The Prisoners - Info. Page
This page is devoted to The Prisoners, a little combo from England,
possibly the grooviest band in the multi-verse. The definitive psychedelic garage band,
clearly influenced by the likes of the Small Faces, and cited as an influence for the
Charlatans. This band beats the pants off Kula Shaker - better music and no pretentious
sh*t! Please note that this page is completely unofficial and done for the love of the
music only.
What Its All About...Own Label, Own Teeth?
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Harry Palmer would have definitely loved this band. The Prisoners were/are cool but hard.
Sixties/Garage/Psychedelic/Punk music with equally loud and up front guitar and keyboard
sounds bursting with rawness. A band whose gigs excite. A band which had the guts to go it
alone returning to their own label (Own Up Records) for the release of their third album
when the record industry attempted to cramp their style and neuter their music. A band which
had a fight in their record label's office to retrieve demo & master tapes of their fourth
album. A band which has been quiet for a number of years but is now back, for the moment at least,
via a series of gigs which will pack in their dedicated fans, and a one-off single deal
(probably the only sort of deal that The Prisoners could accept from a record company these days). |
For me the Prisoners offered the best music available in the early 80s, and I moshed and
grooved at around a dozen of their gigs. This ended, to my stunned amazement, on the 18th Septmeber 1986
at the 100 Club in London. When I heard The Prisoners were to release a new single in 1997 my immediate thought
was "Thank **** for that, at last some decent music!" But enough of what I think, read on...
What other people have said about The Prisoners
Gary Crossing, The Big Issue (No.235): "The Hammond organ sounds so damned fat and
cheesy you could slap it in a family sized quiche. Add rootsy Sixties rock guitar, meaty
beats and a garnish of gutsy white R&B boy vocals for instant chart topper. [A] fusion of
psycedelic Sixties vibery [and] acid-fuelled garage band beats"..."the ballsy energy and
excitement is still intact".
Ted Kessler/Roger Sargent, NME (7 June '97): "The toughest
and coolest platoon to ever emerge from this isle's only true punk outpost". "If you're
a fan of either The Charlatans or Kula Shaker, then you owe your allegiance to these
bands to The Prisoners because they invented them".
Steve Lamaq, Radio 1 DJ (May '97): "Style, that's what you
get with The Prisoners". Read Steve Lamaq's review here. Copied from the
old Deceptive Records Site.
The Nearly NEW Single: Shine On Me
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Shine On Me released in a "one-off" deal in June 1997
contains three new
tracks from The Prisoners, 11 years on from their previous recordings.
Shine On Me, Judgement Song and Small could hardly be a better example of
Prisoners' music. Trust me, GET THIS CD. If you are a 1980s Prisoners purist worried
about potential diappointment - don't be! If you're a Charlatans fan, a fan of the
later Paul Weller stuff (Stanley Road etc.), or a "would be if they weren't such a
bunch of hippies" Kula Shaker fan, GET THIS CD. If you're a musical adventurer,
interested in exploring the roots of today's BritPop, GET THIS CD. |
Real record buff bit: Published by
Deceptive Records (Bluff 043CD).
Distributed by Vital. Photo by Tracy Jackson. Design by Flirt.
The WiserMiserDemelza & 7
This is probably (as far as I know anyway) the only other Prisoners release that
is available at the moment. This CD was originally released by Big Beat Records in 1990 and is a
re-release of the 1983 vinyl album of the same name plus 7 bonus tracks recorded
by the group and released on singles/compelations around 1984. The CD comes with a brief history
of the band and a discography which I have reproduced, please click the icon below to view.
Of the original album stuff, the track that leaps out and hits you where you get most pleasure
is "Hurricane". "Unbeliever" is also great, and oh don't you just wish "Go Go" would get the full 3 minute treatment -
Ah well!! Bonus tracks "Melanie", "Coming Home" and "Reaching My Head" are much treasured
additions for the dedicated fan.
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...Just click here for some ancient history and discography. |
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Real record buff bit: Original LP published by ACE Records (subsidiary of
Big Beat) 1983 (WIK1G). Photo by Eugene Doyen. Sleeve design by Phil Smee. CD published by ACE Records 1990 (CDWIKD 937). Compiled by Roger Armstrong. Package design
by Nick Garrad.
Collectors Items
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Of course, having said that these are the only two CDs available, it might be
possible to get hold of some stuff from other sources on the net.
Why not try The Medway Corner
for deleted Prisoners and other Medway Bands' Stuff.
For example... |
A Taste Of Pink
This is the first... a live studio recording, recorded and mixed in only 8 hours on 12/9/82.
This album was recorded for the fans, not for the money! For a devoted fan it is difficult to distinguish
much between the tracks, but "Coming Home", "Maybe I Was Wrong", "Mushroom" and "'Till The Morning Light" certainly stand
out as fine examples, given the full deserving treatment achieved only by live performance. Sleeve notes
with the CD give the added bonus of lyrics for those given to decyphering the angrier wails. Currently
out of print but, I am assured, not deleted.
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Real record buff bit: Published by Own Up Records 1982, Re-issued
1994 (OWN-UP2CD). Distributed by Revolver. Photos by Eugene Doyen. Design by Graham Day.
Rare and Unissued
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This album is a collection of live, promotional, and own-mix recordings which
span the band's original seven years together. This being the case the sound quality of the
album is often not at its best, but this only enhances the memories of the raw
power of a live performance. For this reason, my personal favourite is the
live recording of "Come To The Mushroom". As a sad old fan from the early days I have seen
this done many a time and, even though during the track all semblance of a tune
disappears at one point, you cannot help but appreciate the full-on simultaneous
assault of wailing guitar and keyboards. |
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The album carries the following sleeve notes penned by Graham Day:
"This is the elusive collection of rare and unissued material clogging the vaults of good and bad memories
over a stormy period of seven years. The Prisoners, a group of sixteen year olds, ended up as a
demoralised weatherbeaten quartet dubbed in friendly circles as 'The Pensioners'. Pulled
apart by sharks posing as managers, and record companies only intent on destroying our
unique sound (which has been so often copied in recent years) and moral, we think ourselfes
lucky that we managed to squeeze out a couple of good albums. I don't think of our disbanding
as giving up the light, but rather as a victory against the evil clutches of the music
industry which we managed to finally elude."
Real record buff bit: Published by Hangman Records (HAND-23 UP).
Distributed by Revolver/The Cartel. Tracks selected by Graham Day.
The Last Fourfathers
Can you fault this album? I can't. OK yes I can, the guttural cough at the beginning reminds
me of too many of my own, and the clear use of the F-word during the fake radio intro makes
it difficult for me to play in front of the kids. Small price to pay for a superb album
that, back under their own control, throbs with essence of Prisoner.
Check out all the tracks, but especially "Nobody Wants Your Love", "I Am The Fisherman"
and "FOP", another personal favourite. If you can find a friend with this album - tape
it. If you really don't like them that much - steal it, and watch them dispair at the
loss of a prized possession.
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In From The Cold
The final "make or break" album. As you can probably guess from the word final, this was
the breaking of the Prisoners back in 1986. Back into the shark infested world of company
controlled recording, this album, although displaying much matured talent, has been generally
cited as their weakest effort - their raw power watered down in the name of commercialism.
WHEN WILL THEY LEARN? Still the toons on the album translated into some cracking live
material. "Come Closer", "Deceiving Eye" and "Find And Seek" all veritable belters I can
assure you. Listen to "Rare and Unissued" to get a real feel of how the album might have
been.
Under Construction - More to come as and when, hopefully SOON!
P.S. You are hit number
- Sad isn't it?
Guestbook
Hey looky, a guest book! Yes it may not be original, but please sign it/view it... who knows you might come
across your old buddies cruising on by from The MIC, The King Charles, The Hope & Anchor, The 100 Club,
(The Pentagon Centre???) etc, or even a comment from a real, live Prisoner!!!
Sign My Guestbook
View My Guestbook
Guestbook Update: Wow, visitors from as far afield as Texas and
Amsterdam. Can you beat this? Please sign the book, leaving your location and lets
see if we can find Prisoners influence stretching to all corners of the globe. World
domination - Yes'mm.
Links
OK here are a few links....
Revenge of the Cybermen
- notice the similarity in the images, you saw them here first! What the hey, this is the web.
Good luck to the bloke. You'll definitely get good some stuff from here, even if the wallpaper ain't
so good.
Compiled by The Psyberman. Last updated 27th September 1999.
Please send additions or comments to my Guestbook. All rights reserved © 1999 UrbSat
PS to all those who have signed it, cheers! I've been off-line for a bit, but will try and gee up my activities
soon! (as time allows). Meanwhile, thanks for visiting. Hope you enjoyed.
The Psyberman thanks all those who have helped in this endevour especially: Andy P.
Dicky B. Clive T. David F. & Paul W. - you know who you are.
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