Groop Dogdrill

Groop Dogdrill were a rock band formed in the early 1990s in the Northern English town of Doncaster, UK, by Damien "Damo" Fowkes (bass), Pete Spiby (vocals/guitar) and Hugh "Hug" Kelly (drums).[1] They achieved modest success, releasing a number of singles and two albums in between numerous tours of the UK, before finally splitting up in 2001.

Band history

The band were originally called Dogdrill, until they played a show with The Wedding Present at The Tunbridge Wells Forum, on 24 August 1994. Darren Belk (friend of the band and frontman/guitarist with Beachbuggy) was playing bass guitar at the time for The Wedding Present. Dogdrill were renamed 'Groop' Dogdrill by Wedding Present drummer Simon Smith and they played as Groop Dogdrill from that day onwards.

They entered a 'battle of the bands' competition in their hometown of Doncaster, as they were unable to afford the bass gear that would allow them to start working the live circuit. The band won the competition (and the bass gear) and also caught the eye of a young producer called Matt Elliss at Axis Studios who offered to record a demo at the studio free of charge. Matt Elliss then passed the song onto a new label called EXP (a subsidiary of ViaCom) which was being run by Feargal Sharkey, formerly of The Undertones. The label demoed the band and released a limited edition (500) 7" single "Gentleman's Soiree"/"Silver Boots" before agreeing to record and release a full-length album. After a brief tour of the UK with Cable the band went into the studio to start recording tracks for their debut long player. A further single, "Gracelands" (1996) and more tours (with A amongst others) followed but financial difficulties forced EXP to fold before the full album was released.

The band were soon picked up by Mantra Records (part of the Beggars Banquet group) and further tours followed before the album "Half Nelson", recorded for EXP two years earlier, was eventually released by Mantra in 1998.[1] The album chronicled the band's obsessions with Americana, the Rat Pack, working class humour, the seedier side of personal and sexual relationships and classic 70s movies with an ever-present combination of metal, punk, blues and rockabilly at its core.

They began to accumulate a small but loyal fanbase, helped by features in Kerrang! and NME, a series of incendiary live shows and a growing (if not necessarily accurate) reputation for on- and off-stage violence. Tours of the UK and Europe followed (with Carter USM, Therapy? and Motörhead amongst others) and the band eventually had the opportunity to tour their spiritual home, the United States. A double headline tour with London-based Blues/Punk/Sleaze band Penthouse (who were renamed 'Fifty Tons of Black Terror' for the occasion after a legal run-in with the head of the adult magazine who shared their name).

By 1998 most of the band had moved from their hometown of Doncaster to the neighbouring city of Sheffield but returned to Axis Studios in Doncaster, to again work with Matt Elliss, to record their second album Every Six Seconds, after potential plans to record in Steve Albini's studio in Chicago were scrapped.

A UK tour with The Yo-Yos and up and coming indie hotshots The Hives as first on, preceded the release of "Every Six Seconds" late in 2000. The album showcased a more sonic vocabulary and more diverse songwriting. A number of favourable reviews followed but the band knew Mantra were not in a financial position to back the band. After meetings the band decide to leave the label before a decision was made on their behalf, as the label was culling its roster. Which included China Drum and upstarts Parva aka The Kaiser Chiefs. Within 3 months the 2nd album had sold as many as the debut release.

A series of unfortunate events followed. With the loss of their management, booking agent and lack of financial funds, Hug made the decision to quit the band in December 2000. Damo and Pete decided to continue and eventually recruited a new drummer Alex Thomas for a handful of gigs. They recorded a new demo in the Summer of 2001. This lineup was short-lived however, and the band had permanently split by the end of the year.

Personnel

After Groop Dogdrill Pete formed Future eX-Wife and is currently (2008) in Black Spiders, and has played drums for Tenebrous Liar.

Discography

Albums

Singles

References

  1. 1 2 Strong, Martin C. (1999) The Great Alternative & Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 0-86241-913-1, p. 297

External links

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