|
|
|
|
|
|
Chumbawamba is a band from the UK who play pop music with influences of folk
and several other styles of popular music. They use their music to promote
anarchist ideas.
Formed in a squat in Leeds, England in 1984, the anarchist pop group
Chumbawamba was a most unlikely mainstream success story; after more than a
decade in relative obscurity, much of it spent attacking the very notion of
stardom, they signed to a major label in 1997, quickly scoring a major
international hit with the riotous single "Tubthumping.
***
***
Chumbawamba originally comprised former Men in a Suitcase frontman Dunst,
onetime Ow My Hair's on Fire drummer Alice Nutter and computer technician
Lou Watts. After recording a song for a compilation album, they teamed with
Harry Hamer and Mavis Dillon -- members of one of the LP's other
contributors, the Passion Killers -- and the Chumbawamba lineup was
complete. The band quickly became a thorn in the side of British
conservatives, mounting a series of benefit concerts for a variety of anti-Thatcherite
causes and campaigns; before long, they were also the subject of frequent
police raids. Released at the height of Live Aid-era goodwill, Chumbawamba's
debut LP Pictures of Starving Children Sell Records: Starvation, Charity and
Rock 'N' Roll -- Lies and Tradition appeared in 1986, brutally attacking the
principles of media limelight and career-boosting they perceived at the
heart of the charitable event. (The subject resurfaced in 1987, when a
celebrity cover of "Let It Be" mounted to raise money for ferry-disaster
victims was followed by the Chumbawamba single "Scab Aid," recorded as the
pseudonymous Scum.) 1987's Never Mind the Ballots...Here's the Rest of Your
Lives was rush-released to coincide with the year's general elections, while
the 1989 follow-up EP English Rebel Songs 1391-1914 consisted primarily of
authentic 14th-century anti-poll tax protest songs. With 1990's Slap!,
Chumbawamba began experimenting with sampling; the follow-up, to be titled
Jesus H. Christ, was banned on the eve of its release after rights to cover
versions of songs by Kylie Minogue, Paul McCartney and Abba were denied. (Consequently,
the focus of 1992's Shhh was censorship.) With 1993's anti-fascism rant "Enough
Is Enough," Chumbawamba scored their biggest indie hit to date, and 1994's
Anarchy LP was also a success. After the 1995 live LP Showbusiness, the
group returned the next year with Swingin' With Raymond, a concept album
about a man with the word "LOVE" tattooed on the knuckles of one hand and "HATE"
tattooed on the other. All appeared to be business as usual until it was
announced that Chumbawamba had signed to EMI; their 1997 major-label debut
Tubthumper became a smash, propelled by the infectious "Tubthumping," a Top
Ten hit in the U.S. and throughout Europe. A second single, "Amnesia," was
also a success. Their newfound popularity also allowed the group to bring
their anarchist message to a new audience -- Nutter even found herself in
the middle of a major scandal when she appeared on the American panel
discussion show Politically Incorrect to advocate shoplifting from major
record chains, prompting some retailers to pull Chumbawamba's discs from
their shelves. The ABCs of Anarchy, a split EP with Negativland, followed in
1999, and in the spring of 2000 the group resurfaced with What You See Is
What You Get. Worried about the public reaction to the lyrics, which were
critical of big business and the media, EMI decided to drop the group. The
band was unusually quiet for a period, but director Alex Cox approached them
about scoring Revenger's Tragedy and they jumped at the chance. A
documentary about the band, Well Done, Now Sod Off!, appeared in 2001. That
same year, they stirred attention by licensing songs to certain companies
that fit their political standards. They reappeared in 2002 for a reunion
show, and that summer they released Readymades. The same album resurfaced in
October 2003, this time through a new deal at Koch. Readymades and Then Some
was also augmented with video content and remixes. Next it was the summer of
Shhhlap!, which compiled the early Chumba releases Shh and Slap!, and then
in June '04 the band came through with UN, which built on the folktronic
sound of Readymades and was as ideologically feisty as ever. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHUMBAWAMBA PICTURES |
|
|
|
MOST POPULAR
Angelina Jolie
Jessica Alba
Paris Hilton
Scarlett Johansson
Jessica Simpson
Britney Spears
Christina Aguilera
Lindsay Lohan
Shakira
Beyonce
Hilary Duff
ADDITIONS
Miley Cyrus
Rihanna
Hayden Panettiere
Miranda Cosgrove
Selena Gomez
Demi Lovato
Vanessa Hudgens
Ashley Tisdale
|