Spent a recent evening flicking through old zines I contributed cartoons to, relishing in my own nostalgia. Not egotistically admiring the artwork, or even laughing, rather cringe at most of it. More so because every publication has a backstory; where I was, what the hell I was up to, and thinking, if at all, at the time. Itโs like Granโs photo album, to me. But I guess reminiscing is symbolic of this pandemic year, nought else happening.
With that in mind, Bill Green of local self-titled Britpop trio Billy Green 3 has a great story to tell, ending with a retrospective release on the streaming platforms. He met Simon Hunt at a party, they liked each otherโs jumpers, shared a love of music from the Beatles to the Stone Roses, and hung out on the guest list with Chesterโs indie rock band, Mansun on their โ96 tour.

Billyโs mate John โJimmyโ Burns โsimply wanted to be in a band and dressed well.โ Never having played their instruments before, let alone in a band, one night they decided to form one with another of Billyโs friends, Mark Molloy. โWeโ Bill explained, โjumped about to โThe Jamโ and had often spent nights drumming along on bars and tables.โ
With Mark on drums, Simon on Vox, Jimmy on bass and Billy on guitar, Still was forming. Yet I guess Bill was reminiscing this foundation when deciding upon a name for his debut album as the trio, back in January, which we cordially reviewed, here.
โIโd written a few songs,โ Bill continued, โso we set up second-hand instruments in Marston Village Hall, and banged out a few tunes, no covers mind.โย He had been DJing the โVroom!โ Club, at the Corn Exchange. โIan James was kind enough to put us on that Christmas and New Yearโs, and people actually came to watch, a band was born.โ

Still played the local circuit and even had a dalliance with Virgin Records, having spent a day travelling around London knocking on doors and dodging receptionists and PAs. They booked studio time with Pete Lambโs studio in Potterne, followed by more studio time at Holt Studios, where a personnel change saw Andy Phillips join on drums and later, James Ennis on guitar.
As a five-piece they played into early 1999, before calling it a day and believing the recordings were lost. Simon Hunt recently unearthed the cassette, much to Billโs delight, and the demos have been remastered โand tidied up a bit,โ with the help of Danny Wise. Returned to Bill, who has enthusiastically released it as an album called Destruction at the beginning of the month. โAnd here they are,โ he excitedly called, โas a permanent record of the biggest indie band ever from Devizesโฆ. called Still!โ
โI’m just shocked that Marston has, or had a village hall,โ I expressed.
โRubble when we finished playing!โ Billy kidded, possibly.
These are raw demos, but brilliantly echo a time of yore when Britpop was in the making and a newfound generation of garage bands were spawning like a wart on the bottom of commercialised pop. What is great about this album, aside the backstory, is it represents all those early influences of the scene and mergers in a way we might today take for granted, but were, in essence, different scenes and youth cultures divided by decades, at the time. Yes, these may have been bought together by his more defined recent album, Still, but this is essential history for fans of that album, as it opens the casing and shows the very workings of it. Similarly, it works more generally than that, as an insight for fans of the genre.
For if influences of Britpopโs โbig fourโ are represented here, in the jaunty attitude of Blur, the maladroit studiousness of Pulp, the euphoric ballads of Oasis, and the brashness of Suede, thereโs also arty punk rock and psychedelic reprises, like Elasticaโs affection for Wire, even the Beatles.

There are echoes of Britpop inspirations, โRespect Nowโ feels like itโs drawn from the genreโs eighties influences; the Jam, up to the Stone Roses. Yet tracks like โHappier Nowโ ring drum-based upbeat riffs, but slating postpunk vocals, and the sobering drone of The Smiths. Whereas, โPale Impression, Manโ is closer indie enthused from post-punk gothic, rather the end of the era anthems, like the track โCatch,โ which rings Suede or The Verve.
โLady Leisureโ just rocks, simple; this was produced at Pete Lambโs, along with the other first bout of garage-style rock, โHappier Nowโ, and โSuperstars,โ the latter savouring the sound of the Kinks. Perhaps the most poignant are two the love ballads, which along with โCatchโ were recorded at Holt. Bill informed me, โโGav4Safโ was a fledging love song written for a friendโs wedding.โ But the beautifully crafted โLoveSongโ is a missing piece of Oasis, and as a stand-out ballad is the only track rightfully to be reworked for Billy Green 3โs modern album Still. The finale is the title track, with a sublime rolling bass guitar, Who-like.
ย โWe hope there are some people who will listen and remember those heady days as fondly as we do,โ Bill expressed, โitโs basically demos but such good memories!โ It may help, but is not, I reckon, essential. I reason, quite regularly, that finding the early recordings of any artist is often more worthy than the celebrated later releases, when eagerness overrides rawness and economical recording sessions. They brought out the original enthusiasm, the roots to greatness. I favour โThe Wild, Innocent and E-Street Shuffleโ rather than Springsteenโs โBorn in the USA,โ for example. Even delve into bootlegs of Steel Mill, where despite the boss not being frontman, you can hear a distant echo of genius harking from the background. โDestructionโ is out now, as well as the single, โCatch,โ across the streaming sites, (Spotify) a notable antiquity of the local music scene.

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