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{{short description|English punk rock band}} | |||
'''Crass''' were a ] band from ] in England and progenitors of militant ] that became pervasive in the punk music scene. Their philosphical influence on numerous punk bands from the 1980s on cannot be overstated, even if few bands mimicked their more free-form musical style. Whereas the ]' anarchism seemed to be a self-consciously nihilistic prank, Crass's anarchism was more directly linked to the ] or communalistic varieties of 20th century political thought. | |||
{{about|the band|the definition of "crass"|wikt:crass|the people named Crass|Crass (surname)}} | |||
{{pp-move}} | |||
{{good article}} | |||
Recommended listening (all released on the Crass record label); | |||
{{use British English|date=September 2012}} | |||
The Feeding Of The 5000 (12" single, 1978), Stations Of The Crass (LP, 1979), Reality Asylum (7", 1978), Penis Envy (LP, 1981), Christ The Album (LP, 1982), Yes Sir I Will (LP, 1983), Best Before 1984 (Retrospective LP compilation, 1986) | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}} | |||
{{Infobox musical artist | |||
| name = Crass | |||
| image = Crass_pete_steve_andy.png | |||
| caption = Crass on stage in ] in May 1984, with the slogan "there is no authority but yourself" in the background. From left to right: ], ], and ]. | |||
| image_size = <!-- Only for images narrower than 220 pixels --> | |||
| landscape = yes | |||
| alias = Stormtrooper (1977) | |||
| origin = ], England | |||
| genre = {{flatlist| | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*{{nowrap|]}} | |||
}} | |||
| years_active = 1977–1984 | |||
| label = {{flatlist| | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
| past_members = * ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* Phil Free | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* Joy De Vivre | |||
* Mick Duffield | |||
* ] | |||
* Steve Herman | |||
}} | |||
'''Crass''' were an English ] and ] band formed in ] in 1977<ref>"In August 1977 Dave King went (...) As Dave exits stage left, Steve Ignorant returns to Dial House and (...) Crass was born." {{cite book |author=Berger, George |title=The Story of Crass |publisher=] |year=2006 |page=76}}</ref> who promoted ] as a political ideology, a lifestyle and a ]. Crass popularised the ] movement of the ], advocating ], ], ], ] and ]. The band employed and advocated a ] in its albums, ]s, leaflets and films. | |||
Crass spray-painted stencilled ] messages in the ] system and on advertising billboards, coordinated ] and organised political action. The band expressed its ideals by dressing in black, military-surplus-style clothing and using a stage backdrop amalgamating ]s of perceived authority such as the ], the ], the ] and the ]. | |||
'''Crass''' in their own words (reprinted with permission from their retrospective LP 'Best Before 1984'; | |||
The band was critical of the punk subculture<ref>{{cite book |quote=We believed that you could no more be a socialist and signed to CBS (The Clash) than you could be an anarchist and signed to EMI |last=Rimbaud |first=Penny |year=2004 |title=Love Songs |publisher=Pomona Publishing |page=xxiv |isbn=1-904590-03-9}}</ref> and ] in general; nevertheless, the anarchist ideas that they promoted have maintained a presence in punk.<ref>{{AllMusic|class=explore|id=style/d11374|label=Anarchist Punk genre}}</ref> Because of their free experimentation and use of tape collages, graphics, spoken word releases, poetry and improvisation, Crass have been associated with ]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archives.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2010/12/03/crass-the-anarcho-punk-fountainhead-is-coming-to-sf-in-march-sort-of|title=Crass, the Anarcho-Punk Fountainhead, Is Coming to S.F. in March -- Sort Of|first=Josh|last=Graham|date=3 December 2010|access-date=11 November 2017|archive-date=12 November 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171112021501/https://archives.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2010/12/03/crass-the-anarcho-punk-fountainhead-is-coming-to-sf-in-march-sort-of|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://thequietus.com/articles/16660-louder-than-words-walk-through|title=Reading And Rioting: A Louder Than Words Walk Through|magazine=The Quietus|date=11 November 2014|access-date=11 November 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://creators.vice.com/en_uk/article/gvdkbm/smoke-gets-in-your-eyes-anthony-mccalls-enchanting-film-installations|title=Smoke Gets in Your Eyes: Anthony McCall's Enchanting Film Installations|first=Erica|last=Gonsales|website=Creators.vice.com|date=25 May 2011|access-date=11 November 2017}}</ref> and ].<ref name="guardian">{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/sep/28/popandrock.shopping4|first1=Dorian|last1=Lynskey|title=Jeffrey Lewis, 12 Crass Songs|newspaper=The Guardian|location=London|date=28 September 2007}}</ref> | |||
"When, in 1976, punk first spewed itself across the nation's headlines with the message 'do it yourself', we, who in various ways and for many years had been doing just that, naively believed that Messrs. Rotten, Strummer etc. etc. meant it. At last we weren't alone. | |||
== History == | |||
The idea of becoming a band had never seriously occurred to us, it simply happened. Basically anyone was free to join in and rehearsals were rowdy affairs that invariably degraded into little more than drunken parties. Steve and Penny had been writing and playing together since early '77, but it wasn't until Summer of that year that we had begged, borrowed and stolen enough equipment to actually call ourselver a band....CRASS. | |||
=== 1977: Origins === | |||
Having finally managed to rehearse five songs, we set out on the road to fame and fortune armed with our instruments and huge amounts of booze to help us see it through. We did gigs and benefits, chaotic demonstrations of inadequacy and independence. We got turned off here, turned down there and banned from the now legendary Roxy Club. 'They said they only wanted well behaved boys, do they think guitars and microphones are just fucking toys?' | |||
] | |||
The band was based around an anarchist ] in a 16th-century cottage, ], near ], Essex,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/friday_review/story/0,3605,417770,00.html|work=The Guardian|author=Iain Aitch|date=5 January 2001|title=Country house anarchy}}</ref> and formed when commune founder ] began jamming with ]<ref>Sleeve note on ''Bullshit Detector Volume 1'' (Crass Records, cat no.421984/4): "Sometime in 1977 Rimbaud and Ignorant started messing around with a song called 'owe us a living'. They ran through it a few times and decided to form a band consisting of themselves. They called themselves Crass"</ref> (who was staying in the house at the time). Ignorant was inspired to form a band after seeing ] perform at Colston Hall in ],<ref name="ReferenceA">"At the end of the Clash gig there was all these people shouting and saying 'your shit!' and Joe Strummer stood there and said 'if you think you can do any better go ahead and start your own band.' And I was like what a great idea!" {{cite web |url=http://www.punk77.co.uk/anarcho_punk/steve_ignorant_interview_2007.htm |title=Steve Ignorant Interview |website=Punk77.co.uk}}</ref> whilst Rimbaud, a veteran of ] ] groups such as ] and Ceres Confusion,<ref>Rimbaud, P; "...EXIT – 'The Mystic Trumpeter, Live at the Roundhouse 1972{{'"}} accompanying booklet, Exitstencil Recordings 2013</ref> was working on his book ''Reality Asylum''. They produced "So What?" and "Do They Owe Us a Living?" as a drum-and-vocal duo.<ref>{{cite book |author=Rimbaud, P |title=Love Songs |page=xxi |publisher=Pomona Publishing |year=2004 |isbn=1-904590-03-9}}</ref> They briefly called themselves Stormtrooper{{sfn|Glasper|2007|p=14}} before choosing Crass in reference to a line in the ] song "]" ("The kids were just crass").{{sfn|Rimbaud|1999a|p=99}} | |||
By now we had realised that our fellow punks, The Pistols, The Clash and all the other muso-puppets weren't doing it at all. They may like to think that they ripped off the majors, but it was Joe Public who'd been ripped. They helped no one but themselves, started another facile fashion, brought a new lease of life to London's trendy Kings Road and claimed they'd started a revolution. Same old story. We were on our own again. | |||
Other friends and household members joined (including ], ], ] and Steve Herman), and Crass played their first live gig at a squatters' ] in Huntley Street, ]. They planned to play five songs, but a neighbour "pulled the plug" after three.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=83}} Guitarist Steve Herman left the band soon afterward and was replaced by Phil Clancey, a.k.a. ].{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=86}} ] and ] also joined around this time. Other early Crass performances included a four-date tour of New York City,{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=93}} a festival gig in ]<ref name="punk77.co.uk">{{cite web |url=http://www.punk77.co.uk/anarcho_punk/steve_ignorant_interview_2007.htm |title=Steve Ignorant interviewed |website=Punk77.co.uk |year=2007}}</ref> and regular appearances with the ] at ] and Action Space in central London. The latter performances were often poorly attended: "The audience consisted mostly of us when the Subs played and the Subs when we played".<ref name=rimbaudsleevenote>Rimbaud, P; "...In Which Crass Voluntarily Blow Their Own", sleeve note essay included with ''Best Before 1984'' album</ref> | |||
Through the alchoholic haze we determined to make it our mission to create a real alternative to musie biz exploitation, we wanted to offer something that gave rather than took and, above all, we wanted to make it survive. Too many promises have been made from stages only to be forgotten on the streets. | |||
Crass played two gigs at the ] in Covent Garden, London.<ref name="punk77.co.uk"/> According to Rimbaud, the band arrived drunk at the second show and were ejected from the stage; this inspired their song "Banned from the Roxy"<ref>{{cite web |title="Banned from the Roxy" from ''Feeding the 5000'' |publisher=Small Wonder Records |year=1978 |url=http://www.plyrics.com/lyrics/crass/bannedfromtheroxy.html}}</ref> and Rimbaud's essay for Crass's self-published magazine ''International Anthem'', "Crass at the Roxy".<ref>{{cite web|author=Rimbaud, Penny |title="Crass at the Roxy" from ''International Anthem 1'' |year=1977 |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/anthem1/anthem1_4.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051201130815/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/anthem1/anthem1_4.html |archive-date=1 December 2005 }}</ref> After the incident, the band took themselves more seriously, avoiding alcohol and cannabis before shows and wearing black, military-surplus-style clothing on and off the stage.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=103}} | |||
Throughout the long, lonely winter of 77/78 we played regular gigs at The White Lion, Putney with the UK Subs. The audience consisted mostly of us when the Subs played and the Subs when we played. Sometimes it was disheartening, but usually it was fun. Charley Harper's indefatigable enthusiasm was always an inspiration when times got bleak, his absolute belief in punk as a peoples' music had more to do with revolution than McClaren and his cronies could ever have dreamt of. Through sheer tenacity we were exposing the punk charlatans for what they really were, a music-biz hype. | |||
]They introduced their stage backdrop, a logo designed by Rimbaud's friend ].{{sfn|Glasper|2007|p=23}} This gave the band a militaristic image, which led to accusations of fascism.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=104}} Crass countered that their uniform appearance was intended to be a statement against the "]" so that no member would be identified as the "leader".{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=104}} | |||
Our gigs remained wild and disorderly, we were still too scared to play without a belly full of booze and invariably we were in such a state that we'd realise half way through a song that each of us was playing a different one. For all the chaos it was immense fun, no one bitched about leather boots or moaned about milk in tea, no one wanted to know how anarchy and peace could be reconciled, no one bored our arses off with protracted monologues on Bakunin, who at that time we probably would have thought was a brand of vodka. Ideas were open, we were creating our own lives together. These were the glorious years before the free alternatives that we were creating became just another set of bigoted rules, before what we were defining as real punk became yet another squalid ghetto. We even played a Rock Against Racism gig, the only gig that we'd ever been paid for. When we told the man to keep the money for the cause, he informed us that 'this was the cause'. We never played for RAR again. | |||
Conceived and intended as cover artwork for a self-published pamphlet version of Rimbaud's ''Christ's Reality Asylum'',{{sfn|Glasper|2007|p=13}} the Crass logo was an amalgam of several "icons of authority" including the ], the ], the ] and a two-headed ] (symbolising the idea that power will eventually destroy itself).{{sfn|Rimbaud|1999a|p=90}}<ref name="Crass interview">{{cite journal |title=Crass interview |journal=New Crimes |issue=3 |date=Winter 1980}}</ref> Using such deliberately mixed messages was part of Crass's strategy of presenting themselves as a "barrage of contradictions",<ref>{{cite journal |title=Crass interview |journal=] |issue=25 |date=April 1979}}</ref> challenging audiences to (in Rimbaud's words) "make your own fucking minds up".{{sfn|McKay|1996|page=90}} This included using loud, aggressive music to promote a ] message,{{sfn|McKay|1996|page=89}} a reference to their ]ist, performance-art backgrounds and ] ideas.{{sfn|McKay|1996|page=88}} | |||
As the charlatans increasingly headed Stateside, to get a sniff of that which refreshed them best, we became hardened by the isolation. We determined to stop fucking about with booze and to start taking ourselves that much more seriously. We adopted black clothing as a protest against the narcissistic peacockery of fashion punks. We started incorporating film and-video into our set. We went into production of handout sheets to explain our ideas and a newspaper, International Anthem. We designed the banner that hung behind us to the end, and we committed ourselves to see it through at least until the end of the then mythical 1984. | |||
The band eschewed elaborate ] during live sets, preferring to play under 40-watt household light bulbs; the technical difficulties of filming under such lighting conditions partly explains why there is little live footage of Crass.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=108|ps=: "They were very difficult to film, because with Super-8 you needed far more light than was available at a Crass gig – all you'd get was shadows and light – that would be about it. So it was a bit pointless filming the gigs. I did try asking for maybe 60 watt bulbs instead of 40 but there was no deal" – Mick Duffield}} They pioneered ] presentation, using video technology (back-projected films and ] by Mick Duffield and ]) to enhance their performances, and also distributed leaflets and handouts explaining anarchist ideas to their audiences.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=185}} | |||
Later in the Summer of '78, Pete Stennet, owner of the much missed Small Wonder Records, heard one of our demo tapes and loved it. He wanted to put out a single but couldn't decide on which track, so we recorded all the songs we'd written and made the first ever multitracked 45. We named the album The Feeding Of The Five Thousand because 5000 was the minimum number that we could get pressed and some 4900 more than we thought we'd sell. Feeding is now only a few hundred short of going golden, though I don't suppose we'll hear too much about that in the music press. | |||
=== 1978–1979: ''The Feeding of the 5000'' and Crass Records === | |||
So, with our entire stage set on record, wrapped in what was then highly innovative black and white, the music press were able to commence on the barrage of attack that has followed us throughout the years. They hated it and us and their loathing positively overflowed. It is not grandiose to claim that we have been one of the most influential bands in the history of British rock, true we have not greatly influenced music itself, but our effect on broader social issues has been enormous. From the start the media has attempted to ignore us and only when its hand has been forced by circumstances has it grudgingly given us credence. It's all fairly simple, if you don't play their game, that is commercial exploitation, they won't play yours. The music bit doesn't just buy its groups, it pays for the music press as well. The charlatans were spread thicker and deeper than we could ever have imagined. | |||
{{main|Crass Records}} | |||
Crass' first release was '']'' (an 18-track, 12" ] EP on the ] label) in 1978. Workers at an Irish record-pressing plant refused to process it because of the offensive and ] content of the song "Asylum",<ref>{{cite book |author=George Berger |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-iqD__ZkppsC&pg=PT182 |title=The Story of Crass |isbn=9780857120120|date = 4 November 2009| publisher=Omnibus Press }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Maria Raha |title=Cinderella's Big Score: Women of the Punk And Indie Underground |page=96 |isbn=9781580051163 |date=2004 | publisher=Basic Books }}</ref> and the record was released without it. In its place were two minutes of silence entitled "The Sound of Free Speech". This incident prompted Crass to create their own ], ], to retain editorial control over their material.<ref>{{cite book |author=Ignorant, Steve |year=2010 |title=The Rest is Propaganda |publisher=Southern Records |page=167}}</ref> | |||
Nonetheless, realising that we were a threat to its control, the first offers started coming in from the enemy. Mr. Big tried to buy us with cheap wine and an offer of 50000 pounds if; we'd join 'Pursey's Package'. He also informed us that he could 'market revolution' and that we'd never succeed without his help. It was the first of many offers that we refused, we never looked back and, incidentally, we didn't hear too much more of Jimmy Pursey. | |||
A rerecorded, extended version of "Asylum", renamed "Reality Asylum", was shortly afterward on Crass Records as a ], and Crass were investigated by the police because of the song's lyrics. The band were interviewed at their Dial House home by ]'s vice squad and threatened with prosecution, but the case was dropped.<ref name=rimbaudsleevenote /> "Reality Asylum" retailed at 45] (when most other singles cost about 90p),{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=137}} and was the first example of Crass' "pay no more than..." policy to issue records as inexpensively as possible. The band failed to factor ] into their expenses, causing them to lose money on every copy sold.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=138}} A year later, Crass Records released new pressings of ''The Feeding of the 5000'' (subtitled "The Second Sitting"), restoring the original version of "Asylum". | |||
When Feeding came out in the Spring of '79, the first track had been silent and named The Sound Of Free Speech. The pressing plant had decided that the track that had been there, Asylum, was too blasphemous for their, and your, tastes. Such is the true face of censorship in the 'Free World'. | |||
=== 1980: ''Stations of the Crass'' and "Bloody Revolutions" === | |||
Eventually we found a pressing plant willing to deal with Asylum, so we re-recorded it along with Shaved Women, printed the covers at home, sold it for 45p, and totally broke ourselves. | |||
] (left) and ] pictured at ], Birmingham]]In 1979 the band released their second album, '']'', financed with a loan from ],<ref>Rimbaud, P; sleeve notes to 'The Crassical Collection; Stations of the Crass' Crass Records, 2010</ref> a band with whom they regularly appeared. This was a double album, with three sides of new material and a fourth side recorded live at the Pied Bull in ]. | |||
The next Crass single, 1980's "Bloody Revolutions", was a benefit release with Poison Girls that raised £20,000 to fund the ].{{sfn|Glasper|2007|p=23}} The words were a critique (from an anarchist-pacifist perspective) of the traditional ] view of ] and were partly a response to violence marring a September 1979 Crass gig at ] in London's ].{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=169}} The show was intended as a benefit for Persons Unknown, a group of anarchists facing ] charges.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=145}} During the performance, ] supporters and other ] attacked ] ]s, triggering violence.<ref>{{cite book |author=Lux, Martin |title=Anti-Fascist |publisher=Phoenix Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-948984-35-8|page=89}}</ref> Crass later argued that the leftists were largely to blame for the fighting, and organizations such as ] were causing audiences to become polarised into left- and right-wing factions.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://greengalloway.blogspot.co.uk/2007/10/spice-girls-to-cover-crass-song.html |date=23 October 2007 |title=Anarchy in UK: Crass interviewed: 1979 |work=greengalloway |publisher=] |quote=But Crass blame this on Rock Against Racism which, they allege, has polarised youth. "If you're not in RAR then you're a Nazi. Now we're sandwiched between left-wing violence and right-wing violence" – Crass interviewed in "New Society", 1979}}</ref> Others (including the anarchist organisation ]) were critical of Crass's position, stating that "like ], their politics are up shit creek".<ref>{{cite book |title=The Assault on Culture – Utopian Currents From Lettrisme to Class War |publisher=Aporia Press |last=Home |first=Stewart |year=1988 |isbn=978-0-948518-88-1 |page=96 |quote=like Kropotkin, their politics are up shit creek}}</ref> Many of the band's punk followers felt that they failed to understand the violence to which they were subjected from the right.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=149}} | |||
On its release, the Reality Asylum single ran into immediate troubles. Complaints from the 'general public' led to police raids on shops throughout the country and a visit to us from Scotland Yard's vice-squad. After a pleasant afternoon sharing tea with our guardians of public morality, we were left with the threat of prosecution that hung over us for the next year. Eventually we received a note informing us that we were free, but that we'd better not try it again. The nature of our 'freedom' made doing it again inevitable and so the endless roundabout of police harassment set itself in motion; it has continued to this day. | |||
], 1984]]"Rival Tribal Rebel Revel", a ] single distributed with the ''Toxic Grafity''{{sic}} ], was also a commentary about the events at Conway Hall attacking the mindless violence and ] aspects of contemporary youth culture.<ref>{{cite web |author=Mike Diboll |publisher=Kill Your Pet Puppy |title=Crass – Toxic Grafity Fanzine |year=1979 |url=http://killyourpetpuppy.co.uk/news/toxic-grafity-fanzine-1979/}}</ref> This was followed by the double single "Nagasaki Nightmare/Big A Little A". The strongly ] lyrics of "Nagasaki Nightmare" were reinforced by the fold-out sleeve artwork. It featured an article by Mike Holderness of '']'' magazine connecting the ] industry and the manufacture of nuclear weapons<ref>Mike Holderness, sleeve notes of "Nagasaki Nightmare/Big A Little A" single, Crass Records, 1980</ref> along with a large poster-style map of nuclear installations in the UK. The other side of the record, "Big A Little A", was a statement of the band's anti-statist and individualist anarchist philosophy: "Be exactly who you want to be, do what you want to do / I am he and she is she but you're the only you."<ref>Rimbaud, P; "Big A Little A", Crass Records 1980. Quoted in ''Love Songs'' p.57, Pomona Publishing {{ISBN|1-904590-03-9}}</ref> | |||
It was around this time that we did our one and only radio session for John Peel. From then on our growing reputation as foul mouthed yobs precluded us from being given airplay, although we did appear on several chat-shows which led to us being temporarily blacklisted by the BBC. Apparently, expressing dissident views on the Falklands is not acceptable to the listening public who jammed the BBC switchboard with complaints. | |||
=== 1981: ''Penis Envy'' === | |||
To offset claims in the press that we were nothing but leftist/rightist thugs, they never could quite make us out, we started to hang an anarchist banner alongside our own. At that time the circled-A was rarely seen outside the confines of established and generally tedious, small-time anarchist literature. Within months the symbol was to be seen decorating leather jackets, badges, and walls throughout the country, within a few years it spread worldwide. Rotten may have proclaimed himself an anarchist, but it was us who almost single-handedly created anarchy as a popular movement for millions of people. | |||
]Crass released their third album, '']'', in 1981. This marked a departure from the hardcore punk image that ''The Feeding of the 5000'' and ''Stations of the Crass'' had given the group. It featured more complex musical arrangements and female vocals by ] and ] (singer Steve Ignorant was credited as "not on this recording"). The album addressed feminist issues, attacking marriage and ]. | |||
The last track on ''Penis Envy'', a parody of an ] ] entitled "Our Wedding", was made available as a white ] to readers of ''Loving'', a teenage romance magazine. Crass tricked the magazine into offering the disc, posing as "Creative Recording and Sound Services". ''Loving'' accepted the offer, telling their readers that the free Crass flexi would make "your wedding day just that bit extra special".<ref>{{cite web|title=Southern Studios archive |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/09410.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050309043333/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/09410.html |archive-date=9 March 2005 }}</ref> A ] controversy resulted when the hoax was exposed, with the '']'' stating that the title of the flexi's originating album was "too obscene to print".<ref>{{cite web|title=News of the World |date=7 June 1981 |page=13 |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/09410d.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050320134115/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/09410d.html |archive-date=20 March 2005 }}</ref> Despite ''Loving''{{'}}s annoyance, Crass had broken no laws.{{sfn|Berger|2006}} | |||
At the same time, having discovered that CND did actually still exist, albeit in a downtrodden, self-effacing manner, we decided to promote its cause, something that at the time CND seemed to be incapable of doing for itself. From then on, despite screams of derision in the music press, we also displayed the peace symbol at gigs. | |||
The album was banned by the retailer HMV,<ref name="Rimbaud">Rimbaud, P; "...In Which Crass Voluntarily Blow Their Own", sleeve note essay included with Best Before 1984 album</ref> and copies of the album were seized from the Eastern Bloc record shop by ] under the direction of ] ].<ref>{{cite web |author=Petley, Julian |title=Smashed Hits: Overview |url=http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/bitstream/2438/4107/1/Fulltext.pdf}}</ref> The shop owners were charged with displaying ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Flux of Pink Indians – F.C.T.U.L.P. – Alternative Mixes – 1984 |date=21 September 2009 |publisher=Kill Your Pet Puppy |url=http://killyourpetpuppy.co.uk/news/flux-of-pink-indians-f-c-t-u-l-p-alternative-mixes-1984/}}</ref> The judge ruled against Crass in the ensuing court case, although the decision was overturned by the ] (except the lyrics to "Bata Motel", which were upheld as "sexually provocative and obscene").<ref name="Rimbaud_a">Rimbaud, P; sleeve notes to 'The Crassical Collection; Ten Notes on a Summer's Day' Crass Records, 2012</ref> | |||
Our efforts on the road slowly brought CND back to life. We introduced it to the thousands of people who would become the backbone of its revival. A new and hitherto uninformed sector of society was being exposed to a form of radical thought that culminated in the great rallies, demos and actions that continue today. | |||
=== {{anchor|1982–1983: ''Christ – The Album'' and a change of strategy}}1982–1983: ''Christ – The Album'' and strategy change === | |||
The true effect of our work is not to be found within the confines of rock'n'roll, but in the radicaiised minds of thousands of people throughout the world. From the Gates of Greenham to the Berlin Wall, from the Stop The City actions to underground gigs in Poland, our particular brand of anarcho-pacifism, now almost synonymous with punk, has made itself known. | |||
]The band's fourth LP, 1982's double set '']'', took almost a year to record, produce and mix (during which the ] began and ended). This caused Crass to question their approach to making records. As a group whose primary purpose was ], they felt overtaken and made redundant by world events: | |||
{{blockquote|The speed with which the Falklands War was played out and the devastation that Thatcher was creating both at home and abroad forced us to respond far faster than we had ever needed to before. ''Christ – The Album'' had taken so long to produce that some of the songs in it, songs that warned of the imminence of riots and war, had become almost redundant. Toxteth, Bristol, Brixton and the Falklands were ablaze by the time that we released. We felt embarrassed by our slowness, humbled by our inadequacy.<ref name="Rimbaud" />}} | |||
Since early '77 we had been involved in maintaining a graffiti war throughout Central London. Our stencilled messages, anything from 'Fight War Not Wars' to 'Stuff Your Sexist Shit', were the first of their kind to appear in the UK and inspired a whole movement that, sadly, has now been eclipsed by hip-hop artists who have done little but confirm the insidious nature of American culture. | |||
Subsequent releases (including the singles "How Does It Feel? (To Be the Mother of a Thousand Dead)" and "Sheep Farming in the Falklands" and the album '']'') saw the band's sound return to basics and were issued as "tactical responses" to political situations.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=220}} Crass anonymously produced 20,000 copies of a ] with a live recording of "Sheep Farming in the Falklands", and copies were randomly inserted into the sleeves of other records by sympathetic workers at the ] distribution warehouse.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=215}} | |||
To celebrate our success with the spraycan, we decided to call our next album Stations Of The Crass, the cover of which was a photo of some of our work on one of London Underground's stations. Stations featured the first ever six-fold wrapper and came with a sew-on patch that we printed at home. | |||
=== Direct action and internal debates === | |||
By now, Pete of Small Wonder was beginning to tire of the kind of police attention that we were drawing to his shop, so we borrowed the money to release Stations ourselves. It sold so well that after only a very short time we were able to pay back the loan and get the covers folded by machine rather than doing them at home by hand. | |||
]'', illustrating Crass' stenciled graffiti]] | |||
From their early days of spraying stencilled ], anarchist, ] and ] ] messages in the ] and on billboards,{{sfn|McKay|1996|p=87}} Crass was involved in politically motivated ] and musical activities. On 18 December 1982, the band helped coordinate a 24-hour squat in the empty West London Zig Zag club to prove "that the underground punk scene could handle itself responsibly when it had to and that music really could be enjoyed free of the restraints imposed upon it by corporate industry".{{sfn|Glasper|2007|p=25}} | |||
In 1983 and 1984, Crass were part of the ] actions coordinated by ]{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=247}} that foreshadowed the ] rallies of the early 21st century.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=248}} Support for these activities was provided in the lyrics and sleeve notes of the band's last single, "You're Already Dead", expressing doubts about their commitment to ]. It was also a reflection of disagreements within the group, as explained by Rimbaud: "Half the band supported the pacifist line and half supported direct and if necessary violent action. It was a confusing time for us, and I think a lot of our records show that, inadvertently".{{sfn|McKay|1996|page=99}} This led to introspection within the band, with some members becoming embittered and losing sight of their essentially positive stance.{{sfn|Rimbaud|1999a|p=249}} Reflecting this debate, the next release under the Crass name was '']'': ] settings of 50 poems by Penny Rimbaud, described as "songs to my other self" and intended to celebrate "the profound sense of unity, peace and love that exists within that other self".<ref>] of ''Acts of Love'', Crass Records, 1985.</ref> | |||
Stations continued to sell and soon we were able to consider releasing material by other bands. Crass Records was created and we kicked off with a single from Zounds , the first of well over one hundred bands that we have introduced to the unsuspecting public. | |||
=== Thatchergate === | |||
In the Spring of 1980, having played several benefit gigs for the defence fund of the jailed anarchists, known paradoxically as 'Persons Unknown', we were asked by them on their release if we could contribute to the creation of an Anarchist Centre. We recorded Bloody Revolutions, with Poison Girls' Persons Unknown on the reverse side and the centre was opened on the proceeds. For over a year an unhappy liason existed between the old school anarchists of Persons Unknown and the anarcho-punks. Eventually the ideological pressure got too great and the centre closed. | |||
Another Crass ] was known as the "] tapes",<ref name=killyourpetpuppy-thatchergate>{{Cite web|url=https://killyourpetpuppy.co.uk/news/crass-capital-radio-reagan-thatcher-tape-new-broadcast-270184/|title=Crass – Thatchergate Tape And News Broadcasts – January 1984|website=Killyourpetpuppy.co.uk |date=2 November 2007}}</ref> a recording of an apparently accidentally overheard telephone conversation (because of crossed lines). The tape was constructed by Crass from edited recordings of ] and ]. On the "rather clumsily" forged tape, they appear to discuss the sinking of {{HMS|Sheffield|D80|6}} during the ] and agree that Europe would be a target for ] in a conflict between the United States and the ].<ref name=killyourpetpuppy-thatchergate /> | |||
Copies were leaked to the press via a Dutch news agency during the 1983 general election campaign.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/penny-rambaud-on-how-crass-nearly-started |title=Penny Rimbaud on How Crass Nearly Started World War 3 |website=Vice.com |date=3 January 2014 |access-date=25 October 2018}}</ref> The ] and British government believed the tape to be propaganda produced by the ] (as reported by the '']''<ref>{{cite web|title=San Francisco Chronicle |date=30 January 1983 |page=10 |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/1238.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101206074619/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/1238.html |archive-date=6 December 2010 }}</ref> and '']'').<ref name=killyourpetpuppy-thatchergate /> Although the tape was produced anonymously, '']'' linked the tape with the band.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=238}} Previously classified government documents made public in January 2014 under the UK's '] reveal that Thatcher was aware of the tape and had discussed it with her cabinet.<ref>{{cite news|title=Thatchergate Tapes |date=January 2014 |url=http://filestore.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/prem-19-1380.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104013944/http://filestore.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/prem-19-1380.pdf |archive-date=4 January 2014 }}</ref> | |||
The relative ease with which we were able to raise money for the center demonstrated to us the enormous power that we had to generate not only ideas, but the wherewithall to make them possible. By now we were drawing large crowds to our gigs so we decided that the best use to which we could put the situation was to play nothing but benefits. Over the years we were able to create funds for a wide variety of different causes. | |||
=== {{anchor|1984: Dissolution}}1984: Breakup === | |||
It now seemed time to launch a feminist attack. For some time we had been aware that we were being labelled as a bother band and that the feminist element within our work was largely ignored. We released Penis Envy and the music press, missing the point entirely, heralded it as having been made by "the only feminists physically attractive enough to make you sure they're singing out of choice rather than revenge". What do you do with these guys? The reaction from many Crass 'fans' expressed similar prejudices, but from an entirely different angle. They wanted to know why we'd only got 'birds singing'. The devil or the deep blue sea? | |||
] Questions about the band in ] and an attempted prosecution by ] ] ] under the UK's ] for their single "How Does It Feel..."<ref>{{cite news |title=Protest songs: Marching to the beat of dissent |work=The Independent |date=5 April 2012 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/protest-songs-marching-to-the-beat-of-dissent-7619263.html}}</ref> made the members of Crass question their purpose: | |||
{{blockquote|We found ourselves in a strange and frightening arena. We had wanted to make our views public, had wanted to share them with like minded people, but now those views were being analysed by those dark shadows who inhabited the corridors of power (…) We had gained a form of political power, found a voice, were being treated with a slightly awed respect, but was that really what we wanted? Was that what we had set out to achieve all those years ago?<ref name="Rimbaud" />}} | |||
The final track on Penis Envy entitled Our Wedding, a satire on slush MOR romantic bullshit, was offered by 'Creative Recording And Sound Services' to Loving, a magazine specialsing in the exploitation of teenage loneliness. Loving proudly offered it to their readers as 'a must for that happy day'. When the hoax was exposed, Fleet Street rocked, while heads at Loving rolled. | |||
The band had also incurred heavy legal expenses for the ''Penis Envy'' prosecution;<ref name="Rimbaud_a" /> this, combined with exhaustion and the pressures of living and operating together, finally took its toll.<ref name="Rimbaud" /> On 7 July 1984, the band played a benefit gig at ], Wales for ], and on the return trip, guitarist N. A. Palmer announced his intent to leave the group.{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=254}} This confirmed Crass's previous intention to quit in 1984, and the band was dissolved.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2009/jul/08/crass-punk-band-anarchy|title=Could Crass exist today? {{!}} Music blog|last=Robb|first=John|date=2009-07-08|work=The Guardian|access-date=2017-10-06|language=en-GB|issn=0261-3077}}</ref> | |||
The release of Penis Envy confirmed a suspicion that we had had for some time. After one week in the shops it entered the national charts at number fifteen, next week it wasn't to be found anywhere in the top one hundred. The same fate had befallen Nagasaki Nightmare, we knew that it just wasn't possible to be that high in the charts one week and nowhere to be found the next. It seemed obvious to us that if the major labels paid to get their records 'in' the charts, they'd pay to get ours 'out'. We knew that we were disliked by EMI, they'd sent out a circular to their A&R departments forbidding all contact with 'Crass personnel' and their HMV shops have not touched any of our material since they took exception to the poster on Bloody Revolutions. | |||
The group's final release as Crass was the "Ten Notes on a Summer's Day" 12" single in 1986. Crass Records was closed in 1992; its final release was ''Christ's Reality Asylum'', a 90-minute cassette of Penny Rimbaud reading the essay that he had written in early 1977. | |||
For some time now we had been touring far and wide throughout the UK, bravely treading where no band had trod before. Village halls, scout huts, community centers, anywhere that was neither the rip-off clubs or the pampered university circuit. Hundreds of people would travel to join us in unlikely spots to celebrate our mutual sense of freedom. We shared our music, films, literature, conversation, food and tea. Wherever we went we were met by smiling faces, ready and willing to create an alternative to the drab greyness all around. | |||
On 11 July 2024, the full 7 July 1984 concert was released as a free download to celebrate its 40th anniversary, albeit as a poor and upscaled tape transfer. | |||
It was not always easy, there were always those who wanted to destroy what we had created. We tried to play the Stonehenge Festival but got beaten up by the bikers; we had gigs smashed up by the National Front and the SWP; we played host to the RUC in Belfast, sent the British Movement packing in Reading and got thrashed by the Red Brigade in London. There was a lot of trouble, but it never outweighed the joy. | |||
=== {{anchor|2002 onwards: The Crass Collective/Crass Agenda/Last Amendment}}Crass Collective, Crass Agenda and Last Amendment === | |||
Throughout 1981 we were recording Christ-The Album, which by the Summer of '82 was ready to release. This time, however, the trouble did outweigh the joy. 'Great Britain' had gone to war. | |||
In November 2002 several former members arranged Your Country Needs You, a concert of "voices in opposition to war", as the ]. At ] on London's ], Your Country Needs You included Benjamin Britten's '']'' and performances by ], ], ] and Pete Wright's post-Crass project, Judas 2.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=A-Infos |title=Freedom 6322 Nov 16th 2002 – Crass fail to show the way |url=http://www.ainfos.ca/02/nov/ainfos00589.html}}</ref> In October 2003 the Crass Collective changed their name to ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.babellabel.co.uk/old_site/The+Babel+Label-2451.htm|title=babellabel.co.uk|website=Babellabel.co.uk}}</ref> with Rimbaud, Libertine and Vaucher working with ] of ] and ] musicians such as ] and ]. In 2004 Crass Agenda spearheaded a campaign to save the '']'' Jazz Club in ], north London<ref>{{Cite news |last1=Mossman |first1=David |title='This is the spiritual home of jazz and we ain't leaving' |work=The Guardian |date=31 May 2004 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2004/may/31/popandrock1 |language=en-GB |quote=Penny (he's a bloke) has started a petition to keep the Vortex in Stoke Newington, and puts up a notice in the club saying: "This Is the Spiritual Home of Jazz and We Ain't Leaving." The resulting petition ends up going to the council with 3,000 signatures on it}}</ref> (where they regularly played). In June 2005 Crass Agenda was declared to be "no more", changing its name to the "more pertinent" Last Amendment.<ref>{{cite web|title=Southern Studios website archive 'LAST AMENDMENT events' |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050610085313/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/ |archive-date=10 June 2005 }}</ref> After a five-year hiatus, Last Amendment performed at the Vortex in June 2012.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://blog.southern.com/tag/last-amendment/ |title=Last Amendment | Transmissions from Southern |access-date=17 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120922114759/http://blog.southern.com/tag/last-amendment/ |archive-date=22 September 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Rimbaud has also performed and recorded with ] and ]. A "new" Crass track (a remix of 1982's "Major General Despair" with new lyrics), "The Unelected President", is available.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.peace-not-war.org/Music/Crass/index.html |title=Crass music |website=Peace-not-war.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070610115746/http://www.peace-not-war.org/Music/Crass/index.html |archive-date=10 June 2007 }}</ref> | |||
=== {{anchor|2007: The Feeding of the 5000 (revisited)}}2007: Ignorant's ''The Feeding of the 5000'' === | |||
Insignificant events on an island called South Georgia, which no one had ever heard of, led to significant events on an island called the Falklands which no one had ever heard of. The first pin-prick had been placed in the anarcho-pacifist bubble, a pin-prick that would in the space of a few months tear the bubble to shreds. As young men died by the hundreds, our songs, protests and marches, our leaflets, words and ideas suddenly seemed to be worthless. In reality we knew that what we had to offer had value, that what we believed in was worthwhile, but for the moment it all semed futile. | |||
] | |||
On 24 and 25 November 2007, Steve Ignorant performed Crass' '']'' album live at the ] with a band of "selected guests".<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.steveignorant.co.uk/5000.php |title=Steve Ignorant Official Website: Feeding of the 5000 |access-date=16 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071213163056/http://www.steveignorant.co.uk/5000.php |archive-date=13 December 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.punknews.org/article/23428 |title=Crass frontman plans "The Feeding of the 5000" live performance |website=Punknews.org |date=26 April 2007}}</ref> Other members of Crass were not involved in these concerts. Initially Rimbaud refused Ignorant permission to perform Crass songs he had written, but later changed his mind: "I acknowledge and respect Steve's right to do this, but I do regard it as a betrayal of the Crass ethos".<ref name=guardian07>{{cite news |first1=Iain |last1=Aitch |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/oct/19/popandrock/ |title=Why should we accept any less than a better way of doing things? |date=19 October 2007 |newspaper=The Guardian |location=London}}</ref> Ignorant had a different view: "I don't have to justify what I do...Plus, most of the lyrics are still relevant today. And remember that three-letter word, 'fun'?"<ref name=guardian07/> | |||
=== {{anchor|2010: The Crassical Collection reissues}}2010: Crassical Collection reissues === | |||
Thatcher wanted war to boost her party's flagging pre-election image. If she wanted war, she'd have it, along with anything else that took her fancy. Cruise, Pershing, PWR's, Unions, Dennis. | |||
In 2010 it was announced that Crass would release ''The Crassical Collection'',<ref>{{cite web |title=The Feeding of the Five Thousand on Crassical Collection |url=http://blog.southern.com/2010/08/the-feeding-of-the-five-thousand-on-crassical-collection/ |access-date=14 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120517001229/http://blog.southern.com/2010/08/the-feeding-of-the-five-thousand-on-crassical-collection/ |archive-date=17 May 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> remastered reissues of their back catalogue. Three former members objected, threatening legal action.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.punknews.org/article/50808/interviews-the-story-of-the-crassical-collection|title=Interviews: The Story of the Crassical Collection|website=Punknews.org|date=March 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/kwgwk3/anarchy-and-peace-litigated-490-v17n8|title=Anarchy And Peace, Litigated|first=Andy|last=Capper|website=Vice.com|date=1 August 2010}}</ref> Despite their concerns the project went ahead, and the remasters were eventually released. First in the series was ''The Feeding of the 5000'', released in August 2010. ''Stations of the Crass'' followed in October, with new editions of ''Penis Envy'', ''Christ – The Album'', ''Yes Sir, I Will'' and ''Ten Notes on a Summer's Day'' released in 2011 and 2012.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ultimate-guitar.com/news/upcoming_releases/crass_to_reissue_back_catalog.html |title=Crass To Reissue Back Catalog |publisher=]}}</ref> Critics praised the improved sound quality and new packaging of the remastered albums.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.punknews.org/review/11795/crass-the-crassical-collection|title=Crass – The Crassical Collection|website=Punknews.org|date=21 January 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/christ-the-album-the-crassical-collection-mr0003333892|title=Christ the Album – Crass | Release Info|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
=== {{anchor|2011: The Last Supper}}2011: The Last Supper === | |||
At risk of being seen as the 'traitors' that we are, through devious routes we rushed out an anti-Falklands War flexi and were instantly labelled 'traitors' by the music press. We also received a severe warning from the House of Commons to 'watch our step'. Protest against the War seemed to be virtually non-existent and criticism in the press was being supressed. When the issues had been abstract, the Peace Movement had been all too happy to shout 'No more war', now there was a war to shout about, the silence was painful. | |||
In 2011 Steve Ignorant embarked on an international tour, entitled "The Last Supper". He performed Crass material, culminating with a final performance at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 19 November.<ref name=steveignorantblogpost>{{cite web |author=Steve Ignorant |title=Blog post – Shepherds Bush |date=25 November 2011 |url=http://steveignorant.co.uk/2011/11/shepherds-bush-part-1-19th-november-2011/ |access-date=28 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120122000918/http://steveignorant.co.uk/2011/11/shepherds-bush-part-1-19th-november-2011/ |archive-date=22 January 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Ignorant said that this was the last time he would sing the songs of Crass,<ref>{{cite web |author=Steve Ignorant |title=Blog post – The Absolute last Supper |date=25 November 2011 |url=http://steveignorant.co.uk/2011/02/the-absolute-last-supper/}}</ref> with Rimbaud's support; the latter joined him onstage for a drum-and-vocal rendition of "Do They Owe Us A Living", bringing the band's career full circle after 34 years: "And then Penny came on...and we did it, 'Do They Owe Us A Living' as we'd first done it all those years ago. As it started, so it finished".<ref name=steveignorantblogpost /> Ignorant's lineup for the tour were ], Carol Hodge, Pete Wilson and Spike T. Smith, and he was joined by Eve Libertine for a number of songs.<ref name=steveignorantblogpost /> The set list included a cover of "West One (Shine on Me)" by ], when Ignorant was joined onstage by the Norfolk-based ] crew with whom he volunteers.<ref name=steveignorantblogpost /> | |||
=== {{anchor|Artwork and Exhibitions}}Artwork and exhibitions === | |||
However it wasn't until the war had ended and we released How Does It Feel To Be The Mother Of A Thousand Dead? that the shit really hit the fan. After Thatcher had been asked in the House of Commons whether she had listened to the record, it was inevitable that she and her party would want to punish us. Tory MP Tim Eggar had the hapless task of fronting prosecution proceedings and right from the start couldn't put a foot right. The case crumbled completely when Eggar was exposed by us on live radio as a complete fool. The Tories backed down immediately after his miserable performance and even went to the trouble of circulating a note in which members of the Party were ordered to ignore all provocation from our quarter. Suddenly we started receiving letters of support from members of the 'Opposition'. Maybe we weren't on our own. Fall guys or what! | |||
In February 2011, artist ] exhibited a portion of his Crass ephemera collection at the Roth Gallery in New York.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.curatedmag.com/news/2011/01/20/crass-selections-from-the-mott-collection/ |title=Curated Mag |date=January 2011 |access-date=19 April 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120217053440/http://www.curatedmag.com/news/2011/01/20/crass-selections-from-the-mott-collection/ |archive-date=17 February 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://crassthesecondsitting.wordpress.com/2011/01/27/crass-selections-from-the-mott-collection-18th-february-18th-march-2011/ |title=CRASS: selections from The Mott Collection 18th February – 18th March 2011 | |website=Crassthesecondsitting.wordpress.com |date=27 January 2011 |access-date=2012-05-27}}</ref> The exhibit featured artwork, albums (including 12" LPs and EPs), 7" singles from Crass Records and a complete set of Crass' self-published ], ''Inter-National Anthem''. | |||
Artwork by Gee Vaucher and Penny Rimbaud, including a recording of the original 'Thatchergate Tape', featured as part of the 'Peculiar People' show at the Focal Point Gallery in ] during the spring of 2016, part of a series of events celebrating the history of 'Radical Essex'.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/yvjxkj/secret-radical-history-of-essex|title=Essex Has a Much More Radical History Than You'd Think|first=Harry|last=Sword|date=1 June 2016|website=Vice.com}}</ref> Vaucher's painting 'Oh America', featuring an image of the ] hiding her face with her hands, was used as the front page of the UK ] newspaper to mark the election of ] as US President on 9 November 2016.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/gee-vauchers-artwork-oh-america-9231864|title=The story behind the Daily Mirror's historic US election front page|first=Gavin|last=Allen|date=10 November 2016|website=Mirror.co.uk}}</ref> From November 2016 to February 2017 the ] art gallery in ], hosted a retrospective of Gee Vaucher's artwork.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.firstsite.uk/whats-on/gee-vaucher-introspective/|title=Gee Vaucher: Introspective|website=Firstsite.uk|date=14 November 2016}}</ref> | |||
We found ourselves in a strange and frightening arena. We had wanted to make our views public, had wanted to share them with like-minded people, but now those views were being analysed by those dark shadows who inhabited the corridors of power. Eggar had created a great deal of publicity for our cause and the press had lapped it up, especially those who, literally at gun point, had been prevented from gaining any real information on the war. It was as if we'd hooked a whale while fishing for minnows. We didn't know whether to let go of the rod, or keep pulling until we exhausted ourselves, which we knew, inevitabiy, we would. | |||
In June 2016, "The Art of Crass" was the subject of an exhibition at the LightBox Gallery in Leicester curated by artist and technologist Sean Clark.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://thehippiesnowwearblack.org.uk/2016/07/01/the-art-of-crass-exhibition-curator-sean-clark-reflects/ |title=The Art of Crass exhibition – curator Sean Clark reflects|website=Thehippiesnowwearblack.org.uk |date=2016-07-01 |access-date=2017-06-06}}</ref> The exhibition featured prints and original artworks by Gee Vaucher, Penny Rimbaud, Eve Libertine, and Dave King. During the exhibition, Penny Rimbaud, Eve Libertine, and Louise Elliot performed "The Cobblestones of Love", a lyrical reworking of the Crass album "Yes Sir, I Will".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://louderthanwar.com/penny-rimbaud-eve-libertine-and-louise-elliot-leicester-live-review/ |title=Penny Rimbaud, Eve Libertine and Louise Elliot : Leicester : live review |website=Louderthanwar.com|date=2016-06-15 |access-date=2017-06-06}}</ref> On the final day of the exhibition there was a performance by Steve Ignorant's Slice of Life. The exhibition is documented on The Art of Crass website.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://theartofcrass.uk/ |title=The Art of Crass|website=Theartofcrass.uk |date=2016-06-01 |access-date=2017-06-06}}</ref> | |||
The speed with which the Falklands War was played out and the devastation that Thatcher was creating both at home and abroad, forced us to respond far faster than we had ever needed to before. Christ-The Album had taken so long to produce that some of the songs in it, songs that warned of the imminence of riots and war, had become almost redundant. Toxteth, Bristol, Brixton and the Falklands were ablaze by the time that we released. We felt embarrassed by our slowness, humbled by our inadequacy. At the end of '82, aware that the 'movement' needed a morale booster, we organised the first squat gig for decades at the now defunct Zig Zag Club in London. Along with free food and copious supplies of ripped-off booze, we celebrated our independence once again, this time joined by twenty other bands, the cream of what could truly be called 'real punk'. Together we supplied a twenty-four hour blast of energy which inspired similar actions throughout the world. We'd learnt the lesson. 'Do it yourself' has never seemed so real as it did that day at the Zig Zag. | |||
== Influences == | |||
In many respects the Zig Zag consolidated our thinking, the job was by no means over. So, deciding that we should hang onto the rod and fight the whale, we launched an all out attack on Thatcher and her allies. The run up to the '83 Elections had started, the 'Opposition' had all but collapsed. Labour had made the inevitable, revolting turnabout on its anti-nuclear stance and the Peace Movement was in tatters, muted by its own fears. | |||
] | |||
For Rimbaud the initial inspiration for founding Crass was the death of his friend ], as detailed in his book ''The Last of the Hippies: An Hysterical Romance''. Russell had been placed in a ] hospital after helping to set up the first ] in 1974, and died shortly afterwards. Rimbaud believed that Russell was murdered by the State for political reasons.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Last of the Hippies – An Hysterical Romance |last=Rimbaud |first=Penny |author-link=Penny Rimbaud |year=1982 |publisher=Crass |url=http://www.spunk.org/texts/places/britain/sp001297.txt |quote=The court passed a verdict of suicide with no reference at all to the appalling treatment that had been the direct cause of it. Our inquiries convinced us that what had happened was not an accident. The state had intended to destroy Wally's spirit, if not his life, because he was a threat, a fearless threat who they hoped they could destroy without much risk of embarrassment.}}</ref> Co-founder Ignorant has cited The Clash<ref name="ReferenceA"/> and David Bowie{{sfn|Rimbaud|1999a|p=99}} as major personal influences. Band members have also cited influences ranging from ] and ] to ],{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=33}} the poetry of ],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://thequietus.com/articles/05258-penny-rimbaud-crass-interview|title=The Quietus – Features – A Quietus Interview – Penny Rimbaud on Crass & The Poets of Transcendentalism & Modernism|website=The Quietus}}</ref> British working class ']' literature and films such as '']''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://litopia.com/steve-ignorant-crass-warrior/|title=Steve Ignorant: Crass Warrior|website=Litopia.com}}</ref> and the films of ]{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=33}} (McCall's ''Four Projected Movements'' was shown as part of an early Crass performance).{{sfn|Berger|2006|p=146}} | |||
Crass have said that their musical influences were seldom drawn from rock, but more from classical music (particularly ], on whose work, Rimbaud states, some of Crass' riffs are based),{{sfn|McKay|1996|page=95}} ],<ref name="Rimbaud_a" /> European ],<ref name="Rimbaud_a" /> and avant-garde composers such as ]<ref name="Crass interview"/> and ].<ref name="Rimbaud_a" /> | |||
The album Yes Sir, I Will was our first 'tactical response', it was an impassioned scream directed towards the wielders of power and those who passively accept them as an authority. The message in the record was loud and clear, 'There is no authority but yourself'. | |||
== Legacy == | |||
As our political position became increasingly polarised, we felt it necessary to define our motives in a clearer fashion than perhaps we had done before. The what, where and why of our anger needed explaining, as did our idea of 'self'. We had often been accused of sloganeering, now was the time to come out into the open. Several members of the band produced Acts Of Love, fifty poems in lyricai settings, in an attempt to demonstrate that the source of our anger was love rather than hate and that our idea of self was nor that of an egocentric social bigot, but of an internal sense of one's own being. The ambiguity of our attitudes was beginning to disturb us. Was it really possible to have a bloodless revolution? Were we being truly realistic? Were we being destroyed by our own paradoxes? | |||
Crass influenced the anarchist movement in the UK, the US and beyond. The growth of anarcho-punk spurred interest in anarchist ideas.<ref>{{cite book |author=Savage, Jon |year=1991 |title=England's Dreaming: Sex Pistols and Punk Rock |page=584|publisher=Faber & Faber |isbn=978-0571227204}}</ref> The band have also claimed credit for revitalising the ] and the UK ] during the late 1970s and early 1980s.{{sfn|Rimbaud|1999a|p=109}} Others contend that they overestimated their influence, their radicalising effect on militants notwithstanding. Researcher Richard Cross stated: {{cquote|In their own writing, Crass somewhat overstate the contribution that anarcho-punk made to resuscitating the moribund Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) in the early 1980s. The initiation of a new arms race, confirmed by plans to deploy first-strike Cruise and Pershing nuclear missiles across Europe, revived anti-nuclear movements across the continent, and would have arisen with or without the intercession of anarcho-punk. What Crass and anarcho-punk can quite legitimately claim is to have convinced a substantial number of radical youth to commit their energies to the most militant anti-militarist wings of the disarmament movement, which laid siege to nuclear installations across the country and which saw no conflict between its pacifist precepts and its willingness to commit acts of 'criminal damage' on the military property of the nuclear state.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://killyourpetpuppy.co.uk/news/hippies-now-wear-black-rich-cross/|title=Hippies Now Wear Black/ Rich Cross|website=Killyourpetpuppy.co.uk|date=10 February 2008}}</ref>}} | |||
Crass' philosophical and aesthetic influences on 1980s punk bands were far-reaching.<ref>{{cite book|access-date=24 June 2020|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=S7Ko9Yd7lXsC&pg=PA1780|chapter=21: 'How does it feel to be the mother of one thousand dead?'|title=33 Revolutions Per Minute|title-link=33 Revolutions per Minute (book)|first=Dorian|last=Lynskey|publisher=]|date=3 March 2011|isbn=978-0571277209|pages=1773 and 1780}}</ref> A notable example is ]'s ] co-founder ], who followed some of Crass' anti-consumerist and DIY principles in his own label and projects, particularly with the ] band ].<ref>{{cite book|access-date=24 June 2020|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LtKQqq9AvUUC&pg=PT52|title=Combat Rock: A History of Punk (from Its Origins to the Present)|date=26 July 2012|first=Lora |last=Greene|pages=52–53|chapter=4: New Wave|publisher=BookCaps Study Guides|isbn=978-1621073154}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|access-date=24 June 2020|title=Anyone Can Do It: Empowerment, Tradition and the Punk Underground|isbn=978-1317180258|date=15 April 2016 |chapter=Introduction|page=15 and 17|publisher=]|first=Pete |last=Dale|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1UYHDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA15}}</ref> However, few mimicked their later ] style (heard on ''Yes Sir, I Will'' and their final recording, ''Ten Notes on a Summer's Day'').{{sfn|Glasper|2007|p=17}} Their painted and ] black-and-white record sleeves (by ]) may have influenced later artists such as ] (with whom Vaucher collaborated)<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.artofthestate.co.uk/archive/banksy-2/banksy_santas_ghetto_2004/|title=Banksy Santas Ghetto 2004 |website=Artofthestate.co.uk|date=2 January 2019 }}</ref> and the ] movement. ] artist ]'s 2007 album, '']'', features acoustic covers of Crass material.<ref name="guardian" /> ], in his early teens at the time, was a big fan of the band, would play their records at home<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.essentialsuede.com/brett/|title = Brett Anderson|date = 23 August 2020}}</ref> and much later cited them in a radio interview, when asked about what band or artist had first made him want to get up on stage as a singer: "Crass! Their energy on stage was incredible, I was very impressed". | |||
It was at this time that we sent the now infamous 'Thatchergate Tapes' to the world's press. The highly edited tape, which took the form of a telephone conversation between Reagan and Thatcher, had her admitting responsibility for the sinking of the Belgrano, an issue which at that time she had not been confronted with, and implying knowledge of the Invincible's decision to 'guinea-pig' the Sheffield, a fact that still has not come to light. So as to leave no stone unturned. we caused Reagan to threaten to 'nuke' Europe in defence of American heritage, a hypothesis which is probably not as wild as it seems. | |||
In an interview with ] in 2016, the band was cited along with a number of other British ] bands of the early '80s as being an influence to the American ] group ].<ref name="Deller1">{{cite news |last1=Deller |first1=Alex |title=Neurosis: 'Crass were the mother of all bands' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2016/nov/03/neurosis-crass-bands-anarcho-punk-steve-von-till |work=The Guardian |access-date=27 June 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221129004419/https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2016/nov/03/neurosis-crass-bands-anarcho-punk-steve-von-till |archive-date=29 November 2022 |location=] |language=British English |date=3 November 2016}}</ref> | |||
The tape lay dormant for almost a year before surfacing in the State Department in Washington DC. The categorical denials that were issued in relationship to the tape and its contents acted as a clear indication that the methods that we had employed to discredit Thatcher and Reagan were in no way dissimilar to those of The State Department. Why else would they have taken our somewhat amateurish efforts at tape forgery so seriously? Inevitably, they waved the accusatory finger in the direction of the Kremlin. Shortly after that, several papers in America, and The Sunday Times in Britain, ran the story as proof of KGB 'foul-play'. It was the first time that the press had run any story that, albeit in a roundabout fashion, questioned Thatcher's integrity concerning the Belgrano. We were overcome with a mixture of fear and elation, should we or should we not expose the hoax? | |||
== Members == | |||
Our indecision was resolved when a journalist from The Observer contacted us in relation to 'a certain tape'. At first we denied knowledge, but eventually decided to admit responsibility. We had been meticulously careful in the production and distribution of the tape to ensure that no one knew about our involvement. How The Observer got hold of information that led to us is a complete mystery. It acted as a substantial warning, if walls did indeed have ears, how much more was known of our activities? | |||
*] (vocals) | |||
*] (vocals) | |||
*] (vocals) | |||
*] (guitar) | |||
*] (guitar) | |||
*] (bass, vocals) | |||
*] (drums, vocals) | |||
*] (artwork, piano, radio) | |||
*Mick Duffield (films) | |||
*], ] and founder of ], is sometimes considered the "ninth member" of Crass. (died 2005)<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/news/2005/aug/19/guardianobituaries.artsobituaries|title=John Loder obituary|first1=Penny |last1=Rimbaud|newspaper=The Guardian|date=19 August 2005|location=London}}</ref> | |||
*Steve Herman (guitar; left shortly after their first performance and died on 4 February 1989) | |||
== Discography ==<!-- This section is linked from ] --> | |||
Since the graffiti days of '77 we had been involved in various forms of action, from spraying to wire cutting, sabotage and subterfuge. We had been concerned that if we went public on the tape all manner of other 'offences' might bubble to the surface. Now we had exposed ourselves to that risk and the telephone started to ring. | |||
(All released on Crass Records unless otherwise stated.) | |||
=== LPs === | |||
The world's media pounced on the story, thrilled that a 'bunch of punks' had made such idiots of The State Department, and 'by the way, what else had we done/' Throughout the years as a band we had never attracted such attention, the telephone rang incessantly, we travelled here and there to do interviews, all of a sudden we were 'media stars'. We were interviewed by the Russian press as American TV cameras recorded the event, we were live on American breakfast TV, we talked to radio stations from Essex to Tokyo, always giving the anarchist angle on every question. We had gained a form of political power, found a voice, were being treated with a slightly awed respect, but was that really what we wanted? Was that what we had set out to achieve all those years ago? | |||
*'']'' (LP, 1978, 45 rpm, ] – UK Indie – No. 1. Reissued in 1980 as LP 33 rpm as '']'', UK Indie – No. 11) | |||
*'']'' (521984, double LP, 1979) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*'']'' (321984/1, LP, 1981) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*'']'' (BOLLOX 2U2, double LP, 1982) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*'']'' (121984/2, LP, 1983) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*'']'' (catalog No. 6, LP, 1986, Crass Records) (UK Indie – No. 6) | |||
=== Compilations and remastered editions === | |||
After seven years on the road we had become the very thing that we were attacking. We had found a platform for our ideas, but somewhere along the line had lost our insight. Where once we had been generous and outgoing, we had now become cynical and inward. Our activities had always been coloured with a lightness and humour, now we saw that we had been increasingly drawn towards darkness and an often ill-conceived militancy. We had become bitter where once we had been joyful, pessimistic where once optimism had been our cause. Throughout those seven years we had attracted almost constant direct and indirect State harassment, now, inevitably, they struck again. | |||
*'']'' (1986 – CATNO5; compilation album of singles) (UK Indie – No. 7) | |||
*''The Feeding of the 5000 (The Crassical Collection)'' (2010 – CC01CD remastered edition) | |||
*''Stations of the Crass (The Crassical Collection)'' (2010 – CC02CD remastered edition) | |||
*''Penis Envy (The Crassical Collection)'' (2010 – CC03CD remastered edition) | |||
*''Christ – The Album (The Crassical Collection)'' (2011 – CC04CD remastered edition) | |||
*''Yes Sir, I Will (The Crassical Collection)'' (2011 – CC05CD remastered edition) | |||
*''Ten Notes on a Summer's Day (The Crassical Collection)'' (2012 – CC06CD remastered edition) | |||
=== Singles === | |||
1984 had arrived, rather worse than Orwell had predicted. Unemployment, homelessness, poverty, hunger. The police state had become a reality, as the miners were going to discover. 'Accidental' death from Thatcher's private army of boys in blue had become an acceptable norm. The balance of a whole society was hanging on the apron strings of a vicious and uncaring despot. Far less important by far was our own fate. We were hauled into the courts to face an obscenity charge that almost broke us. 'We have ways of making you not talk'. | |||
*"Reality Asylum" / "Shaved Women" (CRASS1, 7", 1979) (UK Indie – No. 9) | |||
*"Bloody Revolutions" / "Persons Unknown" (421984/1, 7" single, joint released with the ], 1980) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*"Rival Tribal Rebel Revel" (421984/6F, one-sided 7" flexi disc single given away with '']''{{sic}} ], 1980) | |||
*"Nagasaki Nightmare" / "Big A Little A" (421984/5, 7" single, 1981) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*"Our Wedding" (321984/1F, one-sided 7" flexi-disc single by '''C'''reative '''R'''ecording '''A'''nd '''S'''ound '''S'''ervices made available to readers of teenage magazine ''Loving'') | |||
*"Merry Crassmas" (CT1, 7" single, 1981, Crass' stab at the Christmas novelty market) (UK Indie – No. 2) | |||
*"Sheep Farming in the Falklands" / "Gotcha" (121984/3, 7" single, 1982, originally released anonymously as a flexi-disc) (UK Indie – No. 1 , UK Singles Chart: No 106) | |||
*"How Does It Feel To Be The Mother of 1000 Dead?" / "The Immortal Death" (221984/6, 7" single, 1983) (UK Indie – No. 1) | |||
*"Whodunnit?" (121984/4, 7" single, 1983, pressed in "shit-coloured vinyl") (UK Indie – No. 2, UK Singles Chart – No.119) | |||
*"You're Already Dead" / "Nagasaki is Yesterday's Dog-End" / "Don't Get Caught" (1984, 7" single. UK Singles Chart – No.166) | |||
=== Other === | |||
That summer we played what was to be our last gig together, a riotous benefit for the South Wales miners. From the stage we vowed to continue working for the cause of freedom, yet, as we drove home, we all knew that the particular path that we had been taking had been exhausted. We needed new ways in which to approach our objectives and, a few weeks after the gig, Hari Nana left the band to seek his. We felt no compulsion to continue gigging. We were no longer convinced that by simply providing what had broadly become entertainment we were having any real effect. We'd made our point and if after seven years people hadn't taken it, it surely wasn't because we hadn't tried hard enough. | |||
*''Penny Rimbaud Reads From 'Christ<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Reality Asylum''' (Cat No. 10C, C90 cassette, 1992) | |||
*''Acts of Love – Fifty Songs to my Other Self'' by Penny Rimbaud with Paul Ellis, Eve Libertine and Steve Ignorant (Cat No. 1984/4, LP and book, 1984. Reissued as CD and book as Exitstencilisms Cat No. EXT001 2012) | |||
*EXIT ''The Mystic Trumpeter – Live at the Roundhouse 1972, The ICES Tapes'' (pre Crass material featuring Penny Rimbaud, Gee Vaucher, John Loder and others) (Exit Stencil Music Cat No. EXMO2, CD and book, 2013) | |||
=== Live recordings === | |||
'There is no authority but yourself', we said that, but we'd lost ourselves and become CRASS. We are still involved in the often painful process of refinding that self, of seeing each other again, of healing ourselves from the self-inflicted wounds of 'public life'. The 'movement', from Class War to Christians For Peace, needs to regain the dignity that it has lost in the process of attempting to confront problems that appear to be created by others. We have all been guilty of defining the enemy, and indeed there are those who would obstruct the course of liberty, yet ultimately the enemy is to be found within. There is no them and us, there is only you and me. We need to consolidate, reassess, reject what patently does not work and be prepared to adopt ideas and attitudes that might. We need to find the 'self' that can truly be the authority that it is. We need to look beyond the barbed-wire and the ranks of police for a vision of life which is of our choosing, not that which is dictated by cynics and despots. The exponent of Karate does not aim at the brick when wishing to break it, but at the space beyond. We would do well to learn from that example. | |||
*''Christ: The Bootleg'' (recorded live in Nottingham, 1984, released 1989 on Allied Records) | |||
*'']'' (recorded live in ], Scotland, 1981, released 1993 on Pomona Records) | |||
=== Videos === | |||
We have spent too much of our time, energy and spirit attempting to dispell the shadow of evil cast over us by the violence and terror of the nuclear age. That shadow has become a stain on our hearts. It is time to wash away that stain and to step out of the shadow into the light. We have become trapped in fear outside metaphorical Greenham Gates. 'Knock and ye shalt enter. . .the kingdom of heaven is within you.' | |||
;Crass: | |||
*''Christ: The Movie'' (a series of short films by Mick Duffield that were shown at Crass performances, VHS, released 1990) | |||
*''Semi-Detached'' (video collages by Gee Vaucher, 1978–84, VHS, 2001) | |||
*''Crass: ]'' (documentary by ], 2006) documenting the history of Crass and Dial House. | |||
*''Crass: The Sound of Free Speech - The Story of Reality Asylum (documentary by Brandon Spivey) | |||
;Crass Agenda: | |||
We know enough of the sickness of the world, we should be careful not to add to it through our own physical and mental exhaustion and ill health. If we are ever to achieve our shared objectives we must each of us be strong enough to do so. We have all failed and we have all succeeded. This is no tail between the leg ending, but a proud, albeit painful and confused, beginning. | |||
*''In the Beginning Was the WORD'' – Live DVD recorded at the Progress Bar, Tufnell Park, London, 18 November 2004 | |||
== See also == | |||
Love, peace and freedom, | |||
{{Portal|Anarchism}} | |||
what was CRASS, but now knows better." | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
== Suggested viewing == | |||
* ''The Art of Punk – Crass'' (]) (2013) – Documentary featuring the art of Dan King and ] | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== Bibliography == | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Berger |first1=George |title=The Story of Crass |publisher=] |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-85712-012-0}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bounds |first=Philip |chapter=Anarchy, for a While |title=Notes from the End of History |location=London |publisher=Merlin Press |year=2014}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Cogan |first1=Brian |title="Do They Owe Us a Living? Of Course They Do!" Crass, Throbbing Gristle, and Anarchy and Radicalism in Early English Punk Rock |journal=Journal for the Study of Radicalism |date=2007 |volume=1 |issue=2 |pages=77–90 |doi=10.1353/jsr.2008.0004 |jstor=41887578 |s2cid=143586670 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41887578 |access-date=13 May 2021 |issn=1930-1189 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Cross |first=Richard |url=http://www.socialist-history-journal.org.uk/SH_26_contents.html |title=The Hippies Now Wear Black: Crass and the anarcho-punk movement, 1977–1984 |journal=Socialist History |publisher=] |issue=26 |year=2004 |access-date=9 February 2006 |archive-date=31 May 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190531053124/http://www.socialist-history-journal.org.uk/SH_26_contents.html |url-status=dead }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Cross |first=Richard |url=http://www.music.ucsb.edu/projects/musicandpolitics/archive/2010-2/cross.pdf |journal=Music and Politics |year=2010 |title='There Is No Authority But Yourself': The Individual and the Collective in British Anarcho-Punk |volume=4 |issue=2 |issn=1938-7687 |access-date=24 November 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604190525/http://www.music.ucsb.edu/projects/musicandpolitics/archive/2010-2/cross.pdf |archive-date=4 June 2011 |url-status=dead }} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Glasper |first1=Ian |title=The Day the Country Died: A History of Anarcho Punk 1980 to 1984 |publisher=] |year=2007|isbn=978-1-901447-70-5}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Ignorant |first1=Steve |last2=Pottinger |first2=Steve |title=The Rest is Propaganda |year=2010 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-9566746-0-9}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=McKay |first1=George |title=Senseless Acts of Beauty: Cultures of Resistance since the Sixties |chapter=Chapter three: 'CRASS 621984 ANOK4U2' |year=1996 |publisher=] |isbn=1-85984-028-0}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=McKay |first1=George |title="They've Got a Bomb": Sounding Anti-nuclearism in the Anarcho-punk Movement in Britain, 1978–84 |journal=Rock Music Studies |date=2 September 2019 |volume=6 |issue=3 |pages=217–236 |doi=10.1080/19401159.2019.1673076 |s2cid=213764792 |url=https://www.academia.edu/40523821 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Mott |first=Toby |title=Crass 1977 – 1984 |publisher=PPP Editions |year=2011}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Rimbaud |first1=Penny |title=Shibboleth: my revolting life |year=1999a |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-873176-40-5}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Rimbaud |first=Penny |title=The Diamond Signature |year=1999b |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-873176-55-9}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Rimbaud |first=Penny |title=Love Songs |publisher=Pomona Books |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-904590-03-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Vaucher |first=Gee |title=Crass Art and other Post Modern Monsters |year=1999 |publisher=AK Press |isbn=978-1-873176-10-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |title=A Series of Shock Slogans and Mindless Token Tantrums |publisher=Exitstencil Press |year=1982 }} (originally issued as a pamphlet with the LP ''Christ – The Album'', much of the text is now published online at {{cite web |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/text/09438a.html |title=Southern Records |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050404042810/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/text/09438a.html |archive-date=4 April 2005 }}) | |||
* ''International Anthem: A Nihilist Newspaper for the Living''. Exitstencil Press. 1977–81. (see {{cite web |url=http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/misc.html |title=Crass Discography |publisher=Southern Records |access-date=6 April 2003 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030415080431/http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/misc.html |archive-date=15 April 2003 |url-status=dead }}) | |||
{{refend}} | |||
== External links == | |||
{{commons}} | |||
*{{discogs artist|Crass}} | |||
*{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=P16690}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:40, 31 December 2024
English punk rock band This article is about the band. For the definition of "crass", see wikt:crass. For the people named Crass, see Crass (surname).
Crass | |
---|---|
Crass on stage in Cumbria in May 1984, with the slogan "there is no authority but yourself" in the background. From left to right: Pete Wright, Steve Ignorant, and N.A. Palmer. | |
Background information | |
Also known as | Stormtrooper (1977) |
Origin | Epping, Essex, England |
Genres | |
Years active | 1977–1984 |
Labels | |
Past members |
|
Crass were an English art collective and punk rock band formed in Epping, Essex in 1977 who promoted anarchism as a political ideology, a lifestyle and a resistance movement. Crass popularised the anarcho-punk movement of the punk subculture, advocating direct action, animal rights, feminism, anti-fascism and environmentalism. The band employed and advocated a DIY ethic in its albums, sound collages, leaflets and films.
Crass spray-painted stencilled graffiti messages in the London Underground system and on advertising billboards, coordinated squats and organised political action. The band expressed its ideals by dressing in black, military-surplus-style clothing and using a stage backdrop amalgamating icons of perceived authority such as the Christian cross, the swastika, the Union Jack and the ouroboros.
The band was critical of the punk subculture and youth culture in general; nevertheless, the anarchist ideas that they promoted have maintained a presence in punk. Because of their free experimentation and use of tape collages, graphics, spoken word releases, poetry and improvisation, Crass have been associated with avant-punk and art punk.
History
1977: Origins
The band was based around an anarchist commune in a 16th-century cottage, Dial House, near Epping, Essex, and formed when commune founder Penny Rimbaud began jamming with Steve Ignorant (who was staying in the house at the time). Ignorant was inspired to form a band after seeing the Clash perform at Colston Hall in Bristol, whilst Rimbaud, a veteran of avant-garde performance art groups such as EXIT and Ceres Confusion, was working on his book Reality Asylum. They produced "So What?" and "Do They Owe Us a Living?" as a drum-and-vocal duo. They briefly called themselves Stormtrooper before choosing Crass in reference to a line in the David Bowie song "Ziggy Stardust" ("The kids were just crass").
Other friends and household members joined (including Gee Vaucher, Pete Wright, N. A. Palmer and Steve Herman), and Crass played their first live gig at a squatters' street festival in Huntley Street, North London. They planned to play five songs, but a neighbour "pulled the plug" after three. Guitarist Steve Herman left the band soon afterward and was replaced by Phil Clancey, a.k.a. Phil Free. Joy De Vivre and Eve Libertine also joined around this time. Other early Crass performances included a four-date tour of New York City, a festival gig in Covent Garden and regular appearances with the U.K. Subs at The White Lion, Putney and Action Space in central London. The latter performances were often poorly attended: "The audience consisted mostly of us when the Subs played and the Subs when we played".
Crass played two gigs at the Roxy Club in Covent Garden, London. According to Rimbaud, the band arrived drunk at the second show and were ejected from the stage; this inspired their song "Banned from the Roxy" and Rimbaud's essay for Crass's self-published magazine International Anthem, "Crass at the Roxy". After the incident, the band took themselves more seriously, avoiding alcohol and cannabis before shows and wearing black, military-surplus-style clothing on and off the stage.
They introduced their stage backdrop, a logo designed by Rimbaud's friend Dave King. This gave the band a militaristic image, which led to accusations of fascism. Crass countered that their uniform appearance was intended to be a statement against the "cult of personality" so that no member would be identified as the "leader".
Conceived and intended as cover artwork for a self-published pamphlet version of Rimbaud's Christ's Reality Asylum, the Crass logo was an amalgam of several "icons of authority" including the Christian cross, the swastika, the Union Jack and a two-headed Ouroboros (symbolising the idea that power will eventually destroy itself). Using such deliberately mixed messages was part of Crass's strategy of presenting themselves as a "barrage of contradictions", challenging audiences to (in Rimbaud's words) "make your own fucking minds up". This included using loud, aggressive music to promote a pacifist message, a reference to their Dadaist, performance-art backgrounds and situationist ideas.
The band eschewed elaborate stage lighting during live sets, preferring to play under 40-watt household light bulbs; the technical difficulties of filming under such lighting conditions partly explains why there is little live footage of Crass. They pioneered multimedia presentation, using video technology (back-projected films and video collages by Mick Duffield and Gee Vaucher) to enhance their performances, and also distributed leaflets and handouts explaining anarchist ideas to their audiences.
1978–1979: The Feeding of the 5000 and Crass Records
Main article: Crass RecordsCrass' first release was The Feeding of the 5000 (an 18-track, 12" 45 rpm EP on the Small Wonder label) in 1978. Workers at an Irish record-pressing plant refused to process it because of the offensive and blasphemous content of the song "Asylum", and the record was released without it. In its place were two minutes of silence entitled "The Sound of Free Speech". This incident prompted Crass to create their own independent record label, Crass Records, to retain editorial control over their material.
A rerecorded, extended version of "Asylum", renamed "Reality Asylum", was shortly afterward on Crass Records as a 7" single, and Crass were investigated by the police because of the song's lyrics. The band were interviewed at their Dial House home by Scotland Yard's vice squad and threatened with prosecution, but the case was dropped. "Reality Asylum" retailed at 45p (when most other singles cost about 90p), and was the first example of Crass' "pay no more than..." policy to issue records as inexpensively as possible. The band failed to factor value-added tax into their expenses, causing them to lose money on every copy sold. A year later, Crass Records released new pressings of The Feeding of the 5000 (subtitled "The Second Sitting"), restoring the original version of "Asylum".
1980: Stations of the Crass and "Bloody Revolutions"
In 1979 the band released their second album, Stations of the Crass, financed with a loan from Poison Girls, a band with whom they regularly appeared. This was a double album, with three sides of new material and a fourth side recorded live at the Pied Bull in Islington.
The next Crass single, 1980's "Bloody Revolutions", was a benefit release with Poison Girls that raised £20,000 to fund the Wapping Autonomy Centre. The words were a critique (from an anarchist-pacifist perspective) of the traditional Marxist view of revolutionary struggle and were partly a response to violence marring a September 1979 Crass gig at Conway Hall in London's Red Lion Square. The show was intended as a benefit for Persons Unknown, a group of anarchists facing conspiracy charges. During the performance, Socialist Workers Party supporters and other anti-fascists attacked British Movement neo-Nazis, triggering violence. Crass later argued that the leftists were largely to blame for the fighting, and organizations such as Rock Against Racism were causing audiences to become polarised into left- and right-wing factions. Others (including the anarchist organisation Class War) were critical of Crass's position, stating that "like Kropotkin, their politics are up shit creek". Many of the band's punk followers felt that they failed to understand the violence to which they were subjected from the right.
"Rival Tribal Rebel Revel", a flexi disc single distributed with the Toxic Grafity [sic] fanzine, was also a commentary about the events at Conway Hall attacking the mindless violence and tribalistic aspects of contemporary youth culture. This was followed by the double single "Nagasaki Nightmare/Big A Little A". The strongly anti-nuclear lyrics of "Nagasaki Nightmare" were reinforced by the fold-out sleeve artwork. It featured an article by Mike Holderness of Peace News magazine connecting the atomic power industry and the manufacture of nuclear weapons along with a large poster-style map of nuclear installations in the UK. The other side of the record, "Big A Little A", was a statement of the band's anti-statist and individualist anarchist philosophy: "Be exactly who you want to be, do what you want to do / I am he and she is she but you're the only you."
1981: Penis Envy
Crass released their third album, Penis Envy, in 1981. This marked a departure from the hardcore punk image that The Feeding of the 5000 and Stations of the Crass had given the group. It featured more complex musical arrangements and female vocals by Eve Libertine and Joy De Vivre (singer Steve Ignorant was credited as "not on this recording"). The album addressed feminist issues, attacking marriage and sexual repression.
The last track on Penis Envy, a parody of an MOR love song entitled "Our Wedding", was made available as a white flexi disc to readers of Loving, a teenage romance magazine. Crass tricked the magazine into offering the disc, posing as "Creative Recording and Sound Services". Loving accepted the offer, telling their readers that the free Crass flexi would make "your wedding day just that bit extra special". A tabloid controversy resulted when the hoax was exposed, with the News of the World stating that the title of the flexi's originating album was "too obscene to print". Despite Loving's annoyance, Crass had broken no laws.
The album was banned by the retailer HMV, and copies of the album were seized from the Eastern Bloc record shop by Greater Manchester Police under the direction of chief constable James Anderton. The shop owners were charged with displaying "obscene articles for publication for gain". The judge ruled against Crass in the ensuing court case, although the decision was overturned by the Court of Appeal (except the lyrics to "Bata Motel", which were upheld as "sexually provocative and obscene").
1982–1983: Christ – The Album and strategy change
The band's fourth LP, 1982's double set Christ – The Album, took almost a year to record, produce and mix (during which the Falklands War began and ended). This caused Crass to question their approach to making records. As a group whose primary purpose was political commentary, they felt overtaken and made redundant by world events:
The speed with which the Falklands War was played out and the devastation that Thatcher was creating both at home and abroad forced us to respond far faster than we had ever needed to before. Christ – The Album had taken so long to produce that some of the songs in it, songs that warned of the imminence of riots and war, had become almost redundant. Toxteth, Bristol, Brixton and the Falklands were ablaze by the time that we released. We felt embarrassed by our slowness, humbled by our inadequacy.
Subsequent releases (including the singles "How Does It Feel? (To Be the Mother of a Thousand Dead)" and "Sheep Farming in the Falklands" and the album Yes Sir, I Will) saw the band's sound return to basics and were issued as "tactical responses" to political situations. Crass anonymously produced 20,000 copies of a flexi disc with a live recording of "Sheep Farming in the Falklands", and copies were randomly inserted into the sleeves of other records by sympathetic workers at the Rough Trade Records distribution warehouse.
Direct action and internal debates
From their early days of spraying stencilled anti-war, anarchist, feminist and anti-consumerist graffiti messages in the London Underground and on billboards, Crass was involved in politically motivated direct action and musical activities. On 18 December 1982, the band helped coordinate a 24-hour squat in the empty West London Zig Zag club to prove "that the underground punk scene could handle itself responsibly when it had to and that music really could be enjoyed free of the restraints imposed upon it by corporate industry".
In 1983 and 1984, Crass were part of the Stop the City actions coordinated by London Greenpeace that foreshadowed the anti-globalisation rallies of the early 21st century. Support for these activities was provided in the lyrics and sleeve notes of the band's last single, "You're Already Dead", expressing doubts about their commitment to nonviolence. It was also a reflection of disagreements within the group, as explained by Rimbaud: "Half the band supported the pacifist line and half supported direct and if necessary violent action. It was a confusing time for us, and I think a lot of our records show that, inadvertently". This led to introspection within the band, with some members becoming embittered and losing sight of their essentially positive stance. Reflecting this debate, the next release under the Crass name was Acts of Love: classical-music settings of 50 poems by Penny Rimbaud, described as "songs to my other self" and intended to celebrate "the profound sense of unity, peace and love that exists within that other self".
Thatchergate
Another Crass hoax was known as the "Thatchergate tapes", a recording of an apparently accidentally overheard telephone conversation (because of crossed lines). The tape was constructed by Crass from edited recordings of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. On the "rather clumsily" forged tape, they appear to discuss the sinking of HMS Sheffield during the Falklands War and agree that Europe would be a target for nuclear weapons in a conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Copies were leaked to the press via a Dutch news agency during the 1983 general election campaign. The U.S. State Department and British government believed the tape to be propaganda produced by the KGB (as reported by the San Francisco Chronicle and The Sunday Times). Although the tape was produced anonymously, The Observer linked the tape with the band. Previously classified government documents made public in January 2014 under the UK's 'thirty-year rule reveal that Thatcher was aware of the tape and had discussed it with her cabinet.
1984: Breakup
Questions about the band in Parliament and an attempted prosecution by Conservative Party MP Timothy Eggar under the UK's Obscene Publications Act for their single "How Does It Feel..." made the members of Crass question their purpose:
We found ourselves in a strange and frightening arena. We had wanted to make our views public, had wanted to share them with like minded people, but now those views were being analysed by those dark shadows who inhabited the corridors of power (…) We had gained a form of political power, found a voice, were being treated with a slightly awed respect, but was that really what we wanted? Was that what we had set out to achieve all those years ago?
The band had also incurred heavy legal expenses for the Penis Envy prosecution; this, combined with exhaustion and the pressures of living and operating together, finally took its toll. On 7 July 1984, the band played a benefit gig at Aberdare, Wales for striking miners, and on the return trip, guitarist N. A. Palmer announced his intent to leave the group. This confirmed Crass's previous intention to quit in 1984, and the band was dissolved.
The group's final release as Crass was the "Ten Notes on a Summer's Day" 12" single in 1986. Crass Records was closed in 1992; its final release was Christ's Reality Asylum, a 90-minute cassette of Penny Rimbaud reading the essay that he had written in early 1977.
On 11 July 2024, the full 7 July 1984 concert was released as a free download to celebrate its 40th anniversary, albeit as a poor and upscaled tape transfer.
Crass Collective, Crass Agenda and Last Amendment
In November 2002 several former members arranged Your Country Needs You, a concert of "voices in opposition to war", as the Crass Collective. At Queen Elizabeth Hall on London's South Bank, Your Country Needs You included Benjamin Britten's War Requiem and performances by Goldblade, Fun-Da-Mental, Ian MacKaye and Pete Wright's post-Crass project, Judas 2. In October 2003 the Crass Collective changed their name to Crass Agenda, with Rimbaud, Libertine and Vaucher working with Matt Black of Coldcut and jazz musicians such as Julian Siegel and Kate Shortt. In 2004 Crass Agenda spearheaded a campaign to save the Vortex Jazz Club in Stoke Newington, north London (where they regularly played). In June 2005 Crass Agenda was declared to be "no more", changing its name to the "more pertinent" Last Amendment. After a five-year hiatus, Last Amendment performed at the Vortex in June 2012. Rimbaud has also performed and recorded with Japanther and the Charlatans. A "new" Crass track (a remix of 1982's "Major General Despair" with new lyrics), "The Unelected President", is available.
2007: Ignorant's The Feeding of the 5000
On 24 and 25 November 2007, Steve Ignorant performed Crass' The Feeding of the 5000 album live at the Shepherd's Bush Empire with a band of "selected guests". Other members of Crass were not involved in these concerts. Initially Rimbaud refused Ignorant permission to perform Crass songs he had written, but later changed his mind: "I acknowledge and respect Steve's right to do this, but I do regard it as a betrayal of the Crass ethos". Ignorant had a different view: "I don't have to justify what I do...Plus, most of the lyrics are still relevant today. And remember that three-letter word, 'fun'?"
2010: Crassical Collection reissues
In 2010 it was announced that Crass would release The Crassical Collection, remastered reissues of their back catalogue. Three former members objected, threatening legal action. Despite their concerns the project went ahead, and the remasters were eventually released. First in the series was The Feeding of the 5000, released in August 2010. Stations of the Crass followed in October, with new editions of Penis Envy, Christ – The Album, Yes Sir, I Will and Ten Notes on a Summer's Day released in 2011 and 2012. Critics praised the improved sound quality and new packaging of the remastered albums.
2011: The Last Supper
In 2011 Steve Ignorant embarked on an international tour, entitled "The Last Supper". He performed Crass material, culminating with a final performance at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 19 November. Ignorant said that this was the last time he would sing the songs of Crass, with Rimbaud's support; the latter joined him onstage for a drum-and-vocal rendition of "Do They Owe Us A Living", bringing the band's career full circle after 34 years: "And then Penny came on...and we did it, 'Do They Owe Us A Living' as we'd first done it all those years ago. As it started, so it finished". Ignorant's lineup for the tour were Gizz Butt, Carol Hodge, Pete Wilson and Spike T. Smith, and he was joined by Eve Libertine for a number of songs. The set list included a cover of "West One (Shine on Me)" by The Ruts, when Ignorant was joined onstage by the Norfolk-based lifeboat crew with whom he volunteers.
Artwork and exhibitions
In February 2011, artist Toby Mott exhibited a portion of his Crass ephemera collection at the Roth Gallery in New York. The exhibit featured artwork, albums (including 12" LPs and EPs), 7" singles from Crass Records and a complete set of Crass' self-published zine, Inter-National Anthem.
Artwork by Gee Vaucher and Penny Rimbaud, including a recording of the original 'Thatchergate Tape', featured as part of the 'Peculiar People' show at the Focal Point Gallery in Southend-on-Sea during the spring of 2016, part of a series of events celebrating the history of 'Radical Essex'. Vaucher's painting 'Oh America', featuring an image of the Statue of Liberty hiding her face with her hands, was used as the front page of the UK Daily Mirror newspaper to mark the election of Donald Trump as US President on 9 November 2016. From November 2016 to February 2017 the Firstsite art gallery in Colchester, hosted a retrospective of Gee Vaucher's artwork.
In June 2016, "The Art of Crass" was the subject of an exhibition at the LightBox Gallery in Leicester curated by artist and technologist Sean Clark. The exhibition featured prints and original artworks by Gee Vaucher, Penny Rimbaud, Eve Libertine, and Dave King. During the exhibition, Penny Rimbaud, Eve Libertine, and Louise Elliot performed "The Cobblestones of Love", a lyrical reworking of the Crass album "Yes Sir, I Will". On the final day of the exhibition there was a performance by Steve Ignorant's Slice of Life. The exhibition is documented on The Art of Crass website.
Influences
For Rimbaud the initial inspiration for founding Crass was the death of his friend Phil 'Wally Hope' Russell, as detailed in his book The Last of the Hippies: An Hysterical Romance. Russell had been placed in a psychiatric hospital after helping to set up the first Stonehenge free festival in 1974, and died shortly afterwards. Rimbaud believed that Russell was murdered by the State for political reasons. Co-founder Ignorant has cited The Clash and David Bowie as major personal influences. Band members have also cited influences ranging from existentialism and Zen to situationism, the poetry of Baudelaire, British working class 'kitchen sink' literature and films such as Kes and the films of Anthony McCall (McCall's Four Projected Movements was shown as part of an early Crass performance).
Crass have said that their musical influences were seldom drawn from rock, but more from classical music (particularly Benjamin Britten, on whose work, Rimbaud states, some of Crass' riffs are based), free jazz, European atonality, and avant-garde composers such as John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
Legacy
Crass influenced the anarchist movement in the UK, the US and beyond. The growth of anarcho-punk spurred interest in anarchist ideas. The band have also claimed credit for revitalising the peace movement and the UK Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Others contend that they overestimated their influence, their radicalising effect on militants notwithstanding. Researcher Richard Cross stated:
In their own writing, Crass somewhat overstate the contribution that anarcho-punk made to resuscitating the moribund Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) in the early 1980s. The initiation of a new arms race, confirmed by plans to deploy first-strike Cruise and Pershing nuclear missiles across Europe, revived anti-nuclear movements across the continent, and would have arisen with or without the intercession of anarcho-punk. What Crass and anarcho-punk can quite legitimately claim is to have convinced a substantial number of radical youth to commit their energies to the most militant anti-militarist wings of the disarmament movement, which laid siege to nuclear installations across the country and which saw no conflict between its pacifist precepts and its willingness to commit acts of 'criminal damage' on the military property of the nuclear state.
Crass' philosophical and aesthetic influences on 1980s punk bands were far-reaching. A notable example is Washington, D.C.'s Dischord Records co-founder Ian MacKaye, who followed some of Crass' anti-consumerist and DIY principles in his own label and projects, particularly with the post-hardcore band Fugazi. However, few mimicked their later free-form style (heard on Yes Sir, I Will and their final recording, Ten Notes on a Summer's Day). Their painted and collage black-and-white record sleeves (by Gee Vaucher) may have influenced later artists such as Banksy (with whom Vaucher collaborated) and the subvertising movement. Anti-folk artist Jeffrey Lewis's 2007 album, 12 Crass Songs, features acoustic covers of Crass material. Brett Anderson, in his early teens at the time, was a big fan of the band, would play their records at home and much later cited them in a radio interview, when asked about what band or artist had first made him want to get up on stage as a singer: "Crass! Their energy on stage was incredible, I was very impressed".
In an interview with The Guardian in 2016, the band was cited along with a number of other British Anarcho-punk bands of the early '80s as being an influence to the American avant-garde metal group Neurosis.
Members
- Steve Ignorant (vocals)
- Eve Libertine (vocals)
- Joy De Vivre (vocals)
- N. A. Palmer (guitar)
- Phil Free (guitar)
- Pete Wright (bass, vocals)
- Penny Rimbaud (drums, vocals)
- Gee Vaucher (artwork, piano, radio)
- Mick Duffield (films)
- John Loder, sound engineer and founder of Southern Studios, is sometimes considered the "ninth member" of Crass. (died 2005)
- Steve Herman (guitar; left shortly after their first performance and died on 4 February 1989)
Discography
(All released on Crass Records unless otherwise stated.)
LPs
- The Feeding of the 5000 (LP, 1978, 45 rpm, Small Wonder Records – UK Indie – No. 1. Reissued in 1980 as LP 33 rpm as The Feeding of the 5000 – Second Sitting, UK Indie – No. 11)
- Stations of the Crass (521984, double LP, 1979) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- Penis Envy (321984/1, LP, 1981) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- Christ – The Album (BOLLOX 2U2, double LP, 1982) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- Yes Sir, I Will (121984/2, LP, 1983) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- Ten Notes on a Summer's Day (catalog No. 6, LP, 1986, Crass Records) (UK Indie – No. 6)
Compilations and remastered editions
- Best Before 1984 (1986 – CATNO5; compilation album of singles) (UK Indie – No. 7)
- The Feeding of the 5000 (The Crassical Collection) (2010 – CC01CD remastered edition)
- Stations of the Crass (The Crassical Collection) (2010 – CC02CD remastered edition)
- Penis Envy (The Crassical Collection) (2010 – CC03CD remastered edition)
- Christ – The Album (The Crassical Collection) (2011 – CC04CD remastered edition)
- Yes Sir, I Will (The Crassical Collection) (2011 – CC05CD remastered edition)
- Ten Notes on a Summer's Day (The Crassical Collection) (2012 – CC06CD remastered edition)
Singles
- "Reality Asylum" / "Shaved Women" (CRASS1, 7", 1979) (UK Indie – No. 9)
- "Bloody Revolutions" / "Persons Unknown" (421984/1, 7" single, joint released with the Poison Girls, 1980) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- "Rival Tribal Rebel Revel" (421984/6F, one-sided 7" flexi disc single given away with Toxic Grafity [sic] fanzine, 1980)
- "Nagasaki Nightmare" / "Big A Little A" (421984/5, 7" single, 1981) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- "Our Wedding" (321984/1F, one-sided 7" flexi-disc single by Creative Recording And Sound Services made available to readers of teenage magazine Loving)
- "Merry Crassmas" (CT1, 7" single, 1981, Crass' stab at the Christmas novelty market) (UK Indie – No. 2)
- "Sheep Farming in the Falklands" / "Gotcha" (121984/3, 7" single, 1982, originally released anonymously as a flexi-disc) (UK Indie – No. 1 , UK Singles Chart: No 106)
- "How Does It Feel To Be The Mother of 1000 Dead?" / "The Immortal Death" (221984/6, 7" single, 1983) (UK Indie – No. 1)
- "Whodunnit?" (121984/4, 7" single, 1983, pressed in "shit-coloured vinyl") (UK Indie – No. 2, UK Singles Chart – No.119)
- "You're Already Dead" / "Nagasaki is Yesterday's Dog-End" / "Don't Get Caught" (1984, 7" single. UK Singles Chart – No.166)
Other
- Penny Rimbaud Reads From 'Christ's Reality Asylum' (Cat No. 10C, C90 cassette, 1992)
- Acts of Love – Fifty Songs to my Other Self by Penny Rimbaud with Paul Ellis, Eve Libertine and Steve Ignorant (Cat No. 1984/4, LP and book, 1984. Reissued as CD and book as Exitstencilisms Cat No. EXT001 2012)
- EXIT The Mystic Trumpeter – Live at the Roundhouse 1972, The ICES Tapes (pre Crass material featuring Penny Rimbaud, Gee Vaucher, John Loder and others) (Exit Stencil Music Cat No. EXMO2, CD and book, 2013)
Live recordings
- Christ: The Bootleg (recorded live in Nottingham, 1984, released 1989 on Allied Records)
- You'll Ruin It For Everyone (recorded live in Perth, Scotland, 1981, released 1993 on Pomona Records)
Videos
- Crass
- Christ: The Movie (a series of short films by Mick Duffield that were shown at Crass performances, VHS, released 1990)
- Semi-Detached (video collages by Gee Vaucher, 1978–84, VHS, 2001)
- Crass: There Is No Authority But Yourself (documentary by Alexander Oey, 2006) documenting the history of Crass and Dial House.
- Crass: The Sound of Free Speech - The Story of Reality Asylum (documentary by Brandon Spivey)
- Crass Agenda
- In the Beginning Was the WORD – Live DVD recorded at the Progress Bar, Tufnell Park, London, 18 November 2004
See also
Suggested viewing
- The Art of Punk – Crass (The Museum of Contemporary Art) (2013) – Documentary featuring the art of Dan King and Gee Vaucher
References
- "In August 1977 Dave King went (...) As Dave exits stage left, Steve Ignorant returns to Dial House and (...) Crass was born." Berger, George (2006). The Story of Crass. Omnibus Press. p. 76.
- Rimbaud, Penny (2004). Love Songs. Pomona Publishing. p. xxiv. ISBN 1-904590-03-9.
We believed that you could no more be a socialist and signed to CBS (The Clash) than you could be an anarchist and signed to EMI
- Anarchist Punk genre at AllMusic
- Graham, Josh (3 December 2010). "Crass, the Anarcho-Punk Fountainhead, Is Coming to S.F. in March -- Sort Of". Archived from the original on 12 November 2017. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
- "Reading And Rioting: A Louder Than Words Walk Through". The Quietus. 11 November 2014. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
- Gonsales, Erica (25 May 2011). "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes: Anthony McCall's Enchanting Film Installations". Creators.vice.com. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
- ^ Lynskey, Dorian (28 September 2007). "Jeffrey Lewis, 12 Crass Songs". The Guardian. London.
- Iain Aitch (5 January 2001). "Country house anarchy". The Guardian.
- Sleeve note on Bullshit Detector Volume 1 (Crass Records, cat no.421984/4): "Sometime in 1977 Rimbaud and Ignorant started messing around with a song called 'owe us a living'. They ran through it a few times and decided to form a band consisting of themselves. They called themselves Crass"
- ^ "At the end of the Clash gig there was all these people shouting and saying 'your shit!' and Joe Strummer stood there and said 'if you think you can do any better go ahead and start your own band.' And I was like what a great idea!" "Steve Ignorant Interview". Punk77.co.uk.
- Rimbaud, P; "...EXIT – 'The Mystic Trumpeter, Live at the Roundhouse 1972'" accompanying booklet, Exitstencil Recordings 2013
- Rimbaud, P (2004). Love Songs. Pomona Publishing. p. xxi. ISBN 1-904590-03-9.
- Glasper 2007, p. 14.
- ^ Rimbaud 1999a, p. 99.
- Berger 2006, p. 83.
- Berger 2006, p. 86.
- Berger 2006, p. 93.
- ^ "Steve Ignorant interviewed". Punk77.co.uk. 2007.
- ^ Rimbaud, P; "...In Which Crass Voluntarily Blow Their Own", sleeve note essay included with Best Before 1984 album
- ""Banned from the Roxy" from Feeding the 5000". Small Wonder Records. 1978.
- Rimbaud, Penny (1977). ""Crass at the Roxy" from International Anthem 1". Archived from the original on 1 December 2005.
- Berger 2006, p. 103.
- ^ Glasper 2007, p. 23.
- ^ Berger 2006, p. 104.
- Glasper 2007, p. 13.
- Rimbaud 1999a, p. 90.
- ^ "Crass interview". New Crimes (3). Winter 1980.
- "Crass interview". The Leveller (25). April 1979.
- McKay 1996, p. 90.
- McKay 1996, p. 89.
- McKay 1996, p. 88.
- Berger 2006, p. 108: "They were very difficult to film, because with Super-8 you needed far more light than was available at a Crass gig – all you'd get was shadows and light – that would be about it. So it was a bit pointless filming the gigs. I did try asking for maybe 60 watt bulbs instead of 40 but there was no deal" – Mick Duffield
- Berger 2006, p. 185.
- George Berger (4 November 2009). The Story of Crass. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9780857120120.
- Maria Raha (2004). Cinderella's Big Score: Women of the Punk And Indie Underground. Basic Books. p. 96. ISBN 9781580051163.
- Ignorant, Steve (2010). The Rest is Propaganda. Southern Records. p. 167.
- Berger 2006, p. 137.
- Berger 2006, p. 138.
- Rimbaud, P; sleeve notes to 'The Crassical Collection; Stations of the Crass' Crass Records, 2010
- Berger 2006, p. 169.
- Berger 2006, p. 145.
- Lux, Martin (2006). Anti-Fascist. Phoenix Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-948984-35-8.
- "Anarchy in UK: Crass interviewed: 1979". greengalloway. Blogspot. 23 October 2007.
But Crass blame this on Rock Against Racism which, they allege, has polarised youth. "If you're not in RAR then you're a Nazi. Now we're sandwiched between left-wing violence and right-wing violence" – Crass interviewed in "New Society", 1979
- Home, Stewart (1988). The Assault on Culture – Utopian Currents From Lettrisme to Class War. Aporia Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-948518-88-1.
like Kropotkin, their politics are up shit creek
- Berger 2006, p. 149.
- Mike Diboll (1979). "Crass – Toxic Grafity Fanzine". Kill Your Pet Puppy.
- Mike Holderness, sleeve notes of "Nagasaki Nightmare/Big A Little A" single, Crass Records, 1980
- Rimbaud, P; "Big A Little A", Crass Records 1980. Quoted in Love Songs p.57, Pomona Publishing ISBN 1-904590-03-9
- "Southern Studios archive". Archived from the original on 9 March 2005.
- "News of the World". 7 June 1981. p. 13. Archived from the original on 20 March 2005.
- Berger 2006.
- ^ Rimbaud, P; "...In Which Crass Voluntarily Blow Their Own", sleeve note essay included with Best Before 1984 album
- Petley, Julian. "Smashed Hits: Overview" (PDF).
- "Flux of Pink Indians – F.C.T.U.L.P. – Alternative Mixes – 1984". Kill Your Pet Puppy. 21 September 2009.
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Penny (he's a bloke) has started a petition to keep the Vortex in Stoke Newington, and puts up a notice in the club saying: "This Is the Spiritual Home of Jazz and We Ain't Leaving." The resulting petition ends up going to the council with 3,000 signatures on it
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The court passed a verdict of suicide with no reference at all to the appalling treatment that had been the direct cause of it. Our inquiries convinced us that what had happened was not an accident. The state had intended to destroy Wally's spirit, if not his life, because he was a threat, a fearless threat who they hoped they could destroy without much risk of embarrassment.
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Bibliography
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External links
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See also |
- Crass
- Anarcho-punk groups
- Anti-consumerist groups
- English art rock groups
- British hardcore punk groups
- Political music groups
- DIY culture
- English anti-fascists
- British critics of Christianity
- British critics of religions
- English punk rock groups
- Musical groups established in 1977
- Musical groups disestablished in 1984
- Sound collage artists
- Squatters' movements
- Underground punk scene in the United Kingdom
- 1977 establishments in England