RADIO BROADCAST #713 11-26–22

RADIO BROADCAST #713

11-26–22

Fanatic! Happy Saturday to you. Finally, after months of waiting after months of work, literally years in the making, I can tell you about two records Larry Hardy and I have been working on. They were released yesterday. From the master tapes we have generated two 12”s. One is the three song session that informed the first Ruts record with In A Rut and H-Eyes. The third track is an early version of Society, which was the B side of the Babylon’s Burning 7”.  The record sounds great. Here are the liner notes, they tell the story.

It seems like years ago I contacted Mr. Segs and Mr. Ruffy and inquired if either Rut had possession of the In A Rut Session tape. The two song 7” with In A Rut and the prophetic H-Eyes had never been reissued since its original three pressing 1979 release. 

Rarely does anything in life work out easily so when both replied not only did they not have the tape in their possession, neither had any idea as to its location. I got to work. My pseudo-sleuth supposition was that the band had turned the tape over soon after the passing of Malcolm Owen to Virgin Records for the assemblage of the Grin And Bear It compilation album and it was likely still in the label’s grip. 

And this is where the hero of this story and the reason we’re able to bring you this record, a young man named Jason Repantis, comes into the story. Jason works for Universal Music as a senior researcher in the asset and archives management department. His job focuses mainly on finding the best source of audio or video for each project among the vast archive of tapes. It can be for a reissue on vinyl, a remixing session, a video restoration on 4K, a request for an instrumental for a movie or whatever else is required.

Via email, Jason and I got to conversing as to where the tape could be. At one point, Jason told me he had located a tape that was dated 1980 with a Town House sticker on the front. The In A Rut Session happened in 1979 but Grin was a 1980 project so the tape could have very well been relabelled by an engineer. Jason gave the tape a closer look and confirmed it was the Fair Deal Studio reel with In A RutH-Eyes and an early version of Society.

I asked Jason how he came upon the tape. 

“Finding this tape involved a lot of research. Reading as much as possible online, contacting people out of the blue and of course browsing Ruts tapes from the archive. When I finally came across it, the first thing I saw on its box was that it contained the slower version of Society. I knew then that this was the right tape and the rest of the information matched as well.”

The tape had been found. We can report that this was the easy part! Prying it loose from Virgin was going to be a multi-month extraction operation single-handedly executed by the resourceful Jason. 

“In order for the tape to be returned to the band, I had to present all the information to EMI's legal and business affairs department. After they reviewed the case as well as the agreement with the band they confirmed that this tape can be returned.”

After months, the tape was released and it is now safely archived with me. We provided a high quality transfer to the very capable Mikey Young for mastering and here you have it, all three songs from the session, cut from the master tape.

Make no mistake: this is a complete victory. Justice! It could have been that the tape would have sat in the guts of Virgin for the rest of the century and there would be no reissue. The tape is back in control of the remaining Ruts and their great music is now yours to enjoy. 

Larry Hardy and I are honored to be a part of this multi-continent allied effort to bring you this record. As lifelong Ruts fans, all involved are righting a wrong. Without Jason, we wouldn’t have gotten here. 

For Malcolm, Paul, Segs and Ruffy

--Henry Rollins

The record hit the stores yesterday. Ruts DC have some copies in England. We reckon the first run wil sell through quickly. We’ll make more. 

Also, we located the master tape for the It Won’t Sell EP by the Panik. There was an extra track on the tape and we got the green light to release it from Panik member Ian Nance. The tape was in perfect health and the audio, cut hot on 12” sounds amazing. Here are the liner notes.  

If you will please permit me. This is a fan story which has endured over decades. 

On one of the many trips I made to Yesterday And Today Records, located at 1327-J Rockville Pike in Rockville, Maryland, I saw the It Won’t Sell! EP a three track 7” by the Manchester area England band the Panik. After seeing the record in the bin a few times, I bought it because the cover looked interesting and I thought the title was cool. 

I put the record on and was immediately amazed by the sounds on the instruments. What was happening on the drums? Great bass sound, tough songs, smart lyrics. The EP became one of my favorite 7” records and remains so to this day. 

Fast forward close to forty years. I was never able to find any information on the Panik but my curiosity never waned. To be clear, just because I couldn’t find any Panik facts, doesn’t mean they weren’t out there. I am at best, an enthusiastic (rank amateur) researcher. Had I been a better sleuth, I could have discovered that the EP was produced by the Panik and their manager, Rob Gretton, who would eventually manage some band called Joy Division. I would have perhaps been able to find out the label the EP was released on, Rainy City Records, was Mr. Gretton’s label, not to mention that Panik’s drummer Steve Brotherdale was for a time, the drummer in the pre-Joy Division band Warsaw and shows up on the 07-18-77 Warsaw Demo. 

Finally, in Jon Savage’s excellent book This Searing Light, The Sun And Everything Else: Joy Division: The Oral History, there was a mention of the Panik being part of the Manchester scene. Curiosity reignited, I was back on the hunt again for Panik information. I wanted to locate the members and find out anything I could. The songs were so good, there had to be more to know. 

It was around this time that top shelf collector/seller Jeff Gold had made contact with Rob Gretton’s partner Lesley Gilbert and bought some of his record collection from her. Through Jeff, I was able to contact Lesley. I asked if she was in possession of the Panik tape. Lesley, it turns out is extremely friendly and quite helpful. When she said she indeed had the tape, knowing that Rob was very on top of things, I wasn’t surprised but I must say, my excitement level spiked. At this point, source audio from this time period seems to have an almost magic ability to vanish without a trace. 

This piton secured into the mountain, I reached out to Ian MacKaye, who reached out to Punk know-a-lot and stand up guy John Robb, to see if he could track down any members of the Panik. John a poster boy for stamina, was able to find an email address for Panik guitarist/vocalist Ian Nance.

Thanks to Jeff, I was able to establish a line of communication with Lesley, who not only connected me to Rob Gretton’s archivist Mat Bancroft, but Steve McGarry, who designed the covers and labels for the EP. Thanks to Ian MacKaye and John Robb, I was able to connect with Ian Nance. Things were coming together.

I got to work. Objective: secure the Panik It Won’t Sell tape, transfer the tracks, master them and reissue the EP on 12” vinyl for the first time ever. 

In one stroke of luck after another, I got the green light from Ian Nance to allow the tape to travel. Word was relayed to Lesley and Mat. The tape was sent to In The Red Records and given to Brian Kehew, tape whisperer extraordinaire. After expertly making the transfer, Brian reported that not only were the tracks in pristine condition, there was a fourth (and unreleased) song on the tape. No way! 

I got the transfers back from Brian and listened on my trusty Yamaha NS10 reference monitors, spending several minutes comparing them to vinyl rips I had made years previously. Brian’s transfers were far superior and the extra track, Teenage Romancewas completely cool. From there, the tracks went to Mikey Young for mastering. The results were more than we could have imagined possible. 

I contacted Ian Nance, told him of the sonic upgrade and asked if Larry Hardy, owner and operator of In The Red Records and I could release all four tracks as a 12”. Permission granted. Knowing that the original release was decades ago, a sturdy set of liner notes were in order. I petitioned Mr. Nance for some Panik information and thanks to his powers of recall, we have some facts from an unimpeachable source. 

Urged on by manager Rob Gretton, Ian formed The Panik in June 1977 (four months before his seventeenth birthday) in Prestwich, Manchester, England. Ian taught bassist Paul Hilton how to play. Add Steve Brotherdale on drums, you’ve got the Panik.

To give you an idea of the geographical proximity of things, Prestwich is a little over three miles north of Manchester City Centre. The Fall’s Mark E. Smith lived there as well. Buzzcocks bass player Steve Garvey went to the same school as Ian. From one small town, members of three bands emerge. 

Counting June of 1977, the Panik had an approximate twelve month lifespan, calling it quits in May of 1978. Ian went on to join the Manchester area band V2. In this short amount of time, the Panik played about fifteen shows, sharing stages with bands that included the Damned, the Vibrators, Warsaw/Joy Division and Reckless Eric, as well as being on the bill in October 1977 at the Electric Circus, some of the bands were recorded over the two nights and released on the Virgin Records 10” Short Circuit: Live at the Electric Circus.

The Panik had about twenty songs in their set. Only the ones recorded for the EP survive. Now that we’re able to include Teenage Romance from the session, we have one more than we did before. 

I asked Ian if he had any memories of the recording session and working with Rob Gretton. This is information I haven’t seen anywhere. 

“The songs for the EP were written in about two days, and recorded one-takes and mixed in a four hour session. The studio we recorded at was out in the boondocks, and the engineers were Country & Western fans who thought we and our music was from Mars (you have to remember this was before the Sex Pistols really took off and punk was brand new). As I recall Rob Gretton was really pleased with the results, though being quite a laconic guy refused to show it. He was worried about going to the pressing plant to master the tracks, since some of the language on it was not for the drawing room, shall we say. Conversely, the cutting engineer wasn't the least bit fazed, he said he'd had the Wurzels in before us (a comedy/novelty act quite popular in the UK at that time), and their language was fifty times worse than ours. When we got the vinyl, Rob and the band stuffed it into the sleeves by hand, aided by copious amounts of Polish vodka, while we listened to the record over and over (at the time there were very few actual "punk" records in existence.)” 

I asked Ian what he thought of the record when he first heard it. At his age and at the time, having a record you’re on must have been pretty cool. 

“I really liked the finished EP, though my only quibble was it seemed to have lost some bottom end at the mastering stage, but other than that, it was a goer...”

When I compared the vinyl rips I had made to the tracks you now have, I see what he means and I believe that issue has been addressed. 

Please indulge me in allowing me to answer a question that I might be the only one asking: why reissue a decades old record by a band that existed only briefly and then all but disappeared? BECAUSE, and I think I can speak for Larry on this, we’ve been fans of this EP for decades and the chance to get it in front of you is more than an opportunity, it’s a mission. The tape sat deathly still for years in perfectly maintained obscurity with a fourth track to remain silent for all time. But then the baying of intrepid and persistent vinyl hounds grew louder and thanks to the access to information and human assets afforded by the internet, a microscopic point of light, all but lost in a universe of information and innumerable potential impediments to its targeted acquisition, the master tape was snatched from the mists. 

Between The Fall, Buzzcocks and Joy Division, it’s easy to see that something was definitely happening in the greater Manchester area. However, these brilliant bands are not nearly the entire story. At some point, when I was able to see this chapter of England’s contribution to music culture as part of a larger story, it bugged me that there was little to no mention of the Panik. Books have been written, records have been reissued but for some reason, the Panik were largely overlooked. It Won’t Sell, (the back cover photo taken by the now legendary Kevin Cummins) is one of my favorite 7” records of all time. The Panik were there and done before a lot of Punk bands had even started. 

Larry and I would like to thank all involved, who on the strength of our promise, perhaps somewhat amused by our boundless enthusiasm, allowed us to get this done. --Henry Rollins

There is an update. Apparently, the Electric Circus tapes include the Panik live set and there are plans to release them. Stoked!

Both record sound great. When the copies that are circulating sell through, we will make more. Anyone who’s interested, we want them to be able to get a copy. Larry and I just got the green light for our next project. We are in motion and we will have a release for 2023. 

My new book, Sic will be arriving on Monday. I’ll be signing them on Tuesday and Wednesday. Heidi and Larry will put them up on the site soon. I’ll let you know. 

I resume tour in Europe next year. Here’s info on that.

I know that was a lot of reading. Whew! 

Dig the show and STAY FANATIC!!!  

–– Henry

Hour 1

01. Lime Crush - Care / Fettkakao 50 

02. Negative Scanner - The Only One / Nose Picker 

03. Tumbas - Destinados A Perder / Dolor 

04. Delivery - Baader Meinhof / Forever Giving Handshakes + Demos

05. Upchuck - Facecard / Sense Yourself 

06. Hammered Hulls - Pilot Light / Careening 

07. UK Subs - Crash Course / Another Kind Of Blues

08. Sniffany & The Nits - Piggy Bank / The Unscratchable Itch

09. The Cool Greenhouse - The UFO's / Sod's Toastie 

10. Eggy - F.I.T.B. / With Gusto 

11. Glenda Collins - Magic Star / Tea Chest Tapes Telstar Story

12. Iggy Pop - Bang Bang / Party

13. School Damage - Something New / 7" 

14. Freak Genes - Among The Drain / Hologram 

15. Duplo - Estático Choque / Duplo - Dor Dor Dor, BB. 7"

16. Klapper - Exciting Life / Klapper 

17. David Bowie - Bang Bang / Never Let Me Down 

18. Señor Coconut - Showroom Dummies / El Baile Alemán 

            

Hour 2

01. Alicja-Pop - Not Gonna Be Dumb 

02. Gene Vincent - Rollin' Danny / The Gene Vincent Box Set 

03. Spinners - Rubberband Man / Soul Comp. 

04. Osees - Perm Act / A Foul Form   

05. Rondelles  - Six O'clock / Shined Nickels And Loose Change

06. Knifeplay - Lonely Sun / Animal Drowning  

07. Chronophage - Talking Android / th'pig'kiss'd album 

08. Doxa Sinistra - Modern Age / Via Del Latte  

09. Teri Gender Bender - The Get Up / Bandcamp dl   

10. Staccato Du Mal - Plea Bargain / Sin Destino

11. The Fall - Rollin' Dany / 458489 A Sides  

12. Phil & The Tiles - Elixr / 7"  

13. Alien Nosejob - Beatles vs Stones / Stained Glass 

14. Swell Maps - Steven Does (CD extra track)   A Trip To Marineville   

15. Joy Division - Something Must Break / Heart And Soul 

16. Liz Lamere - Stand / Keep It Alive 

17. Jah Stitch - Watch Your Step Youthman / Original Ragga Muffin

18. Syzygy - Balance Disorder / Anchor And Adjust