- Third World War (band)
Third World War were an English
proto-punk band formed in1970 by manager and producerJohn Fenton together with songwriters Terry Stamp and Jim Avery. Fenton came up with the band's name and provided a large part of its musical direction;Phill Brown , the recording engineer on the band's first album, quotes him as saying, "I want a no-bullshit, working class band—I've had enough of all this pseudo peace crap." [http://www.stardomroad.com/phill_brown.html] . Due to this attitude, and the band's raucous sound and political lyrics, they are one of the groups to have been described as "England's first punk band". [http://www.johnhawken.com/discography.html]In 1970 the band recorded their first album; "Third World War", which was released in
1971 onFly Records , featured Stamp on rhythm guitar and vocals, Avery on bass,Mick Liber on lead guitars andFred Smith (drums).Tony Ashton also added piano on some of the tracks, and Jim Price (trumpet andtrombone ) andBobby Keyes (saxophone ), American musicians who were playing with theRolling Stones , provided some horn parts.At the time the album was released the band had yet to play live. In the summer of 1971 Avery, Fenton and Stamp reconfigured the group to get "the 'best' live grouping" [http://www.stardomroad.com/terry_1.html] , which was Stamp, Avery,
John Hawken on piano,John Knightsbridge on lead guitar, andPaul Olsen on drums. They touredFinland , playing 35 gigs in 30 days [http://www.stardomroad.com/paul_olsen.html] , and then went on to perform at a number of festivals across Europe. 1971 also saw the release of the band's two singles, "Ascension Day"/"Teddy Teeth Goes Sailing" and "A Little Bit Of Urban Rock"/"Working Class Man", both of which appeared on Fly Records.By the time Third World War went into the studio in
1972 to record their second album the management at Fly Records were becoming unhappy with the band's lack of commercial potential. Hoping to guide the group towards more mainstream acceptability, the label demanded the song "Coshing Old Lady Blues" be removed from the album. Fenton refused to release the album without that track, so "Third World War II" came out instead onThe Who 'sTrack Records label. Personnel on the record was the touring group from the previous summer, except thatCraig Collinge replaced Olsen on drums. During the recording of the album Fenton ran out of money and could no longer pay the musicians, and once the record was finished the band broke up.External links
* [http://www.stardomroad.com Stardom Road: The Official Third World War - Terry Stamp & Jim Avery Website]
* [http://www.strawbsweb.co.uk/@f/f_tww.htm www.strawbsweb.co.uk official strawbs website]
* [http://www.alexgitlin.com/npp/third.htm Excerpt from "The Tapestry of Delights: The Comprehensive Guide to British Music of the Beat, R&B, Psychedelic and Progressive Eras 1963-1976" by Vernon Joynson]
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