Starred in Pretty Woman with Richard Gere, won an Oscar for her role in Erin Brockovitch |
ibiza classifieds |
Top US pop act |
Singer |
Fashion designer and co-founder of Red or Dead |
Female Comedy Cabaret |
Ollyoaks actor |
Professor of Management at the McLaren School of Business, University of San Francisco |
Norman Wisdom is one of the best known British film and theatrical comedians of all time. |
UK Group |
A current presenter of "Top of The Pops" for the BBC. Great presenter for younger events. |
Social psychologist from Channel 4's Big Brother |
After Dinner Speakers: The Buzzcocks, Fran Cotton, Penny Hughes
Originally formed in Manchester in February 1976 by Pete Shelley (b. Peter McNeish, 17 April 1955, Leigh, Lancashire, England; vocals, guitar),
Howard Devoto (b. Howard Trafford, 1955, Manchester, England; vocals), Steve Diggle (bass) and John Maher (drums). Taking their name from a Time Out review of Rock Follies, a support spot on the Sex Pistols' infamous "Anarchy' tour prefaced the Buzzcocks" debut recording, the EP Spiral Scratch, which included one of punk's most enduring anthems, "Boredom". The quartet's undeveloped promise was momentarily short-circuited when Devoto sensationally left in February 1977, only to resurface later that year with Magazine. A reshuffled Buzzcocks, with Shelley taking lead vocal and Garth Davies (later replaced by Steve Garvey) on bass, won a major recording contract with United Artists Records. During the next three years, they recorded some of the finest pop-punk singles of their era, including the Devoto/Shelley song "Orgasm Addict" and, after the split, Shelley's "What Do I Get?", "Love You More", the classic "Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)", "Promises" (with Diggle), "Everybody's Happy Nowadays" and Diggle's "Harmony In My Head". After three albums and nearly five years on the road, the band fell victim to disillusionment and Shelley quit for a solo career. Steve Diggle re-emerged with Flag Of Convenience, but neither party could reproduce the best of the Buzzcocks.
With hindsight, the Buzzcocks' influence upon British "indie-pop' of the late 80s ranks alongside that of the Ramones or the Velvet Underground. Following the release of the excellent Product box set, Shelley, Diggle, Garvey and Maher re-formed the band for a 1989 reunion tour. They kept going with former Smiths drummer Mike Joyce added to their ranks, with Maher unable to commit because of his devotion to motor racing. For their first major tour since the break-up, 1993's 35-date itinerary, Shelley and Diggle were joined by Tony Barber (bass) and Phil Barker (drums). The Buzzcocks continue to be fêted by the rock cognoscenti, and support tours with Nirvana and a genuinely riveting comeback album (Trade Test Transmissions) added to their legacy. Further studio recordings, All Set and Modern (originally issued with a limited edition bonus CD of classic tracks), confirmed the Buzzcocks" latterday renaissance.