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Fra Angelico / FRA
(c’84-’89) Mark Applin (vocals), Tim Hawes (bass) Lloyd Newman (guitar) and Kevin Arthur (drums).

13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave This Lightwater / Bagshot Goth four-piece were starting to get popular with low-key gigs at The Wooden Bridge, Guildford and The Old Schoolhouse, Woking when Applin hopped to Lifespan in ’84, but hadn’t really told Fra Angelico, who were formerly known as Stillbrook. They did however record a demo at Shepperton Studio before Applin’s departure.
On 26 May ’84, Fra Angelico rented Tringham Hall, West End and self promoted a concert with ‘guests appearing live’. The band also played at the ‘Swimming Pool squat gig’ in Farnham organized by Jamie Freeman and Ben Norris (Stigmata Club) and others from the Farnham punk scene. On 7 June ’84 they were at The Old Schoolhouse supporting Glib Thicket, which saw the band labelled “socially concerned peroxide inheritors of the Rush vision” by Andy Marstrand previously of Woking bands Exodus and Interface. On the 3rd August they hit The Wooden Bridge followed by their last gig with Applin on vocals on 14 September ’84 at The Royal Oak, Bordon.
The band dispersed, but Hawes and Newman continued to jam together and wrote some sings. After getting back with Arthur they re-emerged as FRA in ’85. The all black attire was gone, as was the bleach blond hair. They auditioned for a keyboardist and a vocalist with the aim being to finalise a solid line-up, get in some new equipment, concentrate on rehearsing and recording and get together a promo package for record labels.
Once locked down, the band went about securing gigs, performing until late ’89 / early ’90. This included a number of appearances at the Bull & Gate, Kentish Town. On 5 November ’86 they were part of The Timebox night, as the primary support for The Wigs, with The Locomotives, The Milk Monitors, and Jon Beast lending a hand. Ten days later they were back as primary support, this time for The Fifteenth, ably assisted by Camoflague, Saiam, and The Flesh Puppets. On the 15 June ’87 they were supporting Kelly’s Heroes, along with The Patrol, and The Poppy Seeds; and they were back again on 13 April ’89.

15 November 1986: Flyer for Steel Bill and The Buffaloes supported by West One, FRA, and Second Balcony Jump at West End Centre, Aldershot. Source: West One Between the two Bull & Gate gigs in November ’86 they, along with West One and Second Balcony Jump, supported Steel Bill and The Buffaloes at one of The Buzz Club‘s local band night held at West End Centre, Aldershot on 15 November ’86. Two days prior they’d headlined Timebox Two at The Union Tavern, Camberwell with The Shrew Kings, Saviors of Pop Music, and Voice of Europe in support.
A single was apparently released on MCA Records, but it failed to get anywhere.
Applin, after Lifespan, went on to join Isle of Wight based 9th Street Heroes with Level 42’s Mark King’s brother Nathan on bass. This evolved into 9th Street who signed to A&M Records and released one album: “The Prayer”. Arthur and Hawes both went on to be founding members of Elephant Talk. Hawes is now a songwriter, record producer and music publisher with more than ten million record sales, and five number one singles having worked with Spice Girls, Five, Hear’Say, and Sugababes, amongst many others. He has also received of the Ivor Novello award for songwriting. Hawes is currently the CEO of Zebra1 and has been collaborating on the Skylephant project with Applin.
Tracks:
Gallery:

15 June 1987: FRA played Timebox at The Bull & Gate, Kentish Town with Kellys Heroes, The Patrol, and The Poppy Seeds. Source: Brian Caulfield via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave See less 
Soundscene, 20th Sept 1984 
Fron Soundscene Apirl 18th 1985 
Soundscene 14 June 1984 
Soundscene 7th July 1984 
In 1986 FRA appeared at The Timebox, Bull & Gate, Kentish Town on 5th and 25th November and at Timebox Two at The Union Tavern, London on 13th November. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
26 May 1984: Fra Angelico played Tringham Hall, West End. Source: Paul Steffens 
15 June 1987: FRA were at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town with Kellys Heroes, The Patrol, and The Poppy Seeds. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 
13 April 1989: FRA at the Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. Source: Mick Mercer via BULL & GATE MEMORIES – remembering all who sailed in her musical tidal wave 9th Street, 9th Street Heroes, A&M Records, Aldershot, Andy Marstrand, Bagshot, Ben Norris, Bordon, Bull & Gate, Buzz Club, Camberwell, Camoflague, Elephant Talk, Exodus, Farnham, Five, FRA, Fra Angelico, Glib Thicket, Guildford, Hear’Say, Interface, Ivor Novello Award, Jamie Freeman, Jon Beast, Kelly's Heroes, Kentish Town, Kevin Arthur, Level 42, Lightwater, Lloyd Newman, Mark Applin, Mark King, MCA Records, Nathan King, Saiam, Saviors of Pop Music, Second Balcony Jump, Shepperton Studio, Skylephant, Spice Girls, Steel Bill & the Buffalos, Stigmata Club, Stillbrook, Sugababes, The Fifteenth, THe Flesh Puppets, The Locomotives, The Milk Monitors, The Old Schoolhouse, The Patrol, The Poppy Seeds, The Royal Oak, The Shrew Kings, The Timebox, The Union Tavern, The Wigs, Tim Hawes, Timebox Two, Tringham Hall, Voice of Europe, West End, West End Centre, West One, Woking, Wooden Bridge, Zebra1 -
Three Times The Crow
(c’88-’90) – Inga Leru-Kelly (vocals), David Martin (guitar), Antony Taylor (drums) and Steve Russell (bass)

Band pictures taken at Wood Street Green. Picture Courtesy on Inga Leru-Kelly Leru-Kelly joined Three Times The Crow after answering an ad in Melody Maker. The band played locally at the likes of The George, Ash Vale and up into ‘town’ at The Bull & Gate, Kentish Town; Harlow Square and the Y Club; but mostly in Essex – where their manager was based – touring in Martin’s VW camper. Three Times The Crow stickers, designed by Stefanie Dibben, could be found plastered all over Guildford.
The band’s debut gig, as far as we know, was a 21st birthday party on 20 Jan ’89. This was committed to tape as were a number of the band’s performances including appearances at The George, Ash Vale on 15 August ’89. On 18 September ’89 they supported The Spy’s Trademark as part of a ‘Showcase Night’ at The Opera On The Green, Shepherd’s Bush.
Another gig laid down on tape was the band’s Vienna’s, Lincoln on 5 March ’90. A month later, on 4 April, Three Times The Crow were at The Bull & Gate, Kentish Town supporting Soho, with Smells Like Some Ghost. The band were typically busy through the later half of ’90 and, in addition to live recording, studio time was used to record a couple of tracks, with the intention of releasing a single, but the band split and nothing came of the session/s.
Guitarist Martin also used to be the vocalist is Mass Dive.
Tracks:
Gallery:

Candid photograph of Three Times The Crow’s Colin Fletcher. Picture courtesy of Inga Leru-Kelly 
Candid photograph of Three Times The Crow’s Steve Smith and Antony Taylor. Picture courtesy of Inga Leru-Kelly 
Three Times The Crow at New Merlin’s Cave, Clerkenwell. Source: Dave Martin 
1990 gig list for Three Times The Crow. Picture courtesy of Inga Leru-Kelly 

Band pictures taken at Wood Street Green. Picture Courtesy on Inga Leru-Kelly 

“Attic Find”. Picture courtesy on Inga Leru-Kelly 
4th April 1990 – Three Times The Crow are at The Bull and Gate, Kentish Town supporting Soho, with Smells Like Some Ghost. Picture courtesy of Mick Mercer. 
4th April 1990 – Three Times The Crow are at The Bull and Gate, Kentish Town supporting Soho, with Smells Like Some Ghost. Picture courtesy of Mick Mercer. 
4th April 1990 – Three Times The Crow are at The Bull and Gate, Kentish Town supporting Soho, with Smells Like Some Ghost. Picture courtesy of Mick Mercer. 
Inga Leru out front with Three Times The Crow in ’89 at unknown venue. Picture courtesy of Inga Leru-Kelly 
18 September 1989: The Opera On The Green, Shepherd’s Bush was holding a ‘Showcase Night’ and it featured The Spys Trademark and Three Times The Crow, seen here pre-set. Picture courtesy of Inga Leru-Kelly 
18 September 1989: The Opera On The Green, Shepherd’s Bush was holding a ‘Showcase Night’ and it featured The Spys Trademark and Three Times The Crow. Antony Taylor, Ash Vale, Bull & Gate, David Martin, Guildford, Harlow Square, Inga Leru-Kelly, Kentish Town, Lincoln, Mass Dive, Melody Maker, Opera on the Green, Shepherd's Bush, Smells Like Some Ghost, Soho, Stafanie Dibben, Steve Russell, The George, The Spy's Trademark, Three Times The Crow, Vienna's, Y Club -
The Game
(c’84-85) – Lisa Hassenberger (vocals / guitar), Andrew Lewis (bass), Clive Dunford (lead guitar), Alan Davis (drums) and Camello Semino (drums).
These 15 and 16 year old formed this five-piece in late ’84 and debuted at the Salvation Army Youth Club, Woking. Their first demo, recorded at Walton Road’s Youth Centre covered Queen’s “I Want To Break Free” and Siousxsie and the Banshees “Mirage”.
Davis went on to drum with Herbaceous Borders.
Gallery:

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China Heart
(c’85) – Brian Hanlon (vocals / guitar), Nigel Turner (bass), Dave Raphael (keyboards / harmonica) and Malcolm Dewhurst (drums)
The four formed China Heart in early ’85, having previously played in bands such as XLR8, Long Weekend and Panther. They were one of three bands, with AZIZI and What The Curtains, that played the Miss Woking Caberet in ’85; having impressed with their two track demo cassette carrying “Just Seen a Face”, and “Lovers & Fools”.
Tracks:
Gallery:

China Heart article from Soundscene. Picture courtesy of Nigel Turner 
China Heart’s Brian Hanlon at the Miss Woking Cabaret 1985. 
China Heart’s bassist Nigel Turner at the Miss Woking Cabaret 1985 
Pictutre courtesy of William de Kock 
Three members of China Heart. Picture courtesy (I stole it) of Nigel Turner -
Parmaviolet
(c’89-94) Scott Lawrence (drums), Elliott Forge (guitar), Ben Corbett (bass / vocals) and Paul Bolton (keyboards).
Camberley’s Parmaviolet started out on Christmas Eve 1989 and played their first gig 5 months later, on 30 May ’90, at The Fox & Hounds, Fleet. Then Corbett left, going on to form Phobia! The three remaining band members released the “And Then…There Were Three” demo shortly after the bands “demise” in June of that year.

Sleeve of “And Then…There Were Three!” demo cassette. Picture courtesy of Sid Stovold Lawrence, Forge and Bolton kept the fire burning for a while. In June ’91 they competed in day two of the Buzz Club’s Midsummer Madness local band competition against Frayed Edge, Who Moved the Ground?, Cesspit Rebels, and Big Sun. In ’92 their track “Sky” appeared on Farnborough Groove Vol.2 (aka Son of Farnborough Groove).
Adam Wolters (vocals / rhythm guitar) joined in Summer ’92. But Bolton had left, and Forge and Lawrence were the only original members left. By November ’92, after some more shuffling, that reportedly included bassist Chris Wareham – who’d been convinced to first pick up a bass after hearing Rob Le Breton’s ‘massive’ bass playing for Explodehead! – joining before he moved on to Flowers of Sacrifice, a ‘new’ 4-piece Parmaviolet eventually emerged with Nigel Firth on Guitar. We know that the band, in one form or another, played at Camberley Town Football Club on 30 June ’93 and on 14 July, supported by Summersalt, and the 20 August. The next year Parmaviolet competed, but lost to Headnoise, at the Battle for the Limelight held at Princes Hall, Aldershot in May – Head Noise also surpassed Who Moved the Ground?, Strange World, Blind, Punching Judy, and Redefining Beautiful! The band continued until September ’94, when Forge, Lawrence and Firth formed Riser with a female vocalist. After the rise of Riser, Parmaviolet’s “Holy Rover” was included on Farnborough Groove Strikes Back Vol.5 in ’95.
Nigel continues in Vienna Ditto, Wolters was last seen in The Charlie Farley Sunday Four, prior to which he’d joined Backlash for their final gig as bassist before joining Vis The Spoon and Matt Alexander in Brad Obscure, playing 2 gigs before dropping the curtain. In fact all the members have played in various bands over the years since Parmaviolet. Wareham went on to play in a number of gothic and industrial bands: Cathedral Lung, Complicity, Killing Miranda, and The Faces of Sarah. He ended up in a Joy Division tribute band Shadowplay, portraying Peter Hook and more recently plays in, female fronted, X Ray Love.
Tracks:
Gallery:

18 May 1994: Flyer for Battle for the Limelight at Princes Hall, Aldershot. Head Noise beat Who Moved the Ground?, Strange World, Parmaviolet, Blind, Punching Judy, and Redefining Beautiful! Source: Who Moved The Ground? 
Picture courtesy of http://www.chewtonia.com 
Picture courtesy of http://www.chewtonia.com 
Parmaviolet’s “Sky” appeared on Son of Farnborough Groove; Vol.2 in 1992. Picture courtesy of Pete Cole 
Side 2 of June 1990’s “And Then…There Were Three!” demo cassette. Picture courtesy of Sid Stovold 
13 June 1991: West End Centre info sheet covering the first rounds of the Buzz Club’s MidSummer Madness local band competition. Picture courtesy of Steve Porter 
Parmaviolet played Camberley Town Football Club on 30 June 1993 according to this gig list. They also played the venue on 14 July, supported by Summersalt and on 20 August. Picture courtesy of Steve Porter 
The Gossville Arsonist fanzine’s one-line review of Parmaviolet track from The Son of Farnborough Groove Vol.2 
Parmaviolet’s “Holy Rover” was included on Farnborough Groove Strikes Back Vol.5 in 1995. Picture courtesy of Pete Cole Adam Wolters, Aldershot, Backlash, Ben Corbett, Big Sun, Blind, Brad Obscure, Buzz Club, Camberley, Camberley Town Football Club, Cathedral Lung, Cesspit Rebels, Chris Wareham, Complicity, Elliott Forge, Explodehead, Farnborough Groove, Fleet, Flowers of Sacrifice, Fox & Hounds, Frayed Edge, Headnoise, Joy Division, Killing Miranda, Matt Alexander, Nigel Firth, Parmaviolet, Paul Bolton, Peter Hook, Phobia, Princes Hall, Punching Judy, Redefining Beautiful, Riser, Rob Le Breton, Scott Lawrence, Shadowplay, Strange World, Summersault, THe Charlie Farley Sunday Four, The Faces of Sarah, Vienna Ditto, Vis The Spoon, X Ray Love -
Holy Durex
(c’85-86) – Jeff Nash (vocal), Ringo Ognir (drums), Colin ‘The FishPerson’ Robb (bass) and John Roberts (guitar)

Holy Durex, (L to R: Robb, Jones, Nash, Ognir and Roberts. Picture courtesy of Kaz Jones This University of Surrey, Guildford based four-piece often performed dressed as clergy and on at least one occasion roped in Casual Sax, thanks to Robb of Steel Bill and The Buffalos, for whom the sax’y trio also provided horn. In May ’85, Holy Durex entered the University of Surrey Student Band Competition along with Fantasy Lies, but lost out to Swivel Corps, before the evening was headlined by the Geisha Girls. They went on to appear at the University’s Blues All-Dayer and they headlined the University of Surrey Rugby Club’s Drag Disco on 31 January ’86. Later that year they performed at the University’s Royal Charter Disco, supporting Bad Manners along with Inspector Tuppence & the Sexy Firemen; with the event starting at 8:00pm and ending at 6:30 the following morning. Their farewell gig was Guildford Live Aid at the Civic Hall, Guildford, but this was followed by a reunion gig at the University, involving the four mail members, on 3 July ’86.
Gallery:

Bare Facts – Jan 24th 1986 
Bare Facts, May 31st, 1985 
Bare Facts, June 26th 1986 
Bare Facts, June 26th 1986 
Bare Facts – June 20th 1986 
Bare Facts – Feb 14th 1986 
Holy Durex taking Guildford Civic Hall by storm back in ’86, as part of Guildford Live Aid. Picture courtesy of Colin Robb


























































































































































































































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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