The 101ers

The 101ers
Origin London, England
Genres
Years active
  • 1974 (1974)–1976 (1976)
  • (one-off reunion: 2003)
Labels
Associated acts
Past members

The 101ers were a pub rock band from the 1970s playing mostly in a rockabilly style, notable as being the band that Joe Strummer left to join The Clash.[1] Formed in London in May 1974, the 101ers made their performing debut on 7 September at the Telegraph pub in Brixton,[2] under the name 'El Huaso and the 101 All Stars'. The name would later be shortened to the '101 All Stars' and finally just the '101ers'. The group played at free festivals such as Stonehenge, and established themselves on the London pub rock circuit prior to the advent of punk.

History

The group was named after the squat where they lived together: 101 Walterton Road, Maida Vale, although it was for a time rumoured that they were named for "Room 101", the infamous torture room in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.

The band's early gigs included several at the Windsor Castle and a residency at the Elgin.[3] They were supported by the Sex Pistols at the Nashville Room on 3 April 1976; this is when Strummer claimed he saw the light and got involved in the punk scene.[1] Joe Strummer commented on this event in the Don Letts documentary Westway to the World on the end of the 101ers by saying "5 seconds into their (the Pistols') first song, I knew we were like yesterday's paper, we were over."[1]

By the time their debut single, "Keys to Your Heart", was released, Joe Strummer was in The Clash and the band were no more.[2] Clive Timperley later joined The Passions, Dan Kelleher went to Martian Schoolgirls and The Derelicts.[2] Richard Dudanski went on to work with The Raincoats, Basement 5 and Public Image Ltd.[2] Tymon Dogg worked with Strummer briefly in The Clash, playing fiddle and singing his original song, "Lose This Skin", on Sandinista!, and later in The Mescaleros.

I know the 101ers were good. In fact, as far as sound and excitement went we were much better than Eddie and the Hot Rods. The other guys in the group were twenty-five and twenty-six and they played good because they'd spent a few years getting that far. But they were just too old. What I really wanted was to get in with some young yobbo's who I was more in tune with.

The 101ers' recorded output was initially limited to one single. However, by 1981, interest in The Clash was at its height and a second single and a compilation album Elgin Avenue Breakdown was released.[2] Several of the tracks on the latter album were live recordings, and there is no evidence that the band ever conceived of these recordings as a full-length album.

Until his death in 2002, Joe Strummer had been planning to re-release Elgin Avenue Breakdown, complete with previously unreleased tracks that would encompass everything the band ever recorded. The project was completed with the help of Strummer's widow Lucinda Tait and former drummer Richard Dudanski, and released in May 2005 as Elgin Avenue Breakdown Revisited via Astralwerks in the US and EMI in Europe. The last track on the 2005 re-issue was an 8-minute version of "Gloria" recorded on 22 May 1976 at the Cellar Club in Bracknell. This was recorded two weeks before the 101ers finally split.[5] Joe Strummer joined The Clash who played their first gig at the Black Swan, Sheffield supporting the Sex Pistols on 4 July 1976.

Covers

The Clash had played "Keys to Your Heart" live at around the same time it was reissued as a single. The Hypertonics have also covered this song.[6]

Band line-up

Discography

Singles

Albums

References

  1. 1 2 3 Westway 2001.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Strong 2003, p. 109.
  3. Don J Whistance. "Early gigs". Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  4. Coon 1977.
  5. Accompanying booklet to CD 'Elgin Avenue Breakdown Revisited'
  6. The Hypertonics cover of Keys To Your Heart.
  7. Music Brainz entry

Sources

Books
Films and documentaries

Further reading

  • D'Ambrosio, Antonino (2004-10-13). Let Fury Have the Hour: The Punk Rock Politics of Joe Strummer. New York: Nation Books. ISBN 1-56025-625-7. OCLC 56988650. Edited with an Introduction by Antonino D'Ambrosio. 
  • DeCurtis, Anthony (2003). "1952–2002 Joe Strummer – A tribute to the late Clash singer and songwriter, plus his final remarks on the rise and fall of the legendary punk band". Rolling Stone. San Francisco, CA: Straight Arrow. 914 (27). ISSN 0035-791X. OCLC 96002520. 
  • Dudanski, Richard (2013). Squat City Rocks: Proto-punk and beyond, a musical memoir from the margins. ISBN 9781494434977. Illustrations by Esperanza Romero. 
  • Matula, Theodore (December 2003). "Joe Strummer, 1952–2002". Popular Music and Society. Bowling Green, Ohio: Taylor & Francis. 26 (4): 523–525. doi:10.1080/0300776032000144968. ISSN 0300-7766. OCLC 89586252. 
  • Salewicz, Chris (2007-05-15). Redemption Song: The Ballad of Joe Strummer (1st American ed.). New York: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-21178-X. OCLC 76794852. 
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