| Riot
starting, bouncer bashing, cop baiting, hotel trashing, foul talking,
noise making, chaos causing, venue wrecking, government hating, rule
breaking, piss taking, unrelenting, punk rocking…. Clearly we’re
not talking about Pepsi adverts here, or indeed the many so-called punk
bands that would gleefully sell themselves to such corporate giants
for a palm full of silver. Whoo-hoo! The taste of a generation! Fuck
off! Let’s get one thing straight: The Exploited are not ‘punkers’
or any of the other cutesy, watered down, MTV friendly names you might
want to call them.
The Exploited are punk rock.
But maybe we should put that into context since it means so many different
things. It’s early 1980 and ‘entertainment’ on a Saturday
night (or any other night of the week) consists of sitting around at
home watching crap on TV or sitting around in a bus shelter drinking
cider or sniffing glue. Unless, of course, you’re old enough to
drink in the same pub as your dad. Oh the thrill of it all! Punk rock
is all you have. It’s your lifeblood, the only thing that makes
sense and the only thing to look forward to in a world with ‘no
future’. And it’s fucking exciting! The next single, the
next gig, the volume coursing through your veins to remind you that
you’re alive. Punk rock is a dangerous business. The mere act
of looking like a punk will earn you a night in casualty if you’re
not careful, and getting to and from one of the few venues that will
let punk bands play can literally be a matter of life and death. So,
you can cop out and be a part time punk (flatten your hair down for
school, work or more likely the dole queue) or follow whatever trend
you’re told is ‘in’ this week. The other option, the
only other option, is to give to punk rock what it has given to you…everything!
If you’re going to be unemployed, then be unemployable! If you’re
going to get beaten up, then go down fighting! If you’ve got something
to say, then shout it! And most of all, if you’re going to be
in an obnoxious punk rock band, then be in a really obnoxious punk band!
This was the route chosen by ex-squaddie Wattie Buchan (vocals), Big
John Duncan (guitar), Dru Stix (drums) and Gary McCormack (bass). Right
from the start (early 1980, if you were paying attention) there was
no toning these Edinburgh punks down, no diluting their music for public
consumption. The Exploited were punk rock.
Released just one year later on the Secret label, their debut album
was as much a rallying battle cry as a record. It was called ‘Punk’s
Not Dead’ and went on to become the number one independent album
of 1981 (before most of the Indies were just majors in disguise), reaching
number 20 in the national charts and selling 150,000 copies. Which kind
of proved the point. If punk was dead, no one had told the Exploited’s
rapidly growing ‘barmy army’. And while admittedly, ‘Punk’s
Not Dead’ wasn’t the greatest record ever made, as an opening
gambit it was unbeatable and live, the band were nothing short of incredible.
The long hot summer of ’81 saw the whole country going up in flames.
Real anarchy in the UK as city after city, town after town exploded!
A perfect time for the Exploited to co-headline the legendary ‘Apocalypse
Now’ tour with fellow punk giants, Discharge. The sell out London
show (at the Lyceum Ballroom) took place just one day after the Brixton
riots. Talk about an electric atmosphere!
By October that year The Exploited were in the singles charts with the
violently evocative ‘Dead Cities’, leading to arguably the
most ferocious performance ever seen on Top Of The Pops (yeah, you read
that right! And yes, there were numerous complaints) and another massive
UK tour. If memory serves correctly, this was the one where Black Flag
supported them, the one that ended in a full-scale riot at the Rainbow
in Finsbury Park. Or maybe that was another time; certainly it was snowing
in the Capital the night and ever demented front man Wattie declared
war on the Mods (some idiot had booked the Jam to play just up the road),
resulting in a pitched battle outside the venue.
1982 saw the release of the Exploited’s first genuine classic
album ‘Troops Of Tomorrow’ (number 17 in the charts), which
ten years later was to see tracks (most notably ‘UK82’ changed
to ‘LA92’) covered by Slayer for the ‘Judgement Night’
soundtrack. More proof, if it were needed, that without the likes of
Exploited, Discharge and GBH there would be no thrash metal and thus,
no Metallica, Slayer or Slipknot. It has even been noted that those
punk bands influenced such varied acts as Queens Of The Stoneage (whom
Wattie presented with a ‘Best International Newcomers’ gong
at the Kerrang Awards in 2000) and Atari Teenage Riot, Nirvana (Ex-Exploited
guitarist Big John even played for them briefly) and Massive Attack.
In over two decades The Exploited have been tear gassed by German cops,
banned from Holland, arrested in Spain, declared that the Falklands
are British forever whilst on stage in Argentina and have caused more
carnage than a multi-car pile up on the M1. Throughout that time they
have remained steadfastly true to their roots, never selling out, never
splitting up (despite numerous line-up changes) and never bowing down.
They’ve been accused of being dumb (yes, sometimes, but wilfully
so) and causing trouble (guilty again, but smashing stuff is fun and
punks are supposed to be obnoxious). But The Exploited are also fiercely
(not to mention bluntly) socially and politically aware, covering everything
from the Criminal Justice Act to the increasing use of Big Brother CCTV
and never wavering from their anti-authoritarian, anti-war stance. And
while a critic once suggested they were stating the obvious (politicians
are liars and war is bad), someone is still voting for the fuckers and
we seem to be on the brink of World War Three. Someone should be shouting
about it for Christ’s sake! And no one shouts louder than The
Exploited! Who else would have the nerve to drown a Tory politician
in their video (for the title track of their ’96 masterpiece ‘Beat
The Bastards’) or repeatedly refer to Maggie Thatcher as a "fucking
cunt!" (‘Maggie’).
So we face the start of another New Year and nothing has changed. The
country’s still fucked and on the brink of war as America’s
lapdog, bored kids still wander the streets (smack and designer labels
having replaced glue and cider) and The Exploited are just as relevant
today as they were in 1980. Punk rock has come to mean so many different
things to so many different people. Like an incurable virus the genre
has infected the whole world, evolving, mutating (often beyond recognition)
and contaminating everything that gets in its path. Fashion, art, comedy,
politics and of course, music have all been irrevocably altered by punk
rock. Christ, even football got in on the act… a mohican haircut
we’re told, is now called a Beckham.
Not bad for something that has been pronounced dead more times than
Dracula. But to The Exploited punk rock still means everything.
"Fuck The System’ their eighth studio album sees the band
on more explosive form than ever, riotous, unrepentant and wholly uncompromising.
Tracks like ‘Never Sell Out’ and ‘Chaos Is My Life’
(both self-explanatory) are as brutally heavy as anything bands half
their age have to offer and prove beyond doubt that, not only is there
life in the old dog yet, but the fucker’s got rabies! ‘Fuck
The System’ isn’t just an album title; it’s a statement
of intent. But then, it is a punk rock album, and make no mistake.
The Exploited are punk rock!
Written by Morat. January 2003. |

The Exploited - Dogs
Of War
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