13
Mar

Continuing then with the Indietracks bands that are unknown to me. We added to the list of bands to see Owls of Now and Common or Garden. Hopefully after these 5 we can add some more?

Kidsmoke: when the guitar started chiming on their latest song, March 2018’s “Passenger” I immediately thought I was going to like them. And that was the case indeed. The band is formed by Lance, James, Sophie & Ash and they hail from Wrexham. This is good stuff. Happy to add a new band to the list of bands to check out!

Current Affairs: Joan, Josh, Sebastian and Andrew form this Glasgow based band who released a 7″ last year on Brogues label Not Unloved! I didn’t notice he had put this record out. Knowing Brogues, who has great taste, it is no surprise he put this out. It is good, maybe not as indiepoppy as I like my music and a bit more punk, post-punky, but it is enjoyable. I would be curious to see them live.

Songs for Walter: I would guess this Manchester band will play on the train or the church stage. I am listening to their latest album “An Endless Summer Daze” and it is a folk record, acoustic and sweet. It is all right, not my indiepop style it is true, but could be enjoyable as there are nice melodies in his music.

Athabaska: I only found a song on Bandcamp by this London band. It is called “Muddy Moons” and it is from this quick review of bands the one that I haven’t liked so far. So moving on.

Junk Whale: now a band from Oxford. I am listening to “The Captain” and I feel this will be the 2nd band I won’t like today. Oh well. The guitar is way too rocky for my taste. And the vocals too.

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I have to say I’m quite ignorant about the band Gameface. It seems it was pretty popular. Or at least there are many websites mentioning it. One of their band members was in No Such Thing back in the late 80s, so that’s what I’ve been mostly stumbling upon through Google. You see, I heard this song “Marching” on Youtube and thought it was pretty good. I started doing my investigation and well, it now makes sense why the high price on Discogs for the 7″ No Such Thing released in 1988. It is because Gameface fans will be interested in it. Right?

From what I read, Gameface was a hardcore, popcore, band. No Such Thing doesn’t sound like that. The two songs on the 7″ are very 80s sounding. “Not a Word”, the A side, is a bit rockier, more new wave. I’ve read of people likening it to U2. Maybe. The B side, “Marching”, is jangly pop tune. Guitars chiming. People say this one has been influenced by R.E.M. Perhaps?

The 7″ was released in 1988 on the Strategically Placed Raindrops (NST-2501) label. It is the only record listed under this label on Discogs. It might be a self-release? We do know that both songs were recorded at South Coast Studios. This recording studio is based in Santa Ana, California. Oh! I did mention this is an American band? Maybe not. I’m writing as I research this time.

We know thanks to the sleeve who the band members were. Scott Joslyn played bass, John Slick the drums, Michael Bains the guitar and Jeff Caudill sang. The A side was written by Caudill and Bains while the B side is just credited to Bains. The B side has addictional vocals by someone called Laurie. We know the sleeve, with that fanzine style, was created by someone called Jeffrey and that the producer for the songs was Jim Dotson. Oh! Jeff Caudill is the famous member that went to be on Gameface (and also onto bands like Ice, Jeff Caudill & the Goodtimes Band, March, Your Favorite Trainwreck).

The sleeve also gives us an address. Costa Mesa in California. Was that where they were based?

Costa Mesa is a city in Orange County, California. Since its incorporation in 1953, the city has grown from a semi-rural farming community of 16,840 to a primarily suburban and edge city with an economy based on retail, commerce, and light manufacturing. The population was 109,960 at the 2010 United States Census.

Orange County. I see many mentions to this area on interviews to Jeff Caudill. On an interview on the website No Echo he mentions that the first band he was involved with was No Such Thing. He also mentions that two of the band members were older than him. Here he also mentions the band that came after No Such Thing, it was called Ourselves and they released a tape demo.

Sadly, as it is the cases of many of these bands that released the one 7″ in the 80s the information is scarce. The great Wilfully Obscure blog has dedicated them a post where we learn that the band was active between 1986 and 1988. That they were named after an Agent Orange song and played everything from Social Distortion to The Plimsouls. Most importantly we know that the band recorded about a dozen original songs but they only released two. I would love to hear to all of those other recordings someday!

Not much information, but perhaps some Californian friends remember them? I’d be curious to find out more. Who remembers them?!

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Listen
No Such Thing – Marching