Description
New Model Army
“New Model Army is a remarkable band – as hungry and focused as ever, with a continually regenerating audience and insatiable creative ambition…”
New Model Army played their first gig in Bradford on October 23rd 1980, their music drawing on a wide collection of influences and fuelled by their passions for Punk Rock and Northern Soul. In 1982 and undeterred by the indifference of the Music Business, NMA began to perform more and more around the country and frequently featured as opening act on a series of all-day concerts at the London Lyceum which heralded many of the “Post-Punk” bands. A first small-label independent single “Bittersweet” was released in the summer of 1983, followed by “Great Expectations” on Abstract Records that autumn, both played frequently on late night radio by John Peel. Suddenly the band had a “Following”, people who would travel to every concert around the country to see them.
Early in 1984, the producer of “The Tube”, the most important live music show on TV, had seen NMA in concert and invited them to fill the ‘unknown’ slot on the programme. Having originally asked the band to perform their provocative anti-anthem, “Vengeance”, the TV Company suddenly got cold feet about the song’s lyrics minutes before broadcast and asked the band to change songs. It made no difference. Somehow twenty to thirty followers had managed to get into the TV studio and when NMA began with “Christian Militia” the crowd went wild and an electric atmosphere was transmitted around the country. Suddenly NMA were underground news. Their first mini-album, “Vengeance” knocked “The Smiths” from the top of the Independent Charts and the major record companies, who had rejected them less than two years earlier, were now begging to sign the band.
By 1987 the band played high profile gigs including Reading Festival, a gig with David Bowie in front of the Reichstag in Berlin, and a show-stopping performance at the Bizarre Festival at Lorelei in Germany. From time to time, the band added their friend Ricky Warwick as a second guitarist and also enlisted Mark Feltham, the legendary harmonica player who had graced “The Ghost Of Cain” and “Hex” to join them.