Our Soundscene

For anyone who vaguely recalls the Woking / GU postcode area music scene.

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  • Flashback

    Flashback

    (c’86-’92) Yanni Tsamplakos (guitar / vocals), Martyn Lucas (bass / vocals), Sandra Langrish (vocals), Geoff Langrish (vocals), and John Cotter (drums).

    This Woking based 60’s cover band produced at least one demo cassette LP titled “Here We Are Now”. On 25 March ’89 the band performed at the Working Men’s Club, Woking; and are known to have performed at the Centre Halls, Woking too. In addition to numerous gigs at the Lakeside Country Club, Frimley Green.

    Flashback on Sky TV’s Star Search in 1989. Source: Geoff Langrish

    In ’89, Flashback also appeared on Sky TV’s Star Search, a nightly talent show hosted by Keith Chegwin and were judged by Gloria Hunniford and Kenny Everett. Episode 51 from Session 1, which saw Flashback finish the show as runner’s up, was aired on 17 April ’89 and also featured Greg Howard and Valerie Mason. On 23 September ’89, the group appeared at Haslemere Hall, Haslemere for a Swinging Sixties charity dance in aid of Hillsborough families. In ’92, Flashback were part of the ‘Festival of the 60s’ at Butlins in Bognor Regis.

    Geoff Langrish went on to form Tequila, a 60s and 70s covers band. Cotter relocated to Morocco.

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  • X-Pressure

    X-Pressure

    (c’85) Steve Mann (guitar), Pete Marshall (bass), and ?.

    This Camberley based band supported Split Into, along with Which One’s Maurice?, at Frogmore Community College, Yateley on 19 July ’85.

    Mann. was later of The Nonkey Brothers, with Marshall, and became the main songwriter, singer and guitarist in 33AD.

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  • Village Hall, Tilford

    Village Hall, Tilford

    Sat facing The Green, the Village Hall, was built as The Tilford Institute in 1893/4 to a Sir Edwin Lutyens’ design and erected in memory of Charles Archibald Anderson of Waverley Abbey, near Farnham.

    In 1895 the Institute opened as a club for entertainment, with a paid membership, but also available for private hire. In 1933 the name of the building changed from the “Tilford Institute” to the “Tilford Village Hall”. Throughout the 2nd World War local dances, with live bands, continued. In the mid ’80s a number of local bands used the hall as rehearsal space including The Innocence in the Summer of ’84 and This Breed of Heroes.

    Ready! Village Hall, Tilford

    About the same time the building was listed as being of architectural interest. It is still used by bands for rehearsals and performances to this day.

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  • The Livestock Spindles

    The Livestock Spindles

    (c’64-’65) John Perera (guitar / vocals) Jolyon Brettingham-Smith (guitar), Peter Evans (bass / vocals), and Nick Blake (drums)

    This R&B / beat band, who found their name in an engineering magazine, formed at Cranleigh School.

    Brettingham-Smith went on to be a composer, conductor, performer, author, and radio presenter, and a university teacher at the Berlin University of the Arts. He passed in Berlin on 17 May 2008 immediately after concluding his ‘Jolyon Live – The English Connection‘ radio programme on Rundfunk Berlin Brandenburg (RBB).

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  • Rockin’ Timbo

    Rockin’ Timbo

    (c’78-’80) Tim Freeman

    Rockin’ Timbo was the stage name for Tim Freeman, older brother to actor Martin Freeman. We are aware of two support slots at the Technical College, Farnborough, playing ‘Anarchy in the UK’ and ‘My Generation’ on a ukulele, before smashing it. Tim also designed / created the Stonehenge Festival Farnborough Benefit T-Shirt and appeared at the event.

    Freeman was the original vocalist of Farnborough punk band The Grunties (aka The Sods), leaving to focus on his punk-poet performance in late ’78. After Rockin Timbo, Freeman moved to Brighton and went on to be a founding member of Frazier Chorus, for which his brother Jamie Freeman was in the touring band and appeared on their third studio album “Wide Awake“, contributing guitars on all but one track.

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  • Siege

    Siege

    (c’84-’88) Mark ‘Conquer’ Conker (bass), Tony Castro (drums), Sharon Thompson (vocals), and Les Black (guitar / backing vocals)

    Alton based quartet, Siege – not to be confused with the earlier Bridlington band of the same name – was another local New Wave of British Heavy Metal band, although of the late NWOBHM period.

    Shortly after forming they released “Demo 84” a 6-song: “Gods of War“, “Anubis“, “Don’t Punish Me“, “Siege“, “He Will Rise“, and “Climax” cassette demo. Shortly after, the band dropped Castro bringing in Ray Lawrence on drums. The band supported Marseille at The Royal, Guildford on 15 November ’84 and headlined at the venue, with Hoax in support, before the New Year.

    Siege’s self-released 1985 7″ single “Goddess of Fire

    The Royal hosted the band, as headliners again, on 27 February ’85. That same year saw the self-released “Goddess of Fire” [THM1], a 7″ single on the band’s ‘True Hampshire Metal Records’ label, the B-side of which carried “Don’t Punish Me” from the original demo. This was mastered at Utopia Studios and produced by Ken Marshall. Guesting on keyboards for the single was Rachel Glover; and while the information sheet/sleeve originally listed Conquer, he was replaced on bass by Dave Glover on this recording. In fact, only Thompson remained from the original line-up as Al Stringer had replaced Black on guitar earlier in the year.

    Siege in a pub

    Black and Conquer returned at some point and Black was back writing the bands material. They also appeared at the Marquee, London during ’86. It’s reported on various sites that in ’86 the band spent a couple of days recording and mixing four songs: ‘Red Light’, ‘Wait for Me’, ‘How Does it Feel‘, and ‘Wasted Time’, for Tommy Vance’s Friday Rock Show on BBC Radio 1, in the Beeb’s Maida Vale Studios. But BBC records give a date of 16 January ’87 as the day in the studio with the show was broadcast on 6 February ’87.

    Siege at The Marquee (c’86)

    A demo cassette single, titled “Wait for Me“, hit the scene in ’87, with ‘Red Light‘ on the flipside. On 13 June ’87, Siege supported Dumpy’s Rusty Nuts at Basins, Portsmouth and while the headliners receive a princely £425, Siege got £50. Siege returned to Basins on 1 July ’87, to headline after Antigua opened. On the 2 October ’87, Siege kicked off that month’s campaign of sound attacks at The Royal Oak, Passfield, then up to Bumbles, London the next night. Basins was visited again on 7 October ’87 for a £60 paycheck and four days later the band were in Birmingham, on 11 October, at The Mermaid. Almost two weeks passed before the bands next appearance at Tunnel Club, London on 24 October, followed by The Royal Standard, London on 27 October, and the Village Hall, Liphook on 31 October ’87. But, by early ’88 the band had disintegrated.

    From 2012 onward Lawrence, Stringer, and Dave Glover have made a few ‘comeback’ appearances as Siege that included Brofest IV, the classic rock and metal festival based in Newcastle Upon Tyne, appearing on 21 February 2016 with Martin Turner, Weapon UK, Dealer, Seventh Son, Millennium, Oxym, Omen Searcher, and Satan’s Empire. In 2020, the bands “Goddess of Fire” was included Hear No Evil Recordings’ compilation “NWOBHM Thunder – New Wave of British Heavy Metal: 1978-1986“.

    Thompson regrettably passed in 2010 and we are trying to ascertain if this is Sharon-Jayne Thompson who performed at the Football Club, Petersfield and The Queen, Greatham in 1992. Black also appeared in Stone Creed and Dave Glover in The Chase.

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  • Terry Crowe & The Counts

    Terry Crowe & The Counts

    (c’59-’60) Terry Crowe (vocal), Trevor Dean (?), Eddie Colbourne (?), Ray Stott (?), and Ray Lewis (?).

    This, late 50’s, Woking band were one of the most popular bands to play the Butaca Club, Old Woking; they also played the Atlanta Ballroom, Woking several times. The members were predominately from Maybury and many of The Counts, including Lewis, had been in The Gravediggers skiffle group, with Crowe and Chris Smith and Nobby Best.

    Crowe, who has sadly now passed, would go on to appear in the Nashville Teens, The Plebs, Pentad and Renaissance.

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  • The Golden Fleece, Elstead

    The Golden Fleece, Elstead

    The Golden Fleece still hosts the occasional live music, including performances from the Surrey Songwriter’s Showcase, but is possibly better known for its Thai food.

    In ’82, The Vulgar Bros played there, arriving early and holding an impromptu practice in the van! The Innocence were rehearsing slightly west at the Village Hall, Tilford in the Summer of ’84 and nipped over to The Golden Fleece to play.

    This Breed of Heroes at The Golden Fleece Xmas Special December 1985. Picture courtesy of Bruno Bannerman.

    At Christmas, in ’85, This Breed of Heroes, who had a regular monthly spot at the pub, held a Xmas Special. We are also aware that local band Bowler used to rehearse and play there, and that Nikki Papas rolled through almost weekly from 2 October to 18 December ’87, which marked the end a 16-year weekly residency at the Golden Fleece. Jumping ahead five years, Love Match performed there on 20 September ’92.

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  • Bitch Bitch

    Bitch Bitch

    Bitch Bitch was produced by Stewart Home and Dave King and Issue No.1 was publish in 1980 and sold for 30p

    Running to 22-pages the first issue, barring some sausage filling, was packed with pieces on the local scene: The lyrics to The Sleep‘s ‘Bitch‘, the opening line of which we assume is where the ‘zine got its name; and pieces large and small on Disruptive Patterns, Imperfect Hold, Basic Essentials, Tapeworm and Panther, Burst Out Laughing, The Mighty Strypes, White Colours, UBz, Statix, Cricketers, Westfield, Luxury Glass Town, Egham’s Second Window, Crisis, The Vapors, Scrag End, The Royal, Guildford, Base 3 and ‘interview’ with their bassist Mark Turner, The Cat, an interview with Luke Rendle of Theatre of Hate, reviews of Echo and the Bunnymen with Blue Orchids, and Teardrop Explodes at the Civic Hall, Guildford, venue profiles for The Wooden Bridge, Guildford, University of Surrey, Guildford, The National College of Food Technology, Weybridge and others, it makes for a fascinating read.

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  • Phoney American Accents

    Phoney American Accents

    (c’78-’86) Stephen Hudson (?), Kevin Pink (Sax), Martin Blondell (vocals), Ian Everett (bass) and ?

    In ’79, Phoney American Accents rocked up at Bisstock (Bisley Music Festival) and along with Squire entertained a somewhat limited crowd. Playing a punky, musically intense, rawer, heavier sibling to psychedelic rock, the band saw the likes of The Stooges, MC5, Pink Fairies, and the Sex Pistols as influences and performed at squats, free festivals and anywhere that would have them.

    18 July 1986

    Hudson left the band in ’79, and Blondell in ’85. On 18 July ’86 the band headlined The Crypt, Deptford with Steel Bill & The Buffalos, and The Unknown Colours in support. Then, when The Crypt presented The Magic Mushroom Band and Ozric Tentacles at the Recreation Centre, Farnborough on 18 October ’86, it was Phoney American Accents and Steel Bill & The Buffalos who guested on this Stoned Out of Your Head Tour gig date. The following month, on 21 November ’86, they were back at The Crypt, Deptford with Steel Bill & The Buffalos and the next night joined Hondo, Voodoo Child, Steel Bill & The Buffalos, and Freaks of Science at Queen Mary College, London for another date on The Magic Mushroom Band and Ozric Tentacles ‘Stoned Out of Your Head Tour’. That same year the band appeared in Godalming at the Colony Club, that was within the Bridge Street squat.

    Phoney American Accents at Colony Club in Godalming’s Bridge St. squat c’86

    In ’87 the band joined the likes of The Shamen, The Primitives, Blyth Power, and BMX Bandits when their track “Cage” was included by compiler Andy Hurt on the Rough Trade and Cartel distributed ‘Imminent 5‘ compilation LP on the Food label [Bite 5]. As a result “Cage” was added to the pre-recorded weekly weekend night program for the German part of the British Forces Broadcasting Service network by John Peel’s and broadcast on the 15 March ’87 show titled John Peel’s Music On BFBS. The next year, along with 2000 DS, the band appeared at a London squat in an old British Telecon building, called Bovay Place, in February ’88. Richard ?, the then bassist with Phoney American Accents, would later join DS 2000. They also graced the stage of the Rock Garden, Covent Garden in 1990.

    As of 2012 the band were still producing and connected with Witchcraft Records and have appeared even more recently at Sound of the Suburbs, The Holroyd, Guildford in 2017 with Blondale, Pink, and Martin Smith on drum.

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One thought on “Home

  1. Human beings takes me back to 1981. Followed them all over the Surrey reading area for a year a great band and 3 good guys playing well written songs of the era. I wish john Tim and steve well what ever they are doing now. Should reform for a few shows just like Oasis but do the wooden bridge.

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