- Senseless Things
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Senseless Things Origin London Genres Alternative rock Years active 1986–1995 Labels Epic, Cherry Red Associated acts The Wildhearts, Like a Bitch, Gorillaz, The Libertines Website [1] Members Mark Keds, Ben Harding, Morgan Nicholls, Cass Browne Senseless Things were a British indie punk band, who were active on the UK festival circuit in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Contents
Career
Senseless Things formed around the musical partnership of songwriter Mark Keds (vocals, guitar) and Morgan Nicholls (bass, originally guitar), who as eleven year old schoolboys in Twickenham, Middlesex put together Wild Division in the early 1980s. With the addition of drummer Cass Browne (also occasionally known as Cass Cade and Cass Traitor) they became the Psychotics, playing various venues in their local area despite still being at school. Their first gig together as the Senseless Things followed at the subsequently demolished Clarendon in Hammersmith, London, in October 1986. Auxiliary members at this stage included a keyboard player, Ben, then a guitarist, Gerry, who deputized for Nicholls while the latter was studying for his 'O' levels.
The definitive Senseless Things line-up finally evolved in summer 1987 when Nicholls returned to take over bass, with the new recruit, former BBC clerk Ben Harding, acquiring the vacant guitarist's role. Taking their musical cue from The Ramones and The Dickies, and their spiritual lead from fellow guitar outfit Mega City Four, the quartet embarked upon a hectic touring schedule, often playing on the same bill as Mega City Four, Snuff and Perfect Daze.
The band's first release was on a 7-inch compilation single given away with issue 6 of the London fanzine, Sniffin' Rock. By March 1988 the band had attracted the attention of the BBC Radio One disc jockey John Peel, who invited them to record the first of two sessions for his programme. Following another fanzine release, three tracks headed by "I'm Moving", a friend offered to finance a 'proper' release. The "Up And Coming" 12-inch followed, then "Girlfriend" / "Standing In The Rain", for Way Cool Records.
Their first album followed, Postcard CV, which captured their concerts by packing ten tracks into around twenty two minutes. The album was rounded off by "Too Much Kissing", which was released as a single and was to become their signature track. The band joined What Goes On Records just as it collapsed, then signed to Vinyl Solution subsidiary Decoy Records, who released the four-track EP "'Is It Too Late?", in May 1990.
The group stayed with Decoy for "Can't Do Anything", which prefaced an appearance at the Reading Festival, and they signed to Epic Records at the start of 1991. The subsequent album The First Of Too Many saw the band experimenting with other styles including some acoustic songs, and the single "Got It At The Delmar" entered the Top 50 of the UK Singles Chart.[1] Two further Top 20 singles followed in 1992 - "Easy To Smile" and "Hold It Down".[1] The band toured the United States, supporting Blur, and went to Japan for the first time, appearing on talent show Ika-Ten.
Cover art for Postcard CV and The First of Too Many was provided by comic artist Jamie Hewlett, creator of Tank Girl and Gorillaz.
The first single from 1993's Empire Of The Senseless, was "Homophobic Asshole". The subsequent single from the album, "Primary Instinct" had more success. In 1995, the band released a final album, Taking Care Of Business, and a single "Christian Killer" (renamed "Christine Keeler"). They split up after one last UK tour.
Line-up
- Mark Keds - vocals/guitar
- Ben Harding - guitar/vocals
- Morgan Nicholls - bass
- Cass Browne - drums
Post Senseless Things
Keds went on to form Jolt then Trip Fontaine, The Lams and Like A Bitch. He very briefly played with The Wildhearts. He also co-wrote The Libertines hit "Can't Stand Me Now" which took a line from the Jolt single "Kitten".
Harding went on to join 3 Colours Red and has since developed a career in public and media relations with diverse organisations including Help the Aged, the Eden Project and the Crown Prosecution Service. Morgan joined Vent414 with Miles Hunt from The Wonder Stuff then went on to play with The Streets. He is now part of Muse's live set-up. Cass went on to sing for Delakota and then Gorillaz. He also briefly played with Urge Overkill.
Senseless Things reformed (minus Morgan, who was touring in Japan with Muse). He was replaced by Micky Wyle (ex-Hitechjet), for one short four-song performance on 4 March 2007 - over twelve years after the band last performed - as part of a gig to celebrate the life of former Mega City Four frontman Darren "Wiz" Brown, who died in December 2006.
Discography
Albums
- Postcard C.V. (1989) - 12", Tape - Way Cool (WC 004 LP)
- The First of Too Many (1991) - 12", CD, Tape - Epic - UK #66[1]
- Empire of the Senseless (1992) - CD - Epic - UK #37[1]
- Empire of the Senseless/Postcard CV (1993) - Double CD, Tape - Epic
- Peel Sessions (1994) - CD - Strange Fruit
- Taking Care of Business (1995) - CD, 12" - Epic
- Singles (1998) - CD - Epic
Singles/EPs
- 1988 - "Up & Coming" 12" - "Way Cool"
- 1988 - split 7" w/ Crazyhead - "Sniffin' Rock"
- 1988 - "Yo Yo Jo"
- 1989 - "Bootleg"
- 1989 - "Girlfriend" / "Standing in the Rain"
- 1989 - "Too Much Kissing" / "Trevor"
- 1990 - "Is it Too Late?"
- 1990 - "Can't Do Anything"
- 1991 - "Everybody's Gone" - UK #73
- 1991 - "Got it at the Delmar" - UK #50
- 1991 - "Easy to Smile" - UK #18
- 1991 - "Gokigenyo Dudes" (Japanese release on Planet Earth/Toshiba-EMI, comprising previous singles)
- 1991 - "Up & Coming" (CD release)
- 1992 - "Hold it Down" - UK #19
- 1992 - "Homophobic Asshole"
- 1993 - "Primary Instinct" - UK #41
- 1993 - "Too Much Kissing" - UK #69
- 1994 - "Christine Keeler" - UK #56
- 1995 - "Something to Miss" - UK #57[1]
References
External links
Categories:- English indie rock groups
- Musical groups from London
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