{"id":1169,"date":"2008-10-17T21:33:56","date_gmt":"2008-10-17T20:33:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/?p=1169"},"modified":"2015-04-08T01:26:06","modified_gmt":"2015-04-08T00:26:06","slug":"southern-death-cult-hammersmith-palais-london-w9-040782","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/southern-death-cult-hammersmith-palais-london-w9-040782\/","title":{"rendered":"Southern Death Cult &#8211; Hammersmith Palais, London, W6 &#8211; 04\/07\/82"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"http:\/\/i192.photobucket.com\/albums\/z149\/pengy1966\/pengy1966%20stuff\/KYPP41.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"523\" height=\"775\" \/><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.mediafire.com\/?jyuyy5nlydz\" target=\"_blank\">Crow \/ Girl \/ False Faces \/ Fatman \/ Apache \/ Crypt \/ Moya \/ All Glory<\/a><\/p>\n<p>A\u00a0 decent live recording of a decent performance taken from the crowd on\u00a0a sweaty night in July with The Straps and Theatre Of Hate headlining.<\/p>\n<p>Dedicated to Mike and Lena from Post Punk Tribe and the Heretics who are name dropped (not named actually, to protect the guilty!) in Paul Morley&#8217;s N.M.E. article below.<\/p>\n<p>More Southern Death Cult on this site if you care to search for it.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"http:\/\/i192.photobucket.com\/albums\/z149\/pengy1966\/pengy1966%20stuff\/KYPP10.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"523\" height=\"431\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Post punk comes the last tribe, SOUTHERN DEATH CULT, a Bradford group who attack the centralisation of media and political power in London. Paul Morley discovers their anger and aggression is only inspiration \u2013 not a way of life.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: I was in the army for a while, and then I came out, and I was a punk, and i thought, right, fucking anarchy, this is it for the rest of my life. This has got to last forever. And then when it died down, I just sat there, and I thought\u2026 what the fuck was all that about?<\/p>\n<p>Tracey thinks: What to say, what to do I don\u2019t know why i\u2019m on this earth and I don\u2019t know why i\u2019ll leave it. She wants to live. Tracey Bigger is 17, and wondering what is all about. She lives in Stockport, Cheshire, and with the rest of her family, she\u2019s on the dole. She wants to work with animal, or something. Soon she might move to Rochdale with her best friend Carol, but she\u2019s not really sure. Hesitant, helpless, her hair is bright white, and she likes her clothes to be black. Her favorite group is Bauhaus, maybe because there\u2019s a black-ish magic, maybe because of Murphy\u2019s body. There\u2019s no group that really lifts her into the wild beyond; or drops her innocent blue soul into an ecstatic trance. Her illusions are great and simple. The only thing that is vivid about her is her vagueness. She get uncomfortable walking down the street alarmed at the awful, obvious oddness of her arms and legs, feeling that all the passers-by in the mud around her are sniggering at her awkwardness. Some would simply call her \u2019shy\u2019 but it\u2019s a lot more profound than that. She\u2019s completely lost; at a loss.<\/p>\n<p>One thing that really make sense to her is going to The Hacienda with Carol; even with only a few pounds she still flnd way to get there 2 or 3 times a week. Inside the Hacienda building she senses that somewhere distant there might be a purpose, something to find.<\/p>\n<p>At The Hacienda last Friday she met a great boy called Buzz; looked like he\u2019d emerged from the shadows of a Bauhaus song, crimpled fringe-over-eye, clipped eyebrows, powdered face, piercing eyes, gorgeous, and he\u2019s even in a group. A group that are going to be supporting Bauhaus on a few of their dates, and even playing with the Banshees.<\/p>\n<p>She thinks of Buzz, and she thinks that maybe any group with him in must be fantastic. She writes down for him her phone number, on the inside of a cigarette packet in pink lipstick, and adds two kisses. He promises to call her. The next day Tracey\u2019s smiling all the time, and telling Carol that she\u2019s in love. Tracey remembers the name of Buzz\u2019s group. Southern death Cult. She even loves the name<\/p>\n<p>Southern Death Cult.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: It\u2019s a catchy name! It\u2019s not that it\u2019s just weird or anything. It\u2019s not really talking about London\u2026 perhaps the impression you get from the word London. The control that comes from such a place. All the main branches of government are in London, all the main branches of the military, the media, the music business, the multinational companies, so in a way London is a source of all the discontentment. But the Southern Death Cult isn\u2019t specifically London. I\u2019ve got a lot of friends in London! The name is a subtle hint about those people who have control. In a rehearsal room above Roots record shop In Bradford, we talk. Five voices, some unfinished sentences, the usual intrigues interpreted and translated with a tiny distortion, a tiny irregularity, which alters everything.<\/p>\n<p>Southern Death Cult do not produce the conversations and claims familiar in all such interviews; they go further, their view is fresher, they\u2019re acceptant yet infuriated\u2026 as if telling off people is a waste of time. At a loss, full of doubt, but getting ready to take you on. I\u2019m impressed by the way Southern Death Cult present themselves to me; with a consideration on that\u2019s more thrilling than the word suggests.<\/p>\n<p>I take Southern Death Cult to be: free of pettiness, craving for sensation and experience, always gathering strength, always surprised by what comes next\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: I never imagined it meaning anything to anyone other than ourselves. The fact that Southern Death Cult is meaning something outside of ourselves amazes me even now.<\/p>\n<p>Southern Death Cult are 18 months old and started showing off in public last October. Aky, drums, 20. Barry, bass, 20. lan, vocals, 20. Buzz, guitar, 21. Fame is taking them by the hand.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: We didn\u2019t have a plan of action. We didn\u2019t intellectualize about the name or anything. It didn\u2019t occur to us. We just wanted to be in a band blah blah blah\u2026<\/p>\n<p>lan says: We wanted to play the Queen\u2019s Hall down the road. That\u2019s all we wanted to achieve. Then one day we played with Chelsea and Gene October got on stage and said, Right this group is gonna be supporting us down the Marquee, for two days, and we just shit ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>Fucking hell, Marquee, amazing! Cos we didn\u2019t realize what we had\u2026 it was just something that we\u2019d put together. It just happened. People thought we\u2019d tried to manufacture something; It wasn\u2019t that. How this group came about is a complete accident.<\/p>\n<p>Above all else I take them to be: Convincing. Not ready to die of hunger.<\/p>\n<p>Aky says: The Sex Pistols were probably the one group that meant something to all of us. and the first punk thing was what I personally loved. But now I\u2019ve like grown out of it. I definitely don\u2019t like any of that stuff now, The Exploited or any of that. I don\u2019t think they\u2019ve done it right, they\u2019ve done it in a way that has no meaning. I do like Killing Joke. I can sit in my bedroom and listen to them over and over again and they really do something for me. They make me feel aggressive, the Banshees as well. Aggression not in like smashing something, but a personal power, an inspiration.<\/p>\n<p>After we\u2019ve finished, I ask the group how honest they\u2019d been during the interview.<\/p>\n<p>Buzz grins: I\u2019ve been more honest than everyone \u2018cos I didn\u2019t say owt.<\/p>\n<p>This is true, but not due to that risible hostility you can often associate with such groups, that unace immature grimness. Buzz was just a little slow, too slow to edge in a word before Aky or Ian eagerly diverted the conversation down their favorite channels, or Barry felt around a question with a shrewd caution.<\/p>\n<p>Buzz\u2019s is the most obvious friendliness of the SDCult, his smile the most indestructible. Those who feared that SDCult were a unit perfecting the grudge techniques of Killing Joke should have a cup of tea with Buzz. No greasy chip on his shoulder; a sparkle in his eye. Not even a tough hangover can extinguish that sparkle.<\/p>\n<p>Buzz had been at The Hacienda the night before and got incredibly drunk. \u201cI met this girl\u201d, he tells me, pulling a piece of cardboard out of his pocket. It\u2019s the cardboard with Tracey\u2019s phone number on. \u201cI wonder if I should ring her?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Buzz is the one in the group who will look the most responsive when you mention the delight (or not) of being at the centre of attention. When he thought that not all of his face was going to appear on the cover of this newspaper he was horrified. He doesn\u2019t read New Musical Express, but he knows that there are those who do. New Musical Express buys him some makeup for the photo session. Ay! says Aky, joking, \u201cyou should have had a shave this morning.\u201d There\u2019s the slightest hint of an unruly bristle. Buzz brings to Southern Death Cult a useful vanity, a belief about the self based infirm narcissism.<\/p>\n<p>Tracey waits for his call, and a whole lot more.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: We\u2019re not an aggressive protest band. We don\u2019t want to be any sort of Gods. Stimulating thought, bringing people together, entertaining people, creating an atmosphere of sheer exhilaration and enjoyment. These are the main things. It has to be a way of breaking through all the cliques, break it down. I\u2019ve got people writing to me who are into Toyah, The Associates and ABC. I think that\u2019s fucking excellent. Cos we want to break down all the fucking barriers. This is how it should be, a coming together.<\/p>\n<p>Southern Death Cult are not to be taken as ragged, haughty, even sordid, despite their name and the way they\u2019ve been slotted onto the outside of the pop mess. Don\u2019t read here what to read into them. Don\u2019t be misdirected when I say they are a group of romantic expectations and vagrant energies, that there\u2019s not a tot of morbid suspicion, that there\u2019s a disquieting fragility mixed in with the severe inventiveness. Such words are written in the window.<\/p>\n<p>So; blood-puffed, parched throat, a rush of spirit into the world, a novel awareness of danger and light\u2026 the words, the claims, become bland. Only \u201caction\u201d can prove that something special is forming, something as relevant to the times as a fine poem or a lonely girl, something that isn\u2019t too angry, too distraught, too concerned, something that doesn\u2019t feel that to be harsh is enough, that the \u201caction\u201d has to be predated with a snarl and accompanied by a fist.<\/p>\n<p>The action is something that works despite the things that get in the way. Things \u2013 bias, business, cynicism, that are put there, or things that just materialize. SDCult know a lot about the things that get in the way, that interfere with and scratch at the natural dash that exists pure and simple at the start. As soon as the group were written about there were tags and labels and comparisons \u2013 never just an abstract emotional response! \u2013 and pretty soon it seemed as though it was all going to be sucked into the black hole of big business and small minds.<\/p>\n<p>All those busy bodies with the sticky labels, date stamps and boxes for the new toys, turning a new energy into lust another name. Record labels moved forward with their brat-traps, but SDCult are not brats; they scoffed at these companies careless attitudes towards what has to be very special to the group. It\u2019s an ancient dream that the type of energy generated by SDCult \u2013 back through Banshees, Associates, Joy Division and back beyond and round and through \u2013 will remains uninfected. But nothing can stop it coming. Already with SDCult the labels and comparisons sprout like hair.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: The group is just an extension of ourselves, our experiences, what the four of us are interested in. We\u2019ve looked like this for years, not just because here\u2019s a group and some kind of new wave we want to lead or anything. When we started people were calling it redskin rock, and I just felt sick. My interest in North American Indians is nothing so superficial and it doesn\u2019t speak for the rest of the group. That was the first cult tag that we had to steer clear of, and we got past that, and we were chugging alone and now there\u2019s some new ones coming at us and you think. Oh Christ!<\/p>\n<p>Barry brings to the group a sly hardness, a neat watchfulness. When he mentions that Bauhaus \u2013 especially the slow songs \u2013 have had quite an impact on him, he pauses and then adds \u201cI make no apologies for that.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>For him it is certainly the music papers who, in their endless quest for diversion, create the divisions, the fences, who miss the point. For him it is dreadful that inexperienced writers suddenly have an audience of thousands. He talks carefully, listens with a distant interest, and he always looks very sure of himself even when he\u2019s expressing doubt or admitting to a contradiction.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: We respect what Sex Gang Children end Danse Society and those other groups we are being attached to are doing for what it is, but we\u2019re not a part of it, we don\u2019t feel that it\u2019s the same.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: I don\u2019t think they feel that they\u2019re part of anything either.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt\u201d, this thing that\u2019s apparently about, it\u2019s just some guy\u2019s been sat at a typewriter and he\u2019s decided there\u2019s a new wave.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps it\u2019s enough to indicate there\u2019s an audience falling about waiting for something that is solid and directly related to their experience, something that comes in at an angle, inside out, all skin and nerves, and (here it comes\u2026) I suggest, blandly, to Barry that what \u201cit\u201d is could be the most logical, the purest extension or fulfillment of the energy The Sex Pistols unleashed and he will say, in his way : \u201cPossibly\u2026. but that might well be a high thing to lay claim to\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: \u201cOh god, they might think of some shit name for whatever it\u2019s supposed to be\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s inevitable, and SDCult know It. They scratch their heads; but carefully. Have to watch the wonderful hair. I would say \u2013 a label, disposable \u2013 that SDCuIt play music \u201cfor God\u2019s sake\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: Sitting here and talking about it, it can seem pretentious. We\u2019re trying to intellectualize things that\u2026 that we just do ! It just comes naturally. We go onstage and play songs that we wrote and it just comes natural, we just do it. Trying to rationalize it and its direction, its motivation,. and the force that comes behind it, or, doesn\u2019t sit right. We just do it.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says : Look at TOTP now\u2026 I think to myself, where\u2019s the progression I thought there was two years ago? Aky says: Have you seen TOTP lately? It\u2019s like it was in \u201873 \u201874, it\u2019s all come back, the pop star thing.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: It\u2019s slipping back into its traditional roles.<\/p>\n<p>Do you not see any value in subtlety or a kind of literacy and comparative adventure surviving amidst the crass flesh?<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: Well, it would be an important thing if it was happening, but I don\u2019t see that it is. You might think of some examples to prove me wrong, but I don\u2019t think so.<\/p>\n<p>The bland thing for groups to say is right when we get through there it will be different, and the day comes and nothing happens; as in \u2013 the Joke getting on TOTP and being as menacing as the theme tune \u2013 are groups who claim to be outside the identifiable pop tradition more controllable than they\u2019d like to think?<\/p>\n<p>Aky says: It depends how you do it, what kind of band you are. I mean, The Exploited have been on and they haven\u2019t lost the hard core punk following.<\/p>\n<p>Exactly\u2026 surely you have to align yourself to some extent with the gloss of the format, its sophistication \u2013 in such a context The Exploited alternative is laughable, it doesn\u2019t relate to the experience of those who haven\u2019t chosen punk or who nothing is particularly dislodged, no defenses beaten.<\/p>\n<p>I suppose we\u2019re talking about an impact that transcends everything. If you could go on and translate your faith with fierce impact it would work, a communication outside what you would expect anyway. An impact like Bowie and Starman on TOTP, and the Pistols on So It Goes.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: lt would revolve around faith in ourselves and whether we have it or not. If we had that complete faith we could come across on TOTP and make such an impact, achieve that transcendence and break the barriers\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: People shit in their pants when they see examples like you\u2019ve given. That had to come across. Whether we\u2019ve got that much faith in ourselves\u2026 at this point in time I don\u2019t think that we have. It\u2019s happened so quickly. We haven\u2019t had a chance to totally assess everything. Such an impact would enable you to wriggle free of any kind of controlling labels.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: I don\u2019t think that we\u2019re ready yet.<\/p>\n<p>So is this sudden exposure harmful?<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: Certainly when it first happened. We haven\u2019t explored all the possibilities adequately to see how far it can go, so how can we have that complete faith in ourselves?<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: We haven\u2019t even found the perfect form for writing our songs yet. Right now we\u2019ve got 11 songs, with four waiting to spring out I feel that the material we\u2019re beginning to do makes me think, All fucking right, instead of thinking, Oh, we maybe we\u2019ll be able to do it next week, the new stuff makes me think, Well, I\u2019m just going to go and shit in someone\u2019s face. I\u2019m getting that confidence\u2026 I keep talking about shitting myself, but that\u2019s just how I felt when I saw The Sex Pistols, I just couldn\u2019t believe it. That\u2019s the impact you\u2019re talking about. I dunno whether we\u2019re all too modest to fully explain what the band means to each one of us, it\u2019s hard to look down on\u2026 If we were to get all the confidence possible an make that impact it may filter out after that and reach through to all kinds of people, but we\u2019ve got to wait for the right time and when, and if it happens we\u2019ll be able to get past it and just keep going and going and going\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Aky says: I personally have now a lot more confidence in what I do. Being a Pakistani\u2026 I\u2019ll explain\u2026 before it was really hard because I hadn\u2019t really achieved anything\u2026 But now that this is working its way up I don\u2019t really care what other people in our community think. I\u2019ve done something and it\u2019s like a lot of them won\u2019t ever do anything like it. We used to have relations come round and really take the piss out of me, but I have the last laugh because l am really achieving something. They all thought that I was moving away from my community, becoming westernized, but I don\u2019t think that\u2019s true at all.<\/p>\n<p>Aky brings to Southern Death Cult a great gentleness. During the interview he\u2019s extra-keen to explain how he\u2019s connected with the three other individuals: he\u2019s a little jumpy, but pleased to be trying out his thoughts. He says that he\u2019s lost a lot of his friends within his community: the group are his only true friends.<\/p>\n<p>If it wasn\u2019t for this I would probably have been a normal Paki \u2026ten foot green flares, yellow blazer, 15 foot high heel shoes. Actually, I think I just told you a lie there. I think I would have been some sort of rebel even if it hadn\u2019t have been for punk, still thinking much the same way even if I was listening to disco music. I would have tried something else, but not just<\/p>\n<p>for the sake of it.<\/p>\n<p>Why is it not possible for you to move out of your home?\u2026Erm\u2026in a certain way I respect the way that my parents have been brought up. I respect what they say, and obviously they do want the best for me. To leave home would be sacrificing a lot, which I just don\u2019t think it would be possible to explain to an EngIish person\u2026 The effects it would have on my sisters, my parents, that is a feeling I have that I don\u2019t think many people have, a very good feeling. I try to hang oil to that little bit of my Culture. I don\u2019t want to rebel against it just for the sake of it. That feeling has kept me at home.<\/p>\n<p>Does Aky bring to Southern Death Cult some slightly shifting value?<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: I think yes, something important. I think it\u2019s another perspective within the band\u2026 Aky\u2019s situation has made me think a lot actually\u2026 but we\u2019ve decided that we don\u2019t want to dwell too much on Aky being a Pakistani\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Aky says: When I\u2019m just called Aky the Pakistani drummer it really pisses me off, as if I\u2019m the token wog in the band or something. I hate it.<\/p>\n<p>Does he sense that people are following him through in a way?<\/p>\n<p>I think something is happening. It\u2019s really shit to say but l have like really ordinary kids\u2026 they worship me, I know it sounds horrible, but little Paki kids, they all see me and they laugh at me, right ? But they go back to their parents and say, Oh I really like Aky\u2019s style, I want to be like that. And their parents just smack them over the head with a chapatti. I\u2019m not saying that they should all totally break out of it, I want them to hold onto that something. They have got something that a lot of English kids haven\u2019t got.<\/p>\n<p>I detect from the group\u2019s conversation a refreshing lack of tight cynicism towards other people and the way they choose to live their lives.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: Aky\u2019s taught us that. His attitude is a healthy one to look into\u2026 it\u2019s not like mine\u2026<\/p>\n<p>You admit to a cynicism?<\/p>\n<p>I am probably less disposed to be reasonable. And he tells me.<\/p>\n<p>Aky says: it\u2019s really good, because I have come from a really solid culture, the kind of background of morality or something that is really fucking lacking in this country.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: You don\u2019t really realize how much.<\/p>\n<p>We get confused, a mass of information is thrown at us crudely ordering us how to organize our lives but nothing that really fits in with our own spiritual needs; maybe it\u2019s why young people grip onto pop music so much.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: Yeah, if we had one single thing it would probably be strong as Aky\u2019s. but we get five or six things just floating around.<\/p>\n<p>At the heart of the group there\u2019s a call for a coming together, a cry that all our experiences and anxieties are similar so why be split up, a strong searching; yet you will be interpreted the easy lazy way as dark, menacing, the usual clich\u00e9. I\u2019m not saying you should smile all the time.<\/p>\n<p>Barry says: It revolves around the fact that despite what we are and what we want to do when we get onstage, the emotion<\/p>\n<p>that comes through is a very powerful one. It doesn\u2019t really interpret itself gleefully. There\u2019s no point in skipping around.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: But I do smile at people, and they smile back!<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: I\u2019ve had these clothes on for two and a half years.<\/p>\n<p>Ian brings to Southern Death Cult a fierce sense of destiny.<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: I don\u2019t have to do this. I could bugger off back to Canada. I would really really like to go back to Canada. Not in the cities, but just disappear, because a little while ago I just thought that I\u2019d had enough. That\u2019s a long story but l just wanted to get out. But now I\u2019ve been given a direction\u2026<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s really strange how I got into this group. I can\u2019t believe it really. I was travelling round with The Poison Girls and I went to London and stayed with all these kids who were taking heroin in West Hampstead and I was just sat there shitting my pants. I didn\u2019t know where I was going to go.<\/p>\n<p>I went back to Liverpool and I met this friend from Bradford, a place I\u2019d only ever passed through, and he said come and live with me. So I went. And I was just sitting in this house and the group were practicing downstairs and they just asked me to join. It just happened. I just got shifted around, different events happened, and i got shifted to Bradford of all places.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve always thought that its destiny or whatever you want to call it throwing me about. To arrive in Bradford really makes me believe that. I don\u2019t feel that what\u2019s been pushing me around is going to take over and make me into the Messiah or any of that crap\u2026<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s just really special us four people being together. It\u2019s something really strong.<\/p>\n<p>So Southern Death Cult will be hard to resist?<\/p>\n<p>Ian says: I certainly hope so.<\/p>\n<p>Faith. and hope. No charity. Watch for them. Tracey is. She can\u2019t wait. She\u2019s waited long enough.<\/p>\n<p>The first record \u2018Fatman \/ Moya\u2019 will be released in mid October on Situation 2. The group will tour soon; some dates with Bauhaus, some on their own. An early alliance with Terry Razor, Theatre Of Hate\u2019s manager has fallen through.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Crow \/ Girl \/ False Faces \/ Fatman \/ Apache \/ Crypt \/ Moya \/ All Glory A\u00a0 decent live recording of a decent performance taken from the crowd on\u00a0a sweaty night in July with The Straps and Theatre Of Hate headlining. Dedicated to Mike and Lena from Post Punk Tribe and the Heretics who [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1169","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-links-downloads"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1169","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1169"}],"version-history":[{"count":18,"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1169\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":8310,"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1169\/revisions\/8310"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1169"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1169"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/killyourpetpuppy.co.uk\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1169"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}