| The 101'ers |
| Background information |
| Origin |
London, UK |
| Genre(s) |
Pub rock |
| Years active |
1974 - 1978 |
| Label(s) |
Chiswick
Andalucia
Astralwerks
EMI |
Associated
acts |
The Clash
The Passions
The Raincoats |
| Members |
John
"Woody" Mellor
Clive Timperley
Dan Kelleher
Richard Dudanski
Simon Cassell
Alvaro
Peña-Rojas
Antonio Narvaez
Julian Yewdall
Tymon
Dogg |
| Former members |
Marwood Chesterton
aka " Mole"
Patrick Nother
Martin Stone |
The 101'ers were a pub
rock band from the 1970s,
notable as being the band that Joe Strummer left to join The
Clash. Formed in London in May 1974,
the 101'ers made their performing debut on 6
September at the Telegraph pub in Brixton under the name El Huaso
and the 101 All Stars. The name would later be shortened to
the 101 All Stars and finally just the 101'ers.
The group established itself on the London pub rock circuit prior to
the advent of punk.
The group was named for the squat where they lived together: 101 Walterton
Road, Maida Vale, although it was for a time rumoured that they were
named for "Room 101", the infamous torture room in George
Orwell's novel 1984. The novel
was later to become something of a manifesto for the political element
of the punk rock movement.
The 101'ers were supported by the Sex
Pistols at the Nashville Room on 3 April 1976, and this is when
Strummer claimed he saw the light and got involved in the punk scene.
Joe Strummer commented on this event in the Don
Letts documentary Westway
to the World on the end of the 101'ers by
saying "5 seconds into their (the Pistols') first song, I knew we were
like yesterday's paper, we were over."
By the time their debut single was released, Joe Strummer was
in The
Clash and the band were no more. Clive Timperley later joined The
Passions, Dan Kelleher went to The Derelicts and Richard Dudanski
went on to work with The Raincoats and Public
Image Limited. Tymon Dogg worked with Strummer
briefly in The Clash (playing on one track
on Sandinista!) and later, in The Mescaleros.
Their recorded output was initially limited to one single.
However, by 1981, interest in The Clash was at its height and
a second single and a compilation album Elgin Avenue Breakdown
was released. Several of the tracks on the latter album were live
recordings, and there is no evidence that the band ever conceived of
these recordings as a full length album.
Before his death in 2002, Joe Strummer had been planning
to re-release Elgin Avenue Breakdown, complete with
previously unreleased tracks that would encompass everything the band
ever recorded. The project was completed with the help of Strummer's
widow Lucinda Tait and
former drummer Richard Dudanski, and released in
May, 2005
via Astralwerks
in the US and EMI
in Europe.
Band Line-Up
- John "Woody" Mellor (Joe Strummer) - Guitar, Vocals
- Clive Timperley - Lead Guitar
- Marwood Chesterton
aka " Mole" - Bass (replaced Jan 76 by Dan Kelleher)
- Dan Kelleher - Bass,
Additional Guitar Oct 75-Jan 76,
- Richard Dudanski - Drums
- Simon Cassell (Big John) - Sax
- Alvaro Peña-Rojas - Sax
- Antonio Narvaez - Drums
- Julian Yewdall - Vocals, Harmonica
- Patrick Nother - Bass (1st gig)
- Martin Stone - Lead Guitar (final gig)
- Tymon Dogg -
Discography
Singles
- Keys to Your Heart / 5 Star Rock & Roll
Petrol, (Chiswick) 1976
- Sweet Revenge / Rabies, (Chiswick) 1981
Albums
- Elgin Avenue Breakdown,
(Andalucia AND101) 1981
- Elgin Avenue Breakdown Revisited,
(Astralwerks ASW32161 / EMI 474460 2) 2005