Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Content
- Foreword by Suggs
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Tramcar to Frankenstein
- 2 Didn't You Have a Beard?
- 3 ‘It Was the Death of the Loon’
- 4 Bunny Money
- 5 The Invisible River: A Liverpool Interlude
- 6 Hypertension
- 7 America Was Our Hamburg
- 8 ‘Sound of Rock Fades for Deaf School’
- 9 The Stopped Clock
- 10 That Thread of Affinity
- 11 In Town Tonight!
- Epilogue: Deaf School and the Icelandic Constitution
- Appendix: Liverpoem, by Tim Whittaker
- UK Discography
- Sources
- Index
- platesection
Introduction
- Frontmatter
- Content
- Foreword by Suggs
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Tramcar to Frankenstein
- 2 Didn't You Have a Beard?
- 3 ‘It Was the Death of the Loon’
- 4 Bunny Money
- 5 The Invisible River: A Liverpool Interlude
- 6 Hypertension
- 7 America Was Our Hamburg
- 8 ‘Sound of Rock Fades for Deaf School’
- 9 The Stopped Clock
- 10 That Thread of Affinity
- 11 In Town Tonight!
- Epilogue: Deaf School and the Icelandic Constitution
- Appendix: Liverpoem, by Tim Whittaker
- UK Discography
- Sources
- Index
- platesection
Summary
Forty years ago a chaotic student group played their debut show, at the Liverpool art school Christmas dance. They were called Deaf School because they rehearsed in a former school for the deaf. It was a throwaway name for a pop-up band, who took defiant pride in being belowaverage musicians. And yet, somehow, they seemed to do something right.
Word spread, their audiences grew. Record companies came sniffing. Large cheques were produced and champagne corks popped. Twelve years earlier the Liverpool music scene had given the world the Beatles. Could lightning strike twice in the same place? A lot of entirely sane people agreed that this band could be the future of British rock'n'roll.
They weren't, of course. Chart success eluded Deaf School, for reasons that are still being thrashed out in pubs around the country. Most of all their timing was unlucky.
They played a brash, splashy, infectious sort of rock cabaret, just as punk rock was about to explode. (‘They were a great band,’ said the Sex Pistols’ manager Malcolm McLaren, ‘but it's just as bad being too early as too late.’) Deaf School broke up in 1978, somewhat disillusioned. Eventually, though, after varied and often spectacular solo careers, its members reunited and played to joyful audiences. Some very major pop stars acclaimed them as an influence.
That's why I start from the premise that Deaf School are an artistic success and not a commercial failure. Posterity has its own hit parade and I think Deaf School will be high in it. It's a measure of this band's strange, anomalous position in British pop that their story connects such disparate names as Queen and Elvis Costello. They don't sit along any neat continuum. In fact they inhabited a fracture-line between two eras, and they nearly slipped right down it, forever.
Deaf School were pop art, they were their own mad kind of punk rock, and they were always a guaranteed non-stop party. They should have been big, but that doesn't matter now. They are something to celebrate and to cherish. Deaf School are such a delicious secret, it's almost a shame to share it.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Deaf SchoolThe Non-Stop Pop Art Punk Rock Party, pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2013