The_Addicts

The Adicts

The Adicts

British punk rock band


The Adicts are a British punk rock band from Ipswich, Suffolk, England.[1] A popular English punk rock band of the 1980s, they were often in the indie charts during that decade.[2][3]

Quick Facts Background information, Also known as ...

The Adicts originated as The Afterbirth in late 1975 but never had any music or played any shows. They later became The Pinz.[4] They soon changed their name to the Adicts and became known for their distinctive Clockwork Orange "droog" image.[1] "Droog" is a noun derived from the fictional Nadsat language, meaning "friend" (a combination of Russian and English). This image, along with their urgent, uptempo music and light-hearted lyrics, helped set them apart from other punk bands.[1] In the 1980s, they temporarily changed their name to Fun Adicts (for a children's TV appearance) and then ADX (after signing to a major label).

Their music has catchy melodies and lyrics, often featuring extra instruments and sound clips - such as carousel music in "How Sad", violin played by Derick Cook in "Joker in the Pack", as well as gongs and keyboard percussion by Anthony Boyd in "Chinese Takeaway".

The musicians wear all-white clothing with black boots and black bowler hats. The singer, Keith "Monkey" Warren, wears joker makeup, wildly patterned suits (such as checkerboard or polka dot), flared trousers, colourful dress shirts, a bowler hat and gloves. The band's visual look is complemented by their stage shows, involving items such as streamers, confetti, playing cards, beach balls, joker hats, toy instruments, bubbles, and glitter.

History

The band debuted with the 1979 EP Lunch with the Adicts, the first release on the Dining Out label.[1] In 1980, the band recorded the songs "Sympathy" and "Sheer Enjoyment" for an intended single, but they were not released until the 1984 compilation album This Is Your Life. The band released their debut album, Songs of Praise, in 1981 on their own Dwed Wecords,[1] funded by the band's then-manager Geordie Davison. In 1982, the album was re-released on Fallout Records, who also issued their first single "Viva la Revolution", which became one of the band's most iconic songs. That same year, the band began their relationship with Razor Records and released their second album, Sound of Music, featuring the single "Chinese Takeaway".[1]

In 1983, the band released "Bad Boy", their highest-charting single. The success of that single led to the band signing with Warner Bros. Records offshoot Sire Records. At this time, the band changed their name to ADX at the behest of Sire, as the name the Adicts was considered to have too much of a negative connotation. The relationship with Sire only lasted for two singles, "Tokyo" (produced by Vapors frontman David Fenton in 1984) and a cover of Marlene Dietrich's "Falling in Love Again" in 1985. Their third album, Smart Alex, featuring previous singles "Bad Boy" and "Tokyo", was issued in 1985 on Razor Records. The band's third release of that year was the Bar Room Bop EP, for which they returned to Fallout. Their fourth album, 1986's Fifth Overture, was initially released only in Germany, and did not see release in their home country until the following year.

The band then entered a period of inactivity, only releasing the live albums Live and Loud!!, recorded in 1981 and released in 1987, and Rockers into Orbit, recorded in 1986 and released in 1990. The band's next studio album finally appeared in 1992, when the US label Cleopatra Records released Twenty-Seven, which was not released in the UK until a year later on Anagram Records. Cleopatra reissued the band's first three albums in 1993, giving those discs their first release in the US.

Another period of inactivity ensued, this time lasting until 2002. That year, the band's first album in a decade, Rise and Shine was released on Captain Oi! Records, who also released expanded reissues of all of the band's previous albums with the exception of Songs of Praise. Two years later, the Rollercoaster album was released on the US label SOS Records; it has never been officially released in the UK. Over the next couple of years, SOS released their own expanded reissues of Sound of Music, Smart Alex, Twenty-Seven and Rise and Shine. The Adicts' next album was a newly recorded version of their debut Songs of Praise, which was released in 2008 on the European label People Like You Records. A year later, the band released Life Goes On on the same label. In 2012, All the Young Droogs was released on DC-Jam Records.

In 2017, the Adicts signed to Nuclear Blast, and announced a fall 2017 release for the album And It Was So!.[5]

Discography

Studio albums

More information Title, Release date ...

Live albums

Title Release date Record label
Live and Loud 1987 Link Records
Rockers into Orbit 1990 Fallout Records
Joker in the Pack 2004 Anagram Records

Compilation albums

More information Peak position: UK Indie ...

EPs

Title Release date Record label
Lunch with The Adicts 1979 Dining Out
Bar Room Bop 1985 Fallout Records
Triple B Sides 2008 People Like You Records

Singles

More information Peak position: UK ...

Music videos

Title Date
"Viva La Revolution" 1982
"Joker in the Pack" 1982
"Life Goes On" 2010
"Give It to Me Baby" 2013
"Picture the Scene" 2017

References

  1. Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 21. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  2. Feeney, Katherine (10 March 2008). "The Adicts". Brisbane Times / The Sun-Herald. Australia. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  3. Sorocco, Erika (2 March 2011). "CALIFORNIAN: English punk band aim to take Temecula by storm". North County Times. San Diego County, California. Archived from the original on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  4. Forman, Bill (3 March 2011). "Viva la evolution". Colorado Springs Independent. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  5. "THE ADICTS Sign Worldwide Deal With Nuclear Blast - HighWire Daze". Highwiredaze.com. 17 August 2017. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  6. Lazell, Barry (1997). Indie Hits 1980–1999. Cherry Red Books. ISBN 0-9517206-9-4.
  7. Strong, Martin C. (1999). The Great Alternative & Indie Discography. Canongate. ISBN 0-86241-913-1.

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