Demob

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
No Room for You 03:23 Tools
Anti Police 02:44 Tools
Anti-Police 02:42 Tools
New Breed 01:46 Tools
Think Straight 02:16 Tools
Teenage Adolescence 02:21 Tools
No more talk 02:21 Tools
Kids are making a stand 02:32 Tools
My life 02:19 Tools
No Fun 01:45 Tools
3 months DC 02:26 Tools
Unfinished business 02:06 Tools
SUS 02:01 Tools
One More Man Is Dead 02:46 Tools
Riot Squad 03:26 Tools
No Way Out 01:36 Tools
Big Brother 01:33 Tools
What you fighting For 02:12 Tools
Crime Through Time 03:41 Tools
Pain in the Arse 01:53 Tools
Teenage Adolescents 02:18 Tools
Demob Punk 01:59 Tools
Suspect sus 00:00 Tools
Stand Up and Be Counted 02:32 Tools
Billy No Mates 02:00 Tools
I Can't Get an Answer 02:32 Tools
The Colours 03:05 Tools
It's You 02:39 Tools
Fucked off 00:00 Tools
Its You 02:39 Tools
Wait in vain 02:16 Tools
New breed (Live) 02:16 Tools
World of anger 02:16 Tools
Can't get an answer 02:16 Tools
Once Punk Always Punk 02:50 Tools
04-new breed 01:48 Tools
05-sus 02:01 Tools
B.I.C 02:50 Tools
think-straight 02:50 Tools
It's You! 02:50 Tools
3-New Breed 01:47 Tools
6-Fucked Off 01:47 Tools
4-No More Talk 01:47 Tools
Deomb Punk 01:47 Tools
Billy Nomates 01:47 Tools
12-think straight 01:47 Tools
****ed off 01:24 Tools
its you! 02:39 Tools
7-It's You 02:39 Tools
What You Fighting For? 02:39 Tools
  • 25,520
    plays
  • 1,834
    listners
  • 25520
    top track count

Demob formed in late 1978 by guitarist Terry Elcock and drummer Johnny Melfah, and they were soon joined by Mike Howes (vocals), Tony Wakefield (bass) and Chris Rush (guitar). Howes ex-army skinhead friend Andy Kanonik soon joined, also on vocals.[1] It was this line-up that first rehearsed and played the first gigs in and around Gloucester, the Viking youth club becoming the main place of rehearsals and Tracy's night club was the first venue that Demob played in 1978, and became the local night club hangout for all the band and punks at that time. Elcock had previous experience on guitar as a member of a church band.[1] Demob's first big break came in the summer of 1979 when they fooled the authorities into letting them have a place in the Gloucester annual carnival parade. The ever increasing support for the band resulted in a mass riot between the punks and the bikers and, ultimately, the suspension of the carnival.[1] The riot made national press and attracted the interest of the local record label, Round Ear Records.[1][2] In 1980, Howes was sacked from the band, and Kanonik was imprisoned for three months, leaving the band without a singer.[1] The band had just recruited Mark "Miff" Smith to replace Rush, and he took over the role of singer, with Paul "Fatty" Price also replacing Wakefield on bass.[1] Smith soon become an integral part, arranging and organizing gigs. With the line-up now comprising Mark Smith (vocals), Terry Elcock (guitar), Paul Price & Barry Philips (bass guitar), and Johnny Melfah (drums), the band worked on their first recordings. "Anti-Police" was Demob's first release on the independent Round Ear Records, the record supported by the late John Peel, and journalist Garry Bushell. The record spent over two months in the UK Indie Chart, peaking at number 34.[1] On the back of the success of "Anti-Police", Demob supported many acts around the punk circuit at this time, including U2, UK Subs, The Angelic Upstarts, Discharge and The Beat.[1] Most performances ended with a police presence and inevitable violence with their notorious hardcore followers, the Demob Riot Squad.[1] The band's mult-racial line-up sometimes attracted hostility from Nazi skinheads who attended their gigs, and the band would play several concerts in aid of the Anti-Nazi League.[1] A second single, "No Room For You" quickly followed to add to the success, but unfortunately, like so many punk acts of the era, musical differences soon developed amongst the line up and Demob split to pursue other musical avenues in 1983 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.