The Flys | |
---|---|
Origin | Coventry, England |
Genres | Punk rock |
Years active | 1976 (1976)–1980 |
Labels | EMI,Parlophone |
Past members | Dave Freeman Joe Hughes Neil O'Connor Pete King Graham Deakin Lyn Dobson |
The Flys were a Britishpunk rock band that originally formed in 1976 inCoventry, England. After the self-release of their initial EP,Bunch of Fives, they were signed byEMI Records. With EMI they released the albumsWaikiki Beach Refugees andOwn. In 1980 they changed labels toParlophone but soon disbanded.
Flys evolved from a band fromCoventry, England named Midnight Circus. Midnight Circus was composed ofDave Freeman (guitar,vocals),Joe Hughes (bass), Neil O'Connor (vocals, guitar,keyboard),[1] and "a string of unnamed drummers".[2] In 1976 their manager's brother,Pete King, joined in ondrums and Flys were born.[2]
Their career began by regularlyopening for the Englishpunk band theBuzzcocks.[2] In late 1977, with Lyn Dobson onsaxophone, they self-released theEP[2]Bunch of Five with the tracks "Saturday Sunrise", "Love and a Molotov Cocktail", "Can I Crash Here?", "Me and My Buddies", and "Just For Your Sex".[1] The EP, particularly "Love and a Molotov Cocktail", caught the attentionEMI Records, a label that rejected Midnight Circus,[3] who signed them to a deal.[2]
Their initial EMI release came on 20 January 1978, the EPLove and a Molotov Cocktail, which was a release of two of the tracks fromBunch of Five; "Love and a Molotov Cocktail", "Can I Crash Here?", and a new track "Civilisation".[1][4] "Love and a Molotov Cocktail" garnered some positive reviews, "the first undisputed classic45 of 1978".[2] In April they released the single "Fun City" with another new track, "E.C.4.", as itsb side.[1]
The release of their firstLP,Waikiki Beach Refugees, came on 17 October 1978.[5] It contained a rerecording of "Fun City", the future single "Beverley",[1] and the title track "Waikiki Beach Refugees" which EMI had released as a taster single on yellow vinyl in September.[5]
The group spent early 1979 sharing the bills with such acts asThe Psychedelic Furs,[6] thePretenders,[7] andBlack Slate.[7] It was around this time that Pete King, who later joinedAfter the Fire, left the band and was replaced on drums byGraham Deakin.[1][2][8] In April EMI released acompilation of early punk 45s calledThe Rare Stuff that contained the three tracks from the EPLove and a Molotov Cocktail.[9]
Their second LP,Own, was released on 11 October 1979 and contained 14 new tracks[8] and was their last release on EMI.[1] Like their debut album and all their singles it did not chart in the UK.[2][10] The band moved toParlophone Records and released an EP,Four from the Square which included two songs from the last album, and a final single, "What Will Mother Say?", before disbanding.[1]
In the wake of the departure of Neil O'Connor, who joined his sisterHazel's band, the Flys disbanded in 1980.[1][2] In 1990See for Miles Records released the compilation album,Love and a Molotov Cocktail, that Q Magazine described as "angry, angsty, and splenetic guitar tunes with power chords".[1][11] In 2001Waikiki Beach Refugees was reissued with eight bonus tracks covering their brief history.[12] Also in 1991, "Love and a Molotov Cocktail" was covered by the German bandDie Toten Hosen on their albumLearning English, Lesson One.[13] Joe Hughes and David Freeman later worked together again in the short-lived 1980snew wave bandThe Lover Speaks.[14]
Although they were rooted in the 1970s British punk scene and influenced byThe Damned and the Buzzcocks their music did not always fit that mold displaying considerable melody.[2]Power pop,[15] and 'half-punk, half pop'[2] is closer to the style of their actual playing.