The Partisans – No Future Records – 1981/1982

Police Story

Killing Machine

17 Years Of Hell

Power And The Greed / Bastards In Blue

First couple of record releases from Bridgend’s Partisans on the No Future record label, a label who also helped out with debut releases from Blitz, Peter And The Test Tube Babies and The Violators, and no doubt a load more bands that escape my memory right now.

The first 7″ single uploaded (also the bands debut record) is my favorite from the two of them, but ’17 Years Of Hell’ has been requested by Baron Von Zubber, so I lobbed that up as well.

Text below from Welwyn Garden City’s own Rising Free fanzine edited by one time Chron Gen manager Gez Lowery.

Baron Von Zubb’s infamous (to some) punk band The Heretics had an interview with Toxic Graffity in 1979 or 1980 which is uploaded on this site somewhere. Some of the quotes on The Heretics pages are gold dust. For example “I wanna cut my ‘ed off, I don’t want to look like I do” or “I don’t believe in anything unless I’m speeding”, great stuff, well worth a read!

The Partisans interview is rather more pedestian, but feel free to compare by hitting the link for The Heretics page here

Oi! Oi! Oi! Oi! The Partisans from the Bridgend area of South Wales were originally formed way back in August 1978. At that time they had two bassists and were heavily influenced by the Ramones and the Pistols (the former still visible in their music today). By the beginning of 81 the Partisans had gelled into Spike on the mike, Louise on the bass, Lealand on the guitar and Shark on drums. I managed to catch up with the firey foursome, apres gig, at Stevenage Bowes Lyon House for a few brief words.

The Exploited said the Oi! Album they appeared on typecast them as an Oi! band. Would you mind this typecasting?
Lealand:
We don’t mind being classed as Oi!, even though we are punks. We don’t wanna segregate punks and skinheads, it’s better they get on.

Do you see any difference between punk and Oi!?
Louise:
No not really but Oi! is more for skinheads.
Spike: They’re more violent.
Louise: No they’re not, there’s one over there who came with us, he’s ok.
Lealand: A lot of punks don’t like Oi!, but if Anti-Pasti and the Exploited said they were Oi!, they’d be more together. It’s just punk groups trying to segregate the two.
Spike: We don’t want any tribalism, skins against punks, anything like that, stick.

But surely that creates an even bigger tribe?
Lealand:
Yeah, but I think it would be nice if every kind of kid, mods, punks, and heavy metal all got on and liked the same kind of music.
Spike: Oh! I don’t know about that.
Shark: If Oi! become a tribe, it should be working class against all kinds of crappy music.

But don’t you think Oi! is elitist when Garry Bushell says ‘It’s the vision of all working class youth sticking together’?
Louise:
No not really, it depends on what he means by ‘working class’, there are so many different ideas about that.

It shouldn’t be a strictly working class movement then?
Lealand:
No it doesn’t matter whether you’re middle class or working class. Punk and Oi! should be for anyone who wants to join in. You can get people who are middle class with very working class attitudes and vice versa. It’s not what class you are that’s important, it’s what you are as a person that matters.

A lot of your songs are a protest, do you think a band can realistically change anything?
Louise:
No!, but you can influence kids to do marches and things like that but no one ever listen’s to them. We just try and make people more aware.

Is that why you put your lyrics on the sleeve?
Louise:
Yeah!, and because no one can understand them!
Lealand: We don’t want people to read into them too deeply and get depressed about what’s going to happen.

Do you see the new punk explosion dying down after a couple of years, as happened with the original bands?
Shark:
Yeah, I expect it will.
Lealand: It all depends on what the kids are like who are into it, if they are all five minute fashion kids it will. But if they’re really into, it won’t. Also if the bands change musically it will die, hopefully they can stay loyal, we will.

As for their future plans the Partisans seem a bit vague. The No Future deal consists of three singles and an LP. Money-wise, costs and profit are split 50/50, a situation they are more than happy with. A new single, to follow up the 15 000 selling ‘Police Story’, should see the light of day around the end of April. Touring is the only thing they have a problem with at the moment, but when Shark leaves school things should be rectified pronto.

5 comments
  1. baron von zubb
    baron von zubb
    October 20, 2008 at 9:26 am

    Is there any music from the period that you aint got?
    Great stuff. Not exactly sure why it had such an impact on me though now i’ve heared it again. Thus is the passing of time.
    Cheers for that.

  2. Chris
    Chris
    October 20, 2008 at 9:42 am

    Micky, How about sticking up that first single by The Violators. “gangland” I think it was called? that’s a BRILLIANT song. By far my favourite of all the no future type releases. Sure Ian S. will enjoy hearing it again too.

  3. Nic
    Nic
    October 20, 2008 at 2:08 pm

    I’ve got a bit of a soft spot for some of the Partisans tracks, possibly due to the urgent bass playing or the blunt directness of the lyrics…’Killing Machine’ has always sounded pretty good in a “It’s-pretty-crap-but-it-still-makes-me-smile” sort of way (as has ‘I Don’t Give a Fuck’ from their first album)…

    The link to the Heretics interview is quite interesting for the way in which it highlights the differing concerns of bands separated by only a couple of years: the late 70’s nihilism vs the concern with tribalism in the early 80’s…

  4. Ian S
    Ian S
    October 29, 2008 at 11:17 am

    The Violators ‘Gangland’ was a pretty good single. One of those records that’s meant to condemn teen aggro but probably ends up causing more of it. Pub trivia: their lead singer Helen Hill appeared in an episode of ‘Emmerdale’ years later.

    Yet another band influenced by Clockwork Orange, a couple of male band members donning droog clobber for the front cover of the single.

    Must be quite a few bands influenced by Anthony Burgess: Heaven 17, Crewsy Fixers, Clockwork Criminals, Moloko . . .

  5. NATION ON FIRE
    NATION ON FIRE
    October 30, 2008 at 8:25 pm

    two great ep’s remember when i first heard them when i was 16 back in 1986 still love to listen to them to this day you should post there othere classic’s like blind ambition ep 1983 and the time was right lp 1984 cheers.

    gabe

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