Fuzztone Fizzadelic
CD
£9.99
The Now were a band from the good old days of Punk Rock, although they were far removed from what is traditionally known as ‘Punk’. Intelligent songs, political lyrics and a musical style that was much more in keeping with bands like the Gang of 4, PragVeg and other ‘New Wave’ bands.
The band are: Mike McGuire on Vocals, Steve Rolls on Guitar, Faz Farrow on Bass and Joe MacColl on Drums.
They released two singles ‘Development Corporations’ on Ultimate Records in November 1977 and ‘Into The 80’s’ on Raw Records in 1979. They had split up by the end of 1979.
This album was recorded during 2004 by the four original members of The Now.
The track listing represents the first set list from The Now as performed in 1977.
In true punk rock stylee rehearsed for 3 hours with 2 days in the studio for recording and mixing. Not bad after 27 years (some of the band not having played since then).
Check out their fantastic website at http://www.the-now.com/ it’s got all the information you could ever want or need.
History of The Now and press quotes from 1977-79 below….
History of The Now
(From the forthcoming 2005 "Bible" of independent releases 1976 - 1979 by Mario Panciera)
The NOW 1- DEVELOPMENT CORPORATIONS 2- WHY
11/77- Ultimate Rec. ULT- 401 ps - 7"
A primitive but wonderful single from a criminally underrated D.I.Y. Punk band from Peterborough, formed in the first half of 1977 by Mike McGuire (v, ex-The Faderz), Steve Rolls/Rowles (gtr, ex-The Faderz), Paul 'Faz' Farrow (b) and Joe MacColl (d). After a few local gigs, The Now joined London's Punk circuit playing at the Vortex Club on August 30 on a bill that also featured 999, Art Attacks and The Flys: their set included self-penned numbers mostly penned by Rowles and McGuire, alongside re-makes of A HARD DAY'S NIGHT and THE SHAPES OF THINGS TO COME. A self-financed single was recorded in September and was issued on November 4 on the local Ultimate label. With hints of The Sex Pistols' energy and of The Desperate Bicycles' enthusiastic amateurism, the 7" garnered positive reviews (only Danny Baker destroyed it in the pages of Zig Zag: shame on him) and sold about 2,000 copies. The A-side is an under-produced Punk nugget, a rough gem which deserves a place in any UK Punk collection. The flip deserves an honourable mention, too. A re-issue made by the band in March '79, pressed on blue vinyl and housed in an insert sleeve, sold only 200 copies out of 1,000 pressed (the remaining copies were later destroyed by band members "using the vinyl as Frisbees": shame on them!). In 2002 German label Last Year's Youth Records re-released the single (500 hand-numbered copies) with the addition of the bonus track DEVELOPMENT CORPORATIONS Rough Version (Cat.No. LAST-11).
"This sounds like the Desperate Bicycles, and is a very simple, but effective protest song about a subject that should be dear to your hearts. And fuzztone fizzedelic guitar! You need more?"
Jon Savage, Sounds, Nov 5
"Amateur to the point of severe embarrassment" Ian Birch, MM, Nov 5
"It sounds like the rough first cassette of two really good songs from a Peterborough punk band. Usual late '77 cynicism, plus (skeleton) Pistols-style melodic strength. I like it. Try and hear it"
Vivien Goldman, Sounds, Nov 12
"Well-intentioned identipunk. For specialists only"
Charles Shaar Murray, NME, Nov 19
"If you like Patrik Fitzgerald with a backing, you'll like this"
Alan Lewis, Sounds, Mar 31, '79
"Quality stuff apart from embarrassing lyrics" Tony, Ripped & Torn, issue 9
"Even though the sound is strictly garage production level, the songs too long, and the sleeve packaging mateurish in the most boring way, this is worth checking out. 'Why?' has an intro reminiscent of an old Velvet Underground tune (you decide which one), then bursts into one of the most anguished, bewildered cries at life's futility I've ever heard"
The band are: Mike McGuire on Vocals, Steve Rolls on Guitar, Faz Farrow on Bass and Joe MacColl on Drums.
They released two singles ‘Development Corporations’ on Ultimate Records in November 1977 and ‘Into The 80’s’ on Raw Records in 1979. They had split up by the end of 1979.
This album was recorded during 2004 by the four original members of The Now.
The track listing represents the first set list from The Now as performed in 1977.
In true punk rock stylee rehearsed for 3 hours with 2 days in the studio for recording and mixing. Not bad after 27 years (some of the band not having played since then).
Check out their fantastic website at http://www.the-now.com/ it’s got all the information you could ever want or need.
History of The Now and press quotes from 1977-79 below….
History of The Now
(From the forthcoming 2005 "Bible" of independent releases 1976 - 1979 by Mario Panciera)
The NOW 1- DEVELOPMENT CORPORATIONS 2- WHY
11/77- Ultimate Rec. ULT- 401 ps - 7"
A primitive but wonderful single from a criminally underrated D.I.Y. Punk band from Peterborough, formed in the first half of 1977 by Mike McGuire (v, ex-The Faderz), Steve Rolls/Rowles (gtr, ex-The Faderz), Paul 'Faz' Farrow (b) and Joe MacColl (d). After a few local gigs, The Now joined London's Punk circuit playing at the Vortex Club on August 30 on a bill that also featured 999, Art Attacks and The Flys: their set included self-penned numbers mostly penned by Rowles and McGuire, alongside re-makes of A HARD DAY'S NIGHT and THE SHAPES OF THINGS TO COME. A self-financed single was recorded in September and was issued on November 4 on the local Ultimate label. With hints of The Sex Pistols' energy and of The Desperate Bicycles' enthusiastic amateurism, the 7" garnered positive reviews (only Danny Baker destroyed it in the pages of Zig Zag: shame on him) and sold about 2,000 copies. The A-side is an under-produced Punk nugget, a rough gem which deserves a place in any UK Punk collection. The flip deserves an honourable mention, too. A re-issue made by the band in March '79, pressed on blue vinyl and housed in an insert sleeve, sold only 200 copies out of 1,000 pressed (the remaining copies were later destroyed by band members "using the vinyl as Frisbees": shame on them!). In 2002 German label Last Year's Youth Records re-released the single (500 hand-numbered copies) with the addition of the bonus track DEVELOPMENT CORPORATIONS Rough Version (Cat.No. LAST-11).
"This sounds like the Desperate Bicycles, and is a very simple, but effective protest song about a subject that should be dear to your hearts. And fuzztone fizzedelic guitar! You need more?"
Jon Savage, Sounds, Nov 5
"Amateur to the point of severe embarrassment" Ian Birch, MM, Nov 5
"It sounds like the rough first cassette of two really good songs from a Peterborough punk band. Usual late '77 cynicism, plus (skeleton) Pistols-style melodic strength. I like it. Try and hear it"
Vivien Goldman, Sounds, Nov 12
"Well-intentioned identipunk. For specialists only"
Charles Shaar Murray, NME, Nov 19
"If you like Patrik Fitzgerald with a backing, you'll like this"
Alan Lewis, Sounds, Mar 31, '79
"Quality stuff apart from embarrassing lyrics" Tony, Ripped & Torn, issue 9
"Even though the sound is strictly garage production level, the songs too long, and the sleeve packaging mateurish in the most boring way, this is worth checking out. 'Why?' has an intro reminiscent of an old Velvet Underground tune (you decide which one), then bursts into one of the most anguished, bewildered cries at life's futility I've ever heard"