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Sham 69 - Direct Action Day 21 (2001)

Posted By: Nagiants40
Sham 69 - Direct Action Day 21 (2001)

Sham 69 - Direct Action Day 21
Easy CD-DA | FLAC, tracks | Covers Included | 339 MB (4 files)
Punk Rock | 1997 | UK | Label: The Store For Music | RAR | RS

While most of the early British punk bands spoke of working-class concerns – primarily unemployment and the shrinking U.K. economy, which was leaving a generation with nothing to do and nowhere to go – many of the pioneering groups had working-class credentials that were suspect at best; the Sex Pistols' career was being molded by a haberdasher and would-be artist, while the Clash were led by the son of a diplomat.
While most of the early British punk bands spoke of working-class concerns – primarily unemployment and the shrinking U.K. economy, which was leaving a generation with nothing to do and nowhere to go – many of the pioneering groups had working-class credentials that were suspect at best; the Sex Pistols' career was being molded by a haberdasher and would-be artist, while the Clash were led by the son of a diplomat. Sham 69, however, was different; proletarian and proud of it, Sham 69 was the voice of the people in the first wave of British punk, and if they were never as fashionable as such contemporaries as the Sex Pistols, the Clash, Wire, or the Jam (who, in their early days, shared Sham's provincial outlook and "we're with the kids" fan solidarity), they enjoyed a long run of chart successes and were a major influence on the street punk and Oi! movements which followed.
Sham 69 was formed in the working-class community of Hersham (in Surrey) in 1975 by singer and lyricist Jimmy Pursey; the name came from an ancient bit of graffiti celebrating a local football team's winning season in 1969. From the start, Sham 69's politics were populist, and their sound accessible; straight-ahead four-square punk with a hard rock influence and lyrics that often used sing-along slogans in their choruses, such as "If the Kids Are United" and "(Gonna Be A) Borstal Breakout." The band went through a revolving cast of musicians early on before settling on the lineup of Pursey, Dave Parsons on guitar, Albie Slider on bass, and Mark Cain behind the drums. They began scaring up gigs where they could, and began playing the notorious London punk venue the Roxy on a regular basis, where they built up a loyal following. Step Forward, a small independent label, released the band's first single, "I Don't Wanna," in September 1977. The success of the single and the band's growing fan base prompted Polydor to sign the band in the U.K., and their first album, Tell Us the Truth – one side recorded live, the other in the studio – was released in early 1978. (Sire released the album in the United States, and it would prove to be the only Sham 69 album released in America until the late '80s.) By the time the album came out, Albie Slider had left the band and Dave "Kermit" Tregenna took over on bass. Sham's second album, That's Life, was released in the fall of 1978, and featured two major hit singles, "Hurry Up Harry" and "Angels With Dirty Faces"; and as many of the first wave of U.K. punk bands were beginning to peter out, Sham 69's popularity continued to grow. www.allmusic.com

Tracklist:
1.99% 2000
2.Direct Action
3.Mad as A Cow
4.Little Bit Of This (Little Bit Of That)
5.Security Guard
6.Dig It
7.Tattoo
8.Monica
9.15 Minutes
10.S.H.A.G.
11.Tolstoy's Ape
12.Do You Believe
13.This Time
14.Here We Are


**Links**
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

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