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The Wonder Stuff

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The Wonder Stuff are a Britishalternative rockband. Originally based inStourbridge in theWest Midlands, England,[1] the band's first lineup released four albums and nearly 20 singles and EPs, enjoying considerable chart and live success in the UK.[2] The band have continued to tour and record since 2000.

The Wonder Stuff
The Wonder Stuff performing in 2015
The Wonder Stuff performing in 2015
Background information
OriginStourbridge,West Midlands, England
GenresAlternative rock
Years active1986–1994, 2000–present
LabelsPolydor
MembersMiles Hunt
Mark Thwaite
Erica Nockalls
Pete Howard
Malc Treece
Tim Sewell
Past membersRob "The Bass Thing" Jones
Martin Gilks
Paul Clifford
Martin Bell
Stuart Quinell
Andres Karu
Fuzz Townshend
Stevie Wyatt
Dan Donnelly
Tony Arthy
Mark McCarthy
Websitewww.thewonderstuff.co.uk

Largely the vehicle for the songwriting ofMiles Hunt, the band split up with a farewell performance as headliners of the1994 Phoenix Festival,[3] but reformed in 2000 and have toured and recorded since then, with Hunt the anchor member of all line-ups.

Known for their catchy songs and Hunt's sharp lyrics, the band's sound evolved from guitar pop to include sampling and elements of folk and country. The band - and Hunt in particular — were favourites of the UK music press,[4] and were often associated with fellowBlack Country actsNed's Atomic Dustbin andPop Will Eat Itself, with whom they have toured throughout their careers.

The band scored one UK number 1 single, their release of "Dizzy" with comedianVic Reeves, 17 top-20 single hits, and three top-10 albums in the UK.[5] The band also toured internationally, and achieved some success in the United States, where they had six songs on the Billboard Alternative Songs Chart.[6]

History

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Origins andThe Eight Legged Groove Machine (1986–1989)

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The original line-up ofMiles Hunt (whose uncle Bill Hunt was keyboard player withELO andWizzard) on vocals and guitar; Malcolm Treece on guitar and vocals; bassistRob "The Bass Thing" Jones (died July 1993); andMartin Gilks (died April 2006) on drums grew from Hunt and Treece's collaboration with future members ofPop Will Eat Itself in a band called From Eden that featured Hunt ondrums.

The Wonder Stuff were formed on 19 March 1986 (their name reportedly came from a remark made about a very young Hunt by John Lennon[7]) and in September that year recorded a self-financed debutEP,A Wonderful Day. After finding management with Birmingham promoter Les Johnson[8] and signing withPolydor Records for £80,000 in 1987, the group released a series of singles including "Unbearable", "Give Give Give, Me More More More", "A Wish Away" and "It's Yer Money I'm After Baby" (their firstTop 40 entry) that featured on their debutalbumThe Eight Legged Groove Machine, which was released in August 1988 (UK No. 18).[9] This preceded a first headlining nineteen-date national tour, 'Groovers on Manoeuvres'.

A non-album single, "Who Wants to Be the Disco King?" was released in March 1989 and was followed by UK, European, and United States tours and appearances at theReading andGlastonburyfestivals.

Melody Maker madeThe Eight Legged Groove Machine one of their albums of the year for 1988, judging it, "A rollicking debut from the only band with enough wit, energy, charisma and acumen to cross over from loutishgrebo into raffish pop."[10]

Hup (1989–1990)

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In September 1989, "Don't Let Me Down, Gently", with its slick, American-shot video, became the Wonder Stuff's first Top-20 hit, heralding the release of second album,Hup, in October (UK No. 5).[9] The album saw the introduction of new band member, Martin Bell, a multi-instrumentalist who contributedviolin andbanjo,[9] most notably on "Golden Green" (the second single from the album), "Unfaithful" and "Cartoon Boyfriend". Several shows during the band's 1989 tour featured fellow Black Country actsNed's Atomic Dustbin and The Sandkings as opening acts.

Jones left the band in December 1989, moving to theUnited States.[9]

A single, "Circlesquare", was released shortly afterwards, just before Paul Clifford replaced Jones on thebass in the Spring of 1990.[9] This led to a string of live outings for the renewed line-up in mid-1990.

With only one single release in 1990 and no album yet ready, the band put outEleven Appalling Promos, a collection of video promos, with home video footage showing Hunt, Treece and Gilks giving their (usually critical) commentary between each song. In December the group celebrated theirBrit Award nomination by turning down an invitation to the awards show atWembley Arena, to play at Minsthorpe High School inSouth Elmsall in response to a fan's letter: a cover version of John Lennon's "Gimme Some Truth", recorded at the show, was included on the "Caught in My Shadow" single.

Never Loved Elvis and chart success (1990–1992)

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Recording for a third album was started in late 1990 and completed early the following year. The first single from the new album was "The Size of a Cow". Released in March 1991 it became the band's first Top-10 hit, reaching No. 5, (and being nominated for a Brit Award for its video). It was swiftly followed by "Caught in My Shadow" (UK No. 18) in May, before the release of the albumNever Loved Elvis in May 1991 (UK No. 3).[9]

After the album release, the band performed a first headlining stadium show atWalsall'sBescot Stadium, attracting 18,000 fans, before embarking on a world tour taking in the UK, Europe and the US. For the tour, the band was augmented by keyboardist Peter Whittaker.

Just after the third single from the album, "Sleep Alone" in September, the group scored a commercial success when they coveredTommy Roe's "Dizzy" withVic Reeves in 1991, reaching the top of the UK Singles Chart for two weeks in November.[9] The band carried on touring into 1992. They released the single "Welcome to the Cheap Seats" (UK No. 8) in February, which was also the title of their video rockumentary released that Spring after eighteen months of filming on the road with the band.

Touring continued through the latter part of the year, with more dates in the United States (both as headliners and supportingSiouxsie and the Banshees) backed by an appearance onLate Night with David Letterman, performing "Welcome to the Cheap Seats". A further UK tour was complemented with a headlining slot at the 1992Reading Festival.[11]

Construction for the Modern Idiot (1993–1994)

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After previewing their new material at a few European summer festivals, a new single "On the Ropes" (UK No. 10) was released in September 1993 followed by the albumConstruction for the Modern Idiot in October 1993 (UK No. 4).[9] Another single "Full of Life (Happy Now)" came out just before Christmas. The band toured Europe before going to the United States in February 1994. A third single "Hot Love Now" (UK No. 19) was released in time for the UK tour in March and, by the time the tour - called 'Idiot Manoeuvres' - came to an end, it was the longest in the band's history with seventy eight dates since the album's release.

Band split and solo projects (1994–2000)

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A planned tour of the Far East and Australia in May was cancelled. The band made no public announcement at that time but a split was announced in June in a fanclub newsletter.

The Wonder Stuff performed the final contracted show on 15 July 1994 as headliners at thePhoenix Festival near Stratford-on-Avon in front of an audience of 30,000. In September, an 18-song compilationIf The Beatles Had Read Hunter...The Singles (UK No. 8), a re-issue of the "Unbearable" single (UK No. 16), and a video of their farewell performance from July were released. TheLive in Manchester album (recorded in December 1991) was released in July 1995.[9]

During the hiatus between 1994 and 2000, Hunt was involved in several projects. He hostedMTV Europe's120 Minutes show. He then put together another band, Vent 414, with ex-Senseless Things bassist Morgan Nicholls and laterClash,Eat and Wonder Stuff drummer Peter Howard. They released a self-titled debut album in October 1996, but were soon dropped by Polydor prior to the release of the second album.[12] Hunt started to tour as a solo artist, travelling to the US with Malc Treece, and releasing two albums:Miles Across America, an album of new material, Wonder Stuff tracks and Vent 414 material all reworked for the acoustic guitar, and a live acoustic albumBy the Time I Got to Jersey (1998). A full studio album,Hairy on the Inside (again featuring Treece and another fellow Wonder Stuff member Martin Bell) was released in April 1999, followed byThe Miles Hunt Club in April 2002.[13]

Meanwhile, Treece, Clifford and Gilks formed We Know Where You Live (originally titled WeKnowWhereYouLive), with Ange Dolittle from Eat.[9] They gigged extensively throughout 1995 and 1996 and released two EPs before splitting.

Reformation andEscape from Rubbish Island (2000–2005)

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The Wonder Stuff atGuilfest 2011

Hunt, Treece, Gilks, Bell and Whittaker, together with new bassist Stuart Quinell, reformed for a one-off concert at London'sForum in December 2000. This soon became five sold-out nights, preceded by two nights of shows at JB's in Dudley (the site of their debut gig). The group's previous four studio albums were reissued with bonus tracks, and a compilation of b-sides, demos and live tracks,Love Bites & Bruises was released in November.

More live performances continued into 2001 with the release of a live albumCursed with Insincerity in June, and more concerts came in 2002. A DVD release,Construction for the Modern Vidiot, in May 2003 featured highlights from the 2000 to 2002 shows, and then a further tour was announced in December 2003.

In early 2004, Hunt was informed that Gilks and Bell would no longer work with him, and thus The Wonder Stuff (in the eyes of Gilks and Bell) were defunct. As a result, Quinell and Whittaker were informed the band had split, and Hunt began work on a new record with Mark McCarthy (ex-Radical Dance Faction) and Luke Johnson (ex-Amen and son of one-time Wonder Stuff manager, Les Johnson). Sessions for this new solo record were later joined by Malc Treece. The result of this was The Wonder Stuff's first new album for over a decade,Escape from Rubbish Island, which was released in September 2004 with "Better Get Ready for a Fist Fight" and the title track becoming singles. Andres Karu (who had previously worked with Miles as part of The Miles Hunt Club) replaced Luke Johnson on drums. The band toured the UK and US in 2004 and 2005, and were joined by violinistErica Nockalls in March 2005.

Suspended by Stars and anniversary tours (2006–2011)

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This line-up continued into 2006 for the release of their new albumSuspended by Stars in March and the single "Blah Blah La Di Dah" available as a download. The band toured in March 2006 to support the record and in conjunction with their twentieth anniversary.

In April 2006, original Wonder Stuff drummer Martin Gilks was killed in a motorcycle accident in London.[14] An album of We Know Where You Live's demo recordings and live tracks was released in December 2006, with all profits being donated to a charitable concern at the request of Gilk's parents.[15] In 2006, Miles Hunt's acoustic shows were recorded for a live album, titledInterloper and released in October 2006. The Wonder Stuff also began mixing a live record documenting the 2006 concerts and played several UK outdoor shows. The band finished the year by touring the UK again, performing their final show of the year on 8 December at theShepherd's Bush Empire.

Following this, the band went on hiatus due to Treece starting a family.[16] Hunt released the solo albumNot an Exit in 2007, which featured Nockalls and Karu; Hunt toured the UK twice, and the US later in the year.[17][18][19] Before recording the album, he expected the band to be working on their own album at some point during the year.[20]

In 2008, the Wonder Stuff entered into a deal with theCarling Academy Group where the band would play their first two studio albums,The Eight Legged Groove Machine andHup, in full over the course of several shows. Hunt and Treece were confident about the prospect, while the other members of the band who didn't play on either album, had a large workload ahead of them.[21] Hunt came up with the idea of having the band re-recording both albums, which were later released asThe Eight Legged Groove Machine: 20th Anniversary Edition (2008) andHup: 21st Anniversary Edition (2010).[21][22][23] In between the two releases, Hunt and Nockalls released the albumCatching More Than We Miss in early 2009.[21]

Karu left the band in late 2010 to focus on being a cameraman; he was forced to turn down several opportunities in the US while touring the UK with the band. As Hunt lived in South Shropshire, he would often seeFuzz Townshend ofPop Will Eat Itself at local pubs. Hunt asked him if he would drum for the Wonder Stuff, which he agreed to. In 2011, the band toured the UK to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their third studio albumNever Loved Elvis (1991). Prior to the shows taking place, Treece left the band after an argument between himself and Hunt. Hunt's main concern with Treece was due to him making zero effort to write potential new song ideas; Jerry DeBorg ofJesus Jones filled in his position.[21]

Oh No It's... The Wonder Stuff toBetter Being Lucky (2012–present)

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Hunt and Townshend both had home studios, the former's centred around programming and rock instruments, while the latter's was focussed on recording drums. The pair planned to record drums at Townshend, and record other instruments and vocals at Hunt's. With a lack of new material at their disposal, the pair opted to do acovers album of artists from theMidlands, dubbedFrom the Midlands with Love.[21][24] The cover recordings were released in three instalments between April and November 2012.[25][26][27] The project gave Hunt and Townshend a lot of experience when it came to recording at home; Hunt was adamant about producing the band's next album.[21]Oh No It's... The Wonder Stuff was recorded at The Wain House and The Beeches in South Shropshire, with Hunt acting as producer.[24] The band also toured the UK in April 2013, summer shows, and a Sleigh the UK set of shows in December 2013.

In December 2013 the band's track "A Wish Away" was used in a TV commercial for the holiday companyHoseasons.[28]

Following a successful Australian tour in early 2014, drummer Fuzz Townshend left the group to concentrate on his work withThe Beat.[29] In May 2014 the band announced a new line-up with Hunt, Nockalls and McCarthy being joined byDan Donnelly on guitar and Tony Arthy on drums, with Arthy having parted company with Jesus Jones.[30] Arthy had previously worked with Hunt in an earlier, but unreleased incarnation of The Miles Hunt Club in 2001.

In March 2016, a PledgeMusic-funded album,30 Goes Around the Sun, was released to celebrate 30 years since the band's very first rehearsal in the heart of The Black Country. This coincided with a UK tour during March and April. This album became their first studio release to enter the Top 40 since 1994.

In 2019, the band announced a new lineup, with founder member Malc Treece returning on guitar replacing Donnelly,Pete Howard ofThe Clash replacing Arthy on drums, and formerThe Mission guitaristMark Thwaite replacing McCarthy on bass.[31] After a short tour at the start of the year, the group announced they would be releasing a new albumBetter Being Lucky towards the end of 2019, featuring several songs co-written by Thwaite on guitar, which would be followed by a tour where the group would playThe Eight Legged Groove Machine andHup albums in full alongside other tracks from their back catalogue and the new album. Thwaite moved to guitar on the live shows promoting the new album with Tim Sewell taking over bass duties.

Timeline

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Discography

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Videos and DVDs

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  • Eleven Appalling Promos (1990)
  • Welcome to the Cheap Seats (1992)
  • Greatest Hits: Finally Live (1994)
  • Construction for the Modern Vidiot (2003)
  • Hup Live (2010)
  • Never Loved Elvis Live (2012)
  • Oh Yeah, It's the Wonder Stuff (2014)

References

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  1. ^Stanley, Rebecca."The Wonder Stuff and Ned's Atomic Dustbin bringing double-headline tour to Birmingham".Expressandstar.com. Retrieved13 March 2019.
  2. ^"The Wonder Stuff".Discogs. Retrieved13 March 2019.
  3. ^"POP / The last Hunt ball: The Wonder Stuff, Phoenix Festival".The Independent. 21 July 1994.Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved13 March 2019.
  4. ^Thornton, Tim."Album Review: Oh No It's... The Wonder Stuff".Sabotage Times. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved13 March 2019.
  5. ^Savage, Wayne."The Wonder Stuff's Miles Hunt played blues in a tree while near naked Reeves and Mortimer smoked fags".East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved13 March 2019.
  6. ^"The Wonder Stuff Chart History".Billboard. Retrieved14 March 2019.
  7. ^"Martin Gilks".The Independent. 6 April 2006.Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved14 March 2019.
  8. ^"MILES HUNT > THE WONDER STUFF".Fused Magazine. 13 December 2014. Retrieved13 March 2019.
  9. ^abcdefghijStrong, Martin C. (2000).The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. pp. 1083–1084.ISBN 1-84195-017-3.
  10. ^Melody Maker, 24-31 Dec 1988 p57
  11. ^"Reading 1992".Reading Festival. Retrieved14 March 2019.
  12. ^"Vent 414".Discogs. Retrieved14 March 2019.
  13. ^"Miles Hunt".Discogs. Retrieved14 March 2019.
  14. ^"Wonder Stuff drummer dies at 41".BBC News. 4 April 2006. Retrieved10 June 2020.
  15. ^"shop".Room 512 : the unofficial Wonderstuff fansite. Retrieved10 June 2020.
  16. ^"The Wonder Stuff Return To Live Arena".Uncut. 26 March 2008. Archived fromthe original on 29 January 2021. Retrieved14 February 2021.
  17. ^Not an Exit (sleeve). Miles Hunt with Erica Nockalls and Andres Karu. IRL. 2007. IRL033.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  18. ^"Live Dates". The Wonder Stuff. Archived fromthe original on 29 April 2007. Retrieved14 February 2021.
  19. ^"Live Dates". The Wonder Stuff. Archived fromthe original on 13 August 2007. Retrieved14 February 2021.
  20. ^"Update". The Wonder Stuff. 29 May 2006. Archived fromthe original on 2 May 2007. Retrieved14 February 2021.
  21. ^abcdefEtheridge, Loz (30 November 2016)."A Bunch Of Fives: a retrospective with The Wonder Stuff's Miles Hunt - Part Three, From The Midlands With Love".God Is in the TV. Retrieved24 January 2021.
  22. ^The Eight Legged Groove Machine: 20th Anniversary Edition (sleeve). The Wonder Stuff. Self-released. 2008. TWS1.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  23. ^Hup: 21st Anniversary Edition (sleeve). The Wonder Stuff. IRL. 2010. TWS2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  24. ^abOh No It's... The Wonder Stuff (booklet). The Wonder Stuff. IRL. 2012. IRL072/IRL072a.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  25. ^"From the Midlands with Love - Single by The Wonder Stuff". iTunes. Archived fromthe original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved13 February 2021.
  26. ^"From the Midlands with Love 2 - Single by The Wonder Stuff". iTunes. Archived fromthe original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved13 February 2021.
  27. ^"From the Midlands with Love 3 - Single by The Wonder Stuff". iTunes. Archived fromthe original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved13 February 2021.
  28. ^"Manchester Advertising Agency: Hoseasons 'Wish You Were Here' 30 second TV Commercial".YouTube.Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  29. ^"Fuzz Townshend announces he's leaving The Wonder Stuff". facebook.com. 10 March 2014. Archived fromthe original on 26 February 2022. Retrieved16 June 2014.
  30. ^"Drummer Tony Arthy Quits Jesus Jones". mydrumlessons.co.uk. 3 January 2014. Retrieved16 June 2014.
  31. ^"TWS 2019 Announcement".The Wonder Stuff. 6 February 2019. Retrieved11 February 2019.

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