27
Apr

Not sure if I should continue reviewing bands that played the last Wales Goes Pop. So far I’ve checked 6 bands and none of them were indiepop! What do you think? Or suggest? Is it a good exercise? Or perhaps I’m wasting my time? Maybe it would be better if someone can point me out the bands that are worth checking out? That way I can only focus on new indiepop finds. That makes more sense for the blog. This is an indiepop blog afterall.

So, where do we start?

The Catherines: a few days ago Heiko Schneider from The Catherines shared with me this wonderful track called “Sorry, But Your Suicide Note is Really Funny”. It is gorgeous, even including female backing vocals by Sandra Ost. It sounds like a good indiepop song should sound. Chiming, jangly, catchy and with some terrific lyrics too. I hope there is a proper The Catherines release in the near future, one that is not a tape of course!

Kiwis: what is this treat? Ines Martinez de Albornoz, Marta Millet, Jordi Garrigós and Marc Andreu sing in their native catalan on a self-titled tape that is limited to 101 copies. It is REALLY good. If only it wasn’t a tape. Fun indiepop, filled with hooks, all around the 5 songs from the tape the trustworthy label Snap Clap Club is releasing on May 1st. The songs on the cassette are “I Ets Tu”, “El Camino”, “Mapes Infinits”, “Volcán” and “El Far”. Very recommendable.

Jaromil Sabor: the Paris, France, label Howlin Banana Records are releasing a 12″ vinyl album titled “Second Science” on August 13th. Still a long way. But you can stream all songs on the Bandcamp. They hail from Bordeaux and have had a few releases in the past, so not that new though they are brand new for me. First time I’m listening to them. Sounds good mind you, Jaromil Sabor are totally worth giving a chance!

Miti Miti’s: “Monos en la Costa” is the name of the EP that is available to stream from this lofi twee band from Chile. Don’t know much about it, aside that it is put together by a label called Gemelo Parásito Records. It sounds fragile and fun, like many bedroom bands from the early 2000s. The songs that appear on this digital only release are “Intro”, “M&M’s”, “Bikini Kill”, “Caracoquesos”, “Pizza Pizza” and “Galapaguitos”.

Ping Pong Club: only two songs on their Bandcamp. One being a remix of the other one. Yes. I am left looking for more. This is the first single by this electronic/indiepop band from Bandung, Indonesia. Formed by Muhammad Rizky and Hariz Lasa, they have uploaded “Venetian Blinds” and “Venetian Blinds (The Countless Kisses Remix)” and I’m on repeat. It is very good, dreamy and all. I feel it has been an interesting batch of finds this time around!!

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I’ve been having a bit of a 90s period at home. Listening to UK bands, especially from the second half, of that decade. It is true, that in general, I would say I’m not that as familiar with them as I am with the 80s bands or the ones from the 2000s. It is a time period that hasn’t been documented much as far as I know. Britpop reigned supreme and the rest, the smaller pop bands, were kind of put on a side, and forgotten by now. That’s why I’m writing this post, and preparing a 2nd one, about bands from this era. Maybe I’ll write a third too. Or a fourth. I don’t know, my posts depend a lot on my mood on the particular day that I’m writing them. And today it is kind of festive, for no special reason.

I always think of Disco Pistol as a festive, a good party band. Sure, I won’t be DJing their songs because probably not many are familiar with them and as you know, crowds like tunes they know for them to dance. It might have been different in England in the late 90s. I’ve seen videos of Disco Pistol live and people were dancing and having lots of fun. Time changes. Now which indiepop band would people dance? I mean, which contemporary one? Hard to think of one!

I discovered Disco Pistol more than a decade ago, on Soulseek. As many stories I’ve told on the blog, this one starts also on the Twee Folks room, me downloading from some user whose name was lenganlystance or something like that. I can’t remember exactly. The thing was that he had a lot of obscure 7″s in his folders, but all of them were zipped. You couldn’t see which songs were in them. There was no Discogs, so you didn’t know the tracklist until you have downloaded them. It was always a good surprise! I suppose they were his own rips.

I downloaded Disco Pistol’s “Say Something / Solid Gold Radio” 7″. At first it didn’t sound like the jangly indiepop I was used to. This was a bit punkier, but at the same time catchy and fun. I really enjoyed it. But that was that. Only this year, as I was saying I’m having this 90s period, I have returned to them, especially after buying the CD single “Saturday Everyday” a couple of weeks ago on the web. And thought, who were they? Did they release anything else?

It doesn’t seem so, aside from some compilations. Their first record was the aforementioned 7″, “Say Something”, that was released by Org Records (Organ036). This label catalog is unknown to me, is there any pop band in here? I wonder. It came out in three different versions, clear with glitter, transparent marble blue and regular blue. The A side was “Say Something” and the AA side was “Solid God Radio. The producer for the record was Matt Dietrich and Zeus B. Held. Both Germans who used to work in the UK. Mathias had been in a band called Zeus & the Spiritual Traders and Zeus had been in Birth Control, Dream Control and the Gina X Performance among others.

Their 2nd release was the “Saturday Everyday” CD single released by Zerox Records (ZERO002CD) in 1997. There were three songs included in this CD, “Saturday Everyday”, “Spend, Spend, Spend” and “Supersexy Revolutionary”. I have this CD single. We know that these songs were recorded at Tempo Studios and the art for the CD was created by Peter Theobalds.

The last song from that CD single, “Supersexy Revolutionary”, was to appear on two compilations in 1997. The first was on the “And the Rest is History…” CD and LP comp that was released by Zerox Records (ZERO 001) where some important bands from the period appear like Helen Love or Kenickie. And the second one was on “Snakebite City Six” released by Bluefire Records (BLU09). These “Snakebite City” series of compilations appeared in the nineties, first as LPs and later as CDs. At least there were up to eleven volumes! On the volume Disco Pistol appears we see familiar faces like Girlfrendo or Pullover who I’m looking to write my next post about.

Lastly, in 1999, the band’s song “Solid Gold Radio” appeared on the CD compilation “Organ Radio: 5 Suzie Says: Chew on This”, released by Org Records (ORG051CD). Who do I know on this compilation aside from Disco Pistol? Well the very fine German band Pop Tarts are here too. And Mogul, who released a 7″ on Elefant during those years.

On Youtube happily there’s a trove of videos of the band playing live. It indeed makes me happy to find them all! And thanks to these videos I notice the band played Reading Festival in 1998. That’s quite big isn’t it? From that festival check out “Tiger “, “Say Something“, “Weekenders” (where they say they are pop! and will be famous and in Top of the Pops), “Naked“,  “TV Show“, “19” and “Saturday Everyday“. This same user has uploaded some songs from another gig, one at King’s Cross’ Water Rats dating from December 4th, 1997. There is “Say Something” and “Solid Gold” from that gig. And that’s not all, from the Monarch in Chalk Farm, April 14th, 1997, there is “New Miss World“, and from Reading’s Alleycats venue, dating April 5th 1997, we see the band putting on a racket with “Supersexy Revolutionary“.

From the Spearmint band’s website I notice they played with Disco Pistol also the previous day of those videos, on December 3rd of 1997.

Two more videos are found on another user. Both from a live gig at The Garage on December 27th, 1997. There’s “Solid Gold Radio” and “Spend, Spend, Spend“.

But what do we know exactly about the band? Wikipedia actually has an entry about them: They were active in the late 90s and they formed in 1996. They consisted of lead vocalist Mira Manga, lead guitarist Kevin Baxter, keyboard player Hyper Helen, bass player Craig Page and drummer Marky Sparky. They were part of the “Glitter Scene” that was kind of put together by Kevin Wilde and Hifi. They both ran the Club Skinny and it is there were Mira Manga was spotted and others replied to ads in the NME. They were notorious in that “Glitter Scene”, they used to arrive to stage adorned in tiaras, fairy wings and swathes of glitter. They didn’t only play Reading Festival in 1998, but also in 1997. At some point the band signed to Mercury Records and they were rebranded and renamed as  the pop group Sweet 3. Under that name they released just one single, “Love Thang“. It didn’t do well. Afterwards Mira Manga played in the bands Rolemodels, The Duloks and briefly, in 2013, as backing vocalist for Menswear. 

I found a Facebook page. I’m surprised to see only 19 people have liked the page. This is really odd. The first post mentions that Mira Manga guests on a compilation LP called “The Self Preservation Society”. Later there is an NME review by Jim Wirth which is quite fun to read:
A solitary panda car packed with merry men in black is parked in the middle of the road observing Disco Pistol as they pose for their photo shoot. If being a young, vibrant five-piece making ulta-melodic pop records were a crime, the filth would have had the cuffs out by now. It isn’t – yet.
Half an hour later, we are encamped in the basement of a certain major fast food restaurant on London’s Oxford Street, being berated by the mighty Pistol. There’s Mira Manga (vocals and mputh almighty), Kevin Baxter (guitar and serious interjections), Craig Page (bass and general buffoonery), and Hyper Helen (keyboards, air of hunted woodland creature) but not drummer Mark Kelly.
“we can’t have him in interviews because he’s a gangster,” explains Craig.
Eh?
“Put it this way,” adds Manga. “We’re never going to tour Australia.”
Australia’s loss is the rest of the worlds gain. Formed last year in Reading and named after a particularly rubbish childrens toy, Disco Pistol’s dash for greatness has so far yielded two singles, the endearing ‘Supersexy Revolutionary’ and current rabble rouser ‘Say Something’.
“We’re sick of all the apathy that’s going on.” says Manga. “That’s what the single’s about. People sitting indoors with a reefer all day…
however awful life is, if you can do anything, you should get up and do it.”
Like what?
“If you work in an office, put tinsel around your computer,” says Manga.
“If you work in an abattoir, put glitter on the end of your stun gun,” adds Craig.
“We’re all so dragged down by miserable music,” continues Manga. “I love The Verve, but you couldn’t play them before a night out. If we wrote songs about ‘My boyfriend’s left me and i’ve got no mates’ it’s more than likely we’d turn it around to ‘Wahey, that means I can go out and shag lesbians!’. We all have bad days, though.”
“I ran over a rabbit last night” demonstrates Hyper Helen.
Bad days perhaps, but nothing short of brilliant nights onstage. Disco Pistol’s Kaleidoscopic pop is best sampled at one of their notoriously short live shows, where their mash of Blondie, Pulp and Dolly Parton reaches escape velocity. And kids, festooned with eyeliner and glitter stars, naturally go mental.
“At no other gigs do you find people dressing up to see a band like they do at ours,” says Kevin. “No one dresses up to see Oasis.”
“Yes they do,” points out Manga. “They put on an Anorak and smell.”
Disco Pistol’s expectations are suitably high for 1998.
“We’ll be on Top of the Pops,” says Manga matter-of-factly. “Then each of us will Top of the Pops seperatley over a month. The Spice Girls are crumbling; Disco Pistol are ready to step into their shoes.”
Mouthy Pistol, Earnest Pistol, Jokey Pistol and Picked-on-Pistol finish their soft drinks on the night they had their first police escort. Probably the first of many. 

Okay, I posted the whole thing. I don’t usually do that. Then I keep digging around in the Facebook page to find out they played many places. For example at the Camden Palace on Tuesday October 21st 1997. Or at The Garage supporting Salad.

There used to be a Myspace, obviously. But there is not much in there now of course.

Also Org Records website has a bit of a rant about them. Of course, they released the 7″ with them, but in 2003, the label complains about them making the choice of signing to a big label: After all the excitement of the 1997 ORG single, things went very quiet. In total there was two singles – their first Super Sexy Revolutionary (on somewone elses label – can’t remember who released it now) was followed by their Pink see-thru glitter vinyl 7″ “Say Something/Solid Gold Radio” (re-issued in ice cool blue vinyl) – in a Melody Maker interview at the time, Manga, Hyper Helen and the boys stated “We want to be in all four corners of the globe making everybody as happy as we are. The Spice Girls are falling apart and we’re waiting in the wings to take over..” The press told us they were “an explosion of tiaras, glitter, radioactive pink dresses and restless egos. Crawling from the wreckage of North London’s fanzine Underworld unscathed and armed with tunes of sizzling brilliance. Disco Pistol are a five-piece of frightening confidence, formidable ambition and incomparable energy, fronted by the freckle-faced Manga. New single Say Something is a brightly animated splash of teenage kicks, an urgent Teen-C declaration of intent – it sounds like a three-minute giggle, all sugary synths and a cortex-spinning chorus sharper than a shark’s fin” Then they signed a major deal with Mercury Records and changed their name to SWEET 3 – Thanks a lot band – that’s typical, their way of thanking labels like ORG for supporting them when no on else wanted to know. Labels like ORG do all the hard ground work thn the clueless majors want to pretend they’ve discovered something new so they order a repackage and mess it up (and couldn’t care less). The major label tried to pass them off as a new band, destroyed all the possitive history and fan base and in doing so killed the band off. Why are major labels all so clueless (UK ones anyway), why do major labels almost always mess it up? Why do bands go along with them?. Last I heard was that Manga was fronting a raw punk/pop band called Role Models and trying to get back to her roots after the mess up of Sweet 3, Role Model sounded pretty good… that was summer 2001…

I keep looking on the web. A blogger called Kieron Gillen also writes about them but it is just his personal opinion on how much he likes the 7″. Then another good find, a fanzine called Repeat, has a mention of Disco Pistol. Here they also kind of explain this Glitter Scene that until know was a mystery to me: ‘The Glitter Scene’ existed almost solely in the badly-photocopied, glitter-sprinkled pages of fanzines like Abuse Yr Friends, R*E*P*E*A*T and Quirk. More girls, more keyboards, more glamour. Its de facto leaders were Disco Pistol – an average band armed with all the bravura of a hurricane. The glitter scene’s godhead were Kenickie, a band who – having already completed their A-levels – were practically geriatric. In the overlap of these three scenes, in 1997, there was a flurry of seven inches and demos from bands that mostly never released anything else: Agebaby, Charlie’s Angels, Cheetara, Disco, Disco Pistol, Gel, Girlfrendo, Helen Love, Mogul, Period Pains, The Pin-Ups, Pink Kross, Velodrome 2000, VyVyan and Xerox Girls – to name just a few. Disco Pistol got signed and disappeared. Disco Pistol starlet Mira Manga recently re-emerged with a new band, The Duloks, and Kieron Gillen’s Phonogram comic is an unashamed loveletter to 1997. But in 2007 incredibly there are almost no girls playing in indie bands.

The post has grown long! And I have more or less understood the Glitter Scene and can also understand Disco Pistol and what happened to them, why they didn’t release an album and why they disappeared into oblivion. A shame really, they had great songs! These days Mira Manga seems to continue being part of music, being label manager for ECC Records and ECC100 and has been appearing on a YouTube soap called Thamesmeerd. She has also published a book called “Danger! Cosmetics to Go“, which chronicles the company that came before Lush. And has released solo songs, for example “Emotional Brilliance”. Even has her own website.

Now, what about the other members of the band? I can’t find any information about them. Did they continue making music? Were more songs other the ones on the 7″ and CD single recorded by the band? From the live videos on Youtube it is clear they had more songs. Where else did they play? When did they become Sweet 3? And what how did they feel about how that developed. 90s popkids, what else do you all remember about them?

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Listen
Disco Pistol – Supersexy Revolutionary

2 Responses to “:: Disco Pistol”

I was the keys player… I play the accordion and keys for a band these days called the outcast band…
Mira writes and still loves glitter.. Baxter is still playing the band name escapes me but I can ask..
Craig the bass player lives in Australia now…

Helen
May 19th, 2018

Glad to see Disco Pistol get some love, they were ace!

You mentioned Kieron Gillen, he’s actually much more than just a blogger (not that there’s anything wrong with being just a blogger of course!), he’s a very well respected comic book writer. He and Jamie McKelvie’s Phonogram series, is a bit of love letter to the mid to late 90s UK indie scene actually, with copious references to Disco Pistol, Kenickie et al. Well worth checking out!

Crashing Elliptical
June 9th, 2018