With punk's history having entered a new millennium, the impact of the band initially judged "the least likely to" seems to grow ever more each day.
-- helped take it to an even more notorious level, serving as role models for many young bands to this day. But arguably just as important and memorable were
that made their own mark from the start. Eschewing political posing, ill-fitting outside rhetoric, and simply doing the same thing over and over again, the group -- which lacked anything like a stable lineup -- took punk's simplicity and promise as a starting point and ran with it. The end result, at the group's finest: a series of inspired, ambitious albums and amazing live shows combining full-on rock energy, a stylish sense of performance, and humorous deadpan cool. Not necessarily what anyone would have thought when
met in 1974, when both ended up working backstage at the Croydon Fairfield Hall.
Burns and
Millar -- more famously known in later years as guitarist/singer
Captain Sensible and manic drummer
Rat Scabies -- kept in touch as both struggled in the stultifying mid-'70s London scene. Things picked up when
Scabies talked his way into a rehearsal with
London S.S., the shifting lineup ground zero of U.K. punk that nearly everybody seemed to belong to at one point or another. There he met guitarist
Brian James, while in a separate venture overseen by
Malcolm McLaren, casting about for his own particular group to oversee,
Scabies first met theatrical singer
Dave Vanian, still working through his
New York Dolls/
Alice Cooper obsession.
Vanian's own history allegedly included singing "I Love the Dead" and "Dead Babies" while working as a gravedigger, but whatever the background, he proved to be a perfect frontman.
Scabies put
Sensible in touch with
Vanian and
James and
the Damned were born, with
Sensible switching over to bass while
James handled guitar and songwriting.
Though
the Sex Pistols became the most publicized of all the original London punk groups, forming and playing before everyone else,
the Damned actually ended up scoring most of the firsts on its own, notably the first U.K. punk single -- "New Rose" -- in 1976 and the first album,
Damned Damned Damned, the following year. Produced by
Nick Lowe, both were clipped, direct explosions of sheer energy, sometimes rude but never less than entertaining. The group ended up sacked from
the Pistols' cancellation-plagued full U.K. tour after only one show, but rebounded with a opening slot on the final
T. Rex tour, while further tweaking everyone else's noses by being the first U.K. act to take punk back to America via a New York jaunt. Things started to get fairly shaky after that, however, with
Lu Edmonds drafted in on second guitar and plans for the group's second album,
Music for Pleasure, not succeeding as hoped for. The members wanted legendary rock burnout
Syd Barrett to produce, but had to settle for his
Pink Floyd bandmate
Nick Mason. The indifferent results and other pressures convinced
Scabies to call it a day, and while future
Culture Club drummer
Jon Moss was drafted in to cover, the group wrapped it up in early 1978.
Or so it seemed; after various go-nowhere ventures (
Sensible tried the retro-psych
King,
Vanian temporarily joined glam-too-late oddballs
the Doctors of Madness), all the original members save
James realized they still enjoyed working together. Settling the legal rights to the name after some shows incognito in late 1978, the group, now with
Sensible playing lead guitar (and also the first U.K. punk band to reunite), embarked on its most successful all-around period. With a series of bassists -- first ex-
Saints member
Algy Ward, then
Eddie and the Hot Rods refugee
Paul Gray and finally
Bryn Merrick --
the Damned proceeded to make a run of stone-cold classic albums and singles. There'd be plenty of low points amidst the highs, to be sure, but it's hard to argue with the results.
Vanian's smart crooning and spooky theatricality ended up more or less founding goth rock inadvertently (with nearly all his clones forgetting what he always kept around -- an open sense of humor).
Sensible, meanwhile, turned out to be an even better guitarist than
James, a master of tight riffs and instantly memorable melodies and, when needed, a darn good keyboardist, while
Scabies' ghost-of-
Keith Moon drumming was some of the most entertaining yet technically sharp work on that front in years.
The one-two punch of
Machine Gun Etiquette, the 1979 reunion record, and the following year's
The Black Album demonstrated the band's staying power well, packed with such legendary singles as the intentionally ridiculous "Love Song," the anthemic "Smash It Up," and "Wait for the Blackout" and the catchy Satanism (if you will) of "I Just Can't Be Happy Today." On the live front,
the Damned were unstoppable, riding out punk's supposed death with a series of fiery performances laden with both great playing and notable antics, from
Sensible's penchant for clothes-shedding to
Vanian's eye for horror style and performance. Released in 1982,
Strawberries found
the Damned creating another generally fine release, but to less public acclaim than
Sensible's solo work, the guitarist having surprisingly found himself a number one star with a version of "Happy Talk" from South Pacific. While the dual career lasted for a year or two more,
the Damned found themselves starting to fracture again with little more than a hardcore fan base supporting the group work --
Sensible finally left in mid-1984 after disputes over band support staff hirings and firings. Second guitarist
Roman Jugg, having joined some time previously, stepped to the lead and the band continued on.
To everyone's surprise, not only did
the Damned bounce back, they did so in a very public way -- first by ending up on a major label, MCA, who issued
Phantasmagoria in 1985, then scoring a massive U.K. hit via a cover of "Eloise," a melodramatic '60s smash for
Barry Ryan. It was vindication on a commercial level a decade after having first started, but the
Anything album in 1986, flashes of inspiration aside, felt far more anonymous in comparison, the band's worst since
Music for Pleasure. After a full career retrospective release,
The Light at the End of the Tunnel, the band undertook a variety of farewell tours, including dates with both
Sensible and
James joining the then-current quartet. The end of 1989 brought a final We Really Must Be Going tour in the U.K., featuring the original quartet in one last bow, which would seem to have been the end to things.
Anything but. The I Didn't Say It tour arrived in 1991, with
Paul Gray rejoining the band to play along with the quartet. It was the first in a series of dates and shows throughout the '90s which essentially confirmed the group as a nostalgia act, concentrating on the early part of its career for audiences often too young to have even heard about them the first time around. It was a good nostalgia act, though, with performances regularly showing the old fire (and
Sensible his legendary stage presence, often finishing shows nude). After some 1992 shows,
the Damned disappeared again for a while -- but when December 1993 brought some more dates, an almost all-new band was the result. Only
Scabies and
Vanian remained, much like the late '80s lineup; their cohorts were guitarists
Kris Dollimore and
Alan Lee Shaw and bassist
Moose.
This quintet toured and performed in Japan and Europe for about two years, also recording demos here and there that
Vanian claimed he believed were for a projected future album with both
Sensible and
James contributing. Whatever the story, nothing more might have happened if
Scabies hadn't decided to work out a formal release of those demos as
Not of This Earth, first appearing in Japan in late November 1995.
Vanian, having reestablished contact with
Sensible during the former's touring work with his
Phantom Chords band, responded by breaking with
Scabies, reuniting fully with
Sensible and recruiting a new group to take over the identity of
the Damned. Initially this consisted of
Gray once again, plus drummer
Garrie Dreadful and keyboardist
Monty. However,
Gray was replaced later in 1996 following an on-stage tantrum by, in a totally new twist, punk veteran
Patricia Morrison, known for her work in
the Gun Club and
the Sisters of Mercy among many other bands.
Scabies reacted to all this with threats of lawsuits and vituperative public comments, but after all was said and done,
Vanian,
Sensible, and company maintained the rights to the name, occasional billing as "ex-members of
the Damned" aside, done to avoid further trouble.
Since then, this latest version of
the Damned has toured on a fairly regular basis, though this time with instability in the drumming department (
Dreadful left at the end of 1998, first replaced by
Spike, then later in 1999 by
Pinch). While
Vanian continued to pursue work with
the Phantom Chords, for the first time in years,
the Damned started to become a true outfit once again, the lineup gelling and holding together enough to warrant further attention. The capper was a record contract in 2000 with Nitro Records, the label founded and run by longtime
Damned fanatic
Dexter Holland, singer with
the Offspring (who covered "Smash It Up" for the Batman Forever soundtrack in the mid-'90s). In a fun personal note, meanwhile,
Morrison and
Vanian married, perhaps making them the ultimate punk/goth couple of all time.
By 2001, the
Vanian/
Sensible-led
Damned looked to be in fine shape, releasing the album
Grave Disorder on Nitro and touring to general acclaim. Knowing the fractured history of the band -- captured in the literally endless series of releases, authorized and otherwise, from all periods of its career, live, studio, compilations, and more -- only a foolish person would claim things would stay on an even keel for the future. Permanently losing
Scabies would seem to have been a killer blow on first blush, but the group has soldiered on regardless, a welcome influence from the past as well as a group of fine entertainers for the present. The year 2005 found both eras of the band being represented. While the new lineup was touring and working on a new album, the original lineup was honored by the three-disc box set
Play It at Your Sister, which was released on the Sanctuary label. The limited-edition set covered the years 1976-1977, featuring all the tracks from the first two albums along with
John Peel sessions and live material. It soon came time for the new lineup to issue its own album, which arrived in 2008 in the form of a slick, pop-influenced record titled
So, Who's Paranoid?
–
Ned Raggett, Rovi