercolour artwork from Christ
the Album by Gee Vaucher
Their painted and collage-art black-and-white record sleeves
produced by Gee Vaucher themselves became a
signature aesthetic model, and can be seen as an influence on later
artists such as Banksy
(Banksy and Vaucher have latterly collaborated)
and the subvertising
movement.
Members
- Steve Ignorant (Voice)
- Eve Libertine (Voice)
- Joy De Vivre (Voice)
- N.A.Palmer (Guitar)
- Phil Free (Guitar)
- Pete Wright (Bass and Voice)
- Penny Rimbaud (Drums)
- Gee Vaucher (Artwork, Piano, Radio)
- Mick Duffield (Films)
- John
Loder (1946 - 2005), sound engineer and founder of Southern
Studios, is sometimes considered to be the '9th member' of Crass
- Steve Herman (???? - 1989) left Crass shortly after their
first gig.
Discography
(All released on the Crass record label unless otherwise
stated.)
- The Feeding Of The
5000
(12" EP, 1978, originally released by Small
Wonder Records, re-released on Crass Records as 621984) [UK Indie – #6]
- "Reality Asylum / Shaved Women" (CRASS1, 7", 1979) [UK
Indie – #9]
- Stations Of The Crass
(521984, LP, 1979) [UK Indie – #1]
- "You Can Be You" (521984/1, 7" single by Honey
Bane, backed by Crass under the name Donna and the Kebabs, 1979) [UK
Indie – #3]
- "Bloody Revolutions / Persons Unknown" (421984/1, 7"
single, joint released with the Poison Girls, 1980) [UK Indie
– #1]
- "Tribal Rival Rebel Revels" (421984/6F, flexi disc single
given away with Toxic Grafity
(sic) fanzine,
1980)
- The Feeding of the 5000 (Second Sitting)
(1980, 12" EP, a reissue of the 1978 Small Wonder release on Crass
Records, with the missing track "Asylum" reinstated) [UK Indie – #11]
- "Nagasaki Nightmare / Big A Little A" (421984/5, 7" single,
1981) [UK Indie – #1]
- Penis Envy
(321984/1, LP, 1981) [UK Indie – #1]
- "Our Wedding" (321984/1F, flexi disc single by Creative
Recording And Sound
Services given away with magazine Loving)[4])
- "Merry Crassmas" (CT1, 7" single, 1981, Crass' stab at the
Christmas novelty market) [UK Indie – #2] [5])
- Christ The Album
(BOLLOX2U2, double LP, 1982) [UK Indie – #1]
- "Sheep Farming In The Falklands / Gotcha" (121984/3, 7"
single, 1982, originally released anonymously as a flexi-disc) [UK
Indie – #1]
- "How Does It Feel To Be The Mother Of 1000 Dead? / The
Immortal Death" (221984/6, 7" single, 1983) [UK Indie – #1]
- Yes Sir, I Will
(121984/2, LP, 1983) [UK Indie – #1]
- "Whodunnit?" (121984/4, 7" single, 1983), pressed in "shit
coloured vinyl") [UK Indie – #2]
- "You're Already Dead / Nagasaki is Yesterday's Dog-End /
Don't get caught" (1984, 7" single, 1984)
- Acts Of Love
(1984/4, LP and book, 1985. Poems of Penny Rimbaud set to classical music, sung by
Eve Libertine and Steve Ignorant. The book is illustrated with
paintings by Gee Vaucher)
- Best Before 1984
(CATNO5, LP compilation, 1986) [UK Indie – #7]
- "Ten Notes On A Summer's Day" (CATNO6, 12" EP, 1986) [UK
Indie – #6]
- Christ: The Bootleg
(recorded live in Nottingham, 1984, released 1989 on Allied Records)
- You'll Ruin It For
Everyone (recorded live in Perth,
Scotland, 1981, released 1993 on Pomona Records)
Videos
-
- Christ: The Movie (a series of short
films by Mick Duffield that were shown at Crass performances, VHS,
released 1990)
- Semi-Detached (video collages by Gee
Vaucher, 1978–84, VHS, 2001)
-
- In the Beginning Was the WORD – Live
DVD recorded at the Progress Bar, Tufnell Park, London, 18 November
2004 (Gallery Gallery Productions, Le Chaos Factory, 2006)
Compilations
- "It's You" — track on P.E.A.C.E.
international anti-war benefit compilation released by R. Radical
Records (1984)
- "Powerless With A Guitar" — track on Devastate to
Liberate benefit compilation for the Animal Liberation Front,
TIBETan records, (1986)
- "The Unelected President" — track on Peace Not War
anti-war CD compilation. (This track is actually a remix of 1982's
"Major General Despair", with new lyrics and additional instrumentation
provided by Dylan Bates), (2003)
References and bibliography
-
Shibboleth - My Revolting Life (Penny Rimbaud,
1999, AK
Press), page 69
-
Sleeve note to Bullshit Detector volume 1: "Sometime
in 1977 Rimbaud and Ignorant started messing around with a song called
"Owe Us a Living". They ran through it a few times and decided to form
a band consisting of themselves. They called themselves Crass".
-
...In Which Crass Voluntarily Blow Their Own... http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/
"Steve and Penny had been writing and playing together since early '77,
but it wasn't until Summer of that year that we had begged, borrowed
and stolen enough equipment to actually call ourselves a band... CRASS"
-
Shibboleth - My Revolting Life (Penny Rimbaud,
1999, AK Press), page 99
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 84)
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 83)
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 86)
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 93)
-
...In Which Crass Voluntarily Blow Their Own... http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/
-
"Banned from the Roxy", from Feeding the 5000,
Small Wonder Records, 1978 http://www.lyricstime.com/lyrics/50021.html
-
Rimbaud, Penny, "Crass at the Roxy" from International Anthem
1, 1977 http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/anthem1/anthem1_4.html
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 104)
-
Rimbaud, Penny - Shibboleth, My Revolting Life (AK
Press, 1999, page 90)
-
Crass interviewed in 'New Crimes' fanzine, issue 3, winter 1980
-
They were very difficult to film, because with Super-8 you
needed far more light than was available at a Crass gig - all you'd get
was shadows and light - that would be about it. So it was a bit
pointless filming the gigs. I did try asking for maybe 60 watt bulbs
instead of 40 but there was no deal - Mick Duffield, quoted
in The Story of Crass by George Berger (Omnibus
Press, 2006, page 108)
-
News of the World, June
7, 1981,
page 13 http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/09410d.html
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 220)
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 215)
-
Steve Ignorant, quoted in The Day The Country Died,
(Glasper, Ian, Cherry Red Books, p.25)
-
p26 The Day The Country Died
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 247)
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 248)
-
Shibboleth - My Revolting Life (Penny Rimbaud,
1999, AK Press), page 249
-
Sleeve
notes of Acts of Love, Crass Records, 1985
-
Berger, George The Story of Crass (Omnibus Press,
2006, page 238)
-
http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/09422b.html
-
George McKay, Senseless Acts of Beauty (Verso, 1996, ISBN 1-85984-028-0, page 95
-
Santa's Ghetto 2004, Charing Cross Road, London,
December 2004 http://www.artofthestate.co.uk/banksy/Banksy_Santas_Ghetto_2004.htm
-
Penny Rimbaud, John Loder obituary, The Guardian,
Friday August 19, 2005, http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,,1552016,00.html
Also of note
- You've Heard It All Before (1993, Ruptured Ambitions
Records), a 'tribute album' consisting of cover
versions of songs by Crass performed by various
artists.
- "Bullshit Crass" (Rondolet Records, 1982) — a
'critique' of Crass by Colchester punk band Special
Duties that parodied Crass' chant of "fight war, not wars"
with the words "fight Crass, not punk" [6].
- A Series Of Shock Slogans And Mindless Token
Tantrums (Exitstencil Press, 1982) (originally issued as a
pamphlet with the LP Christ The Album, much of the
text is now published online at [7])
- The Diamond Signature (Penny Rimbaud,
1999, AK Press)
- Crass Art and other Post Modern Monsters
(Gee Vaucher, 1999, AK Press)
- International Anthem: A Nihilist Newspaper For The
Living issues 1-3 (Exitstencil Press, 1977-81) (see [8])
- Love Songs (collected lyrics of Crass
with an introduction by Penny Rimbaud, Pomona Books, 2004) [9]
- '"The Hippies Now Wear Black": Crass and the anarcho-punk
movement, 1977-1984', Richard Cross in Socialist History,
26, 2004 [10]
- George McKay Senseless
Acts of Beauty: Cultures of Resistance since the Sixties,
chapter three 'CRASS 621984 ANOK4U2'. (1996) London: Verso. ISBN 1-85984-028-0.
- George Berger - The Story of Crass
(2006) London: Omnibus Press ISBN
1-84609-402-X [11]
- Ian Glasper - The Day the Country Died: A History
of Anarcho Punk 1980 to 1984 (2006) [12]
- There is No
Authority But Yourself - A film by Alexander
Oey documenting the history of Crass and Dial House (Submarine,
Netherlands, 2006)
See also
- Anarchism in the arts
- Punk ideology
External links
| Crass |
|
Period of activity: Formed 1977,
disbanded 1984
Band members: Penny
Rimbaud (drums), Gee Vaucher (artwork), Steve
Ignorant (voice), N.A.Palmer (Guitar), Phil
Free (Guitar), Pete Wright (Bass), Eve
Libertine (Voice), Joy De Vivre (Voice), Mick Duffield (films), John Loder
(engineer)
Major album releases: The Feeding of the
5000, Stations
of the Crass, Penis
Envy, Christ
– The Album, Yes
Sir, I Will, Acts
of Love, Best
Before 1984
See also: Crass
Records, Corpus Christi Records, EXIT, Crass
Agenda, Last Amendment, Dial
House, Anarcho-punk
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