By pure coincidence last night I had been preparing my Colchester 101 interview with Robbie Grey to post on this blog and today I was walking through Colchester and who should call me and suggest we meet for a coffee but Robbie himself. So we met up in Cafe Nero for a chat about what Modern English are up to at the moment. But enough about that for now.
Here it is as published a year ago in June 2011 as Modern
English prepared for their long awaited homecoming gig at the Arts Centre.
If Colchester did music it would probably be the best music in the World. Hang on a minute. We do, and rather well too! There’s Ady Johnson, Cav Ok, Angry Vs the Bear, Greg Blackman, plus a host of upcoming new bands such as Fick as Fieves and The Family Dickens. There was also Blur of course, who we continue to claim as our own, even though they did turn their backs on our town, with Damon Albarn once claiming “Places like Colchester celebrate the mediocre.” Thanks Damon, we’re feeling the love!
But, did Blur make it big in America? No. Even their bitter rivals
Oasis couldn’t crack the States in a big way. Modern English did.
Modern who?
English. Modern English. Post-punk Colchester band. Remembered fondly
by many of ‘a certain age’ around Colchester, and beyond.
A decade before Damon and co burst onto the scene and informed us that
There’s No Other Way, five young guys from Colchester found a way into the
hearts of Americans with their single I Melt With You. It had been picked up by
college radio stations across the US. The band made a video, and found
themselves the darlings of new music television channel MTV. Suddenly they were
famous! “It was mad, Robbie tells us. “We weren’t even looking for it over
there. It was being played on import and hadn’t even been released. Some DJ
picked it up and played it on his radio show,then another, and another, and it
just spread like wildfire across the major stations. All of a sudden record companies
were sniffing around. We were recording our second album with Hugh Jones at
Rockfield Studios in Wales and we got a phone call saying there’s a bidding war
in America for I Melt With You!”
The single reached number 7 on Billboard’s Top Tracks chart and 78 on
the Billboard Hot 100 in 1983. It was even voted number 39 in VH1’s Greatest Songs
of the 80s. Robbie continues “We’d been playing to a couple of hundred people
in some dodgy dark rooms and suddenly we’d got people like Matt Dillon introducing
us on stage at the Ritz in New York. We played there a lot. There were 1000
people outsideand he came backstage and said ‘How do you want me to introduce you?’ and we just said ‘You can say
whatever you want!’ We did a matinee show and I had my shirt ripped off by screaming
kids.”
That one song is almost a part of American popular culture. It was
used in the closing credits of the seminal 80s movie Valley Girl, starring a youthful
Nicolas Cage playing a young punk in his breakthrough role, and it has subsequently
been used in several television shows over the years. It has also been covered
many times, most notably by Bowling for Soup and Limp Bizkit’s Fred Durst, and has
featured in numerous American television commercials with the roll call including
:
Burger King
Ritz Crackers
Vicks
GMC
M&Ms
Taco Bell.
A cover version of it is still featured in Hershey’s ‘Pure Hershey’s’
commercials, which have been running since 2008, and Rob Lowe’s new movie I Melt With
You was inspired by the song.
Photo www.andyroshayphotography.co.uk |
Photo www.andyroshayphotography.co.uk |
It all began around 1976/77 when punk rock exploded onto the UK music
scene and inspired Colchester teenagers Robbie Grey, Gary McDowell and Mick
Conroy to form punk band The Lepers. “We thought, ‘this is brilliant, we can do
this’. So we did. It was as simple as that, we just picked up bits and bobs and
made a noise. But nobody wanted to be the singer so I got lumbered with that!”
With Robbie on vocals, Gary on guitar and Mick on bass they set about making a name for themselves, and The Lepers first gig was in Red Lion
shopping precinct’s underground loading bay. Robbie recalls, “There was a
socket in the wall and we plugged all our gear into it. That was our first ever
gig, we did posters for it, and people actually turned up! We got booked for
everything after that, including a Sham 69 gig at Woods, because nobody else
was doing anything like it at that time.”
In those days your musical taste, and the fashion style that
accompanied it, defined you to your peers, and to the world around you,
creating a kind of tribalism that was very often violent. This was exacerbated in
Colchester by the tension that existed at the time between soldiers from the
garrison, and civilians. “It was brilliant in Colchester then but it was dodgy
too” Robbie recalls. “Soldiers had their own pubs, so you couldn’t go in
certain pubs, and punks were hated anyway. But we were having a great time, and the music was so exciting. That’s why the poster for the Arts Centre
gig is black and white, because that’s how I remember Colchester at the time.
Colchester 101 photoshoot on the roof of the Arts Centre |
In spite of these warring factions, punk, soul and funk were often strange bedfellows and managed to blur the tribal edges. “The Lacy Lady in Ilford, which was a really
happening club at the
time, used to play punk and soul, and you’d go to the Embassy Suite in Colchester and they’d play funk all night followed by half an
hour of the Sex
Pistols and the Damned and all that.”
Homecoming gig at the Arts Centre |
But by 1979
punk was past its prime and a new direction would be needed if the band were to
stay together. A change of name, and direction ensued, along with a new sound,
and Modern English was born, with new band members Richard Brown on drums and Stephen
Walker on keyboards. They got themselves their first gig at the Colchester
Institute on the same bill as Siouxsie and the Banshees and Adam and the Ants,
followed by other local venues including Woods Leisure Centre and the Labour
Club. “The whole Modern English thing happened because we started to play our instruments
properly, so we decided to change our name and get more into the music, using
guitars and keyboards with an edgier sound inspired by Wire and Joy Division.
We became more arty and started to take it a bit more seriously really.”
“Our first
demo, which we recorded at The Hillside Studio in Ipswich, was just a
collection of ideas. We sent them out to about twenty labels and 4AD straight
away said they were interested.”
DJ Gilly, Robbie and myself at the Brightlingsea Festival 2011 |
Now signed
to a label, they recorded their first album Mesh and Lace, and also released
four singles which weren’t on the album: Drowning Man; Swans on Glass;
Gathering Dust; and Smiles and Laughter. Then it all took off in America with
the release of I Melt With You from their second album After The Snow, and long
tours of the USA were soon to follow. Robbie remembers those days fondly. “We’d
go over there and I’d be walking down the street and people would go “Hey!
Robbie from Modern English!” then we’d come back here and go to the Oliver
Twist (now The Twist) and nobody would know who you were. I loved it. You could
have a few pints in the pub and nobody would know what you’d been up to over
there.”
Busking in Colchester before the Free Festival |
Modern
English eventually split up after releasing the album Stop Start in 1986, but
Robbie never really called it a day and reformed the band a couple of times
with different line-ups, touring and recording. Now the 80s line-up is back
together and gigging again “I blame Mick Conroy,” Robbie jokes. “Mick wanted to
get the band back together. I agreed to it, the American manager got involved, and
that’s why it’s all coming around again.”
The week
before the forthcoming Arts Centre gig sees them playing in Paris, then back to
the UK for dates in London and Kent. After that they are heading across the
pond to tour America “The connection with America is still massive. We toured
there last summer and it was amazing.”
Headlining the Free Festival |
Their short
American tour last year included playing festivals in front of crowds of up to
25,000 people. “We enjoyed being back together so much It was so funny looking
around the stage and seeing all these old boys who were my friends. It was
brilliant! So we thought we would give it another year then see what happens after
that.”
The line-up
for the tour consists of Robbie Grey (main vocals), Gary McDowell (guitars, vocals),
Mick Conroy (bass guitars, vocals), Stephen Walker (keyboards), the other
Steven Walker (guitars), and Ric Chandler (drums).
Robbie
doesn’t rule out going into the studio to record some new tracks. “We haven’t
really discussed it much yet as we’re still all too amazed at being back in the
same room together after all these years! I’ve got a whole album’s worth of
material written though, and Mick Conroy’s got a whole load of stuff he wants
to bring to the table. So we’ll see what happens.”
For now
though the focus is on the forthcoming tour, and Robbie is looking forward to
be playing back in Colchester for the first time in many years, and seeing
plenty of familiar faces in the crowd.
...woods was brilliant.a great night.great days.the bay.bubble,chrissy ricketts,fred,cas,cockney(odd name for a chelsea supporter)bird,the sherrifs,nelly,stuart bray,si phillips...
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