The SLADE Story

1964
Dave Hill and Don Powell play in the Wolverhampton, England band  THE VENDORS.   They do not record commercially but record a 4 song demo EP.

1965
THE VENDORS become THE N�BETWEENS and record under their new name.  The results are released in France on the Barclay label.   Meanwhile, Noddy Holer is performing as guitarist and vocalist for Columbia recording artist STEVE BRETT.

1966
Noddy Holder leaves STEVE BRETT�s band and becomes road manager for a band called LISTEN  (which features ROBERT PLANT on vocals).   He meets multi-intrsumentalist JIM LEA and develops a drinking-friendship.   The two discuss forming a band as Dave Hill and DonPowell freqeuent LISTEN gigs.  By November, Holder, Lea, Hill and Powell have joined forces as the next version of the THE N�BETWEENS.   They begin auditioning vocalists.
ROBERT PLANT is considered the forerunner for the vocal spot.   However, the band is offered a high paying spot previous to having chosen  a new singer.  At the last minute, Noddy Holder takes over the vocal chores.  The response to Noddy�s raspy, soulful vocal chords is phenomenal.  Mr. Plant is handed his pink slip and the future SLADE line-up is born.   (Rob would, of course, go on to wonderful success as vocalist for LED ZEPPELIN, so we needn�t feel sorry at this point.  - ED)
With Noddy on vocals, The N�BETWEENS record  �You Better Run�  for Columbia Records.  It is the group�s last recording under this name.

1969
After playing mostly covers  (Motown, Beatles, Stax and ska)  on the Midlands club circuit, the band moves to London.   They change their name to AMBROSE SLADE and are soon spotted by CHAS CHANDLER  (ex-Animals bassist and then-manager of JIMI HENDRIX).  He signs the group immediately to a contract and decides to capitalize on the group�s  �skinhead�  following   (it should be noted here - that this is refering to the �original SKINHEAD cult of the UK�,  a very peaceful lot and in no way affiliated with the neo-fascist skinheads more familiar in today�s headlines. 
SLADE was not ever affiliated with such a prejudice and ignorant crowd, thanxs very much.  Skinheads back in the early 70s were listening to reggae and ska, smoking bongs and had no intentions of spawning ANYTHING related to the swastika....they liked to party - but WERE NOT into violence of any kind  -  ED)  
Slade releases  �Beginnings�   (titled  �Ballzy�  in America)  to no avail.  Audiences are aparently not ready for an act dressed in boots, braces, and with short, cropped hair.

1970
The band shortens it�s name to SLADE and releases the excellent, rowdy singles,  �Wild Winds Are Blowing�  and  �Shapes Of Things To Come�.   They are unsuccessful for the moment.   In the 1990s, however, they will prove to be great catalysts for the �alternative� movement within rock music as artists such as Kurt Cobain take cues from the band. Slade also issues the now classic �Play It Loud�  album.   It also fails to chart.

1971
Chas Chandler insists that the band record  �Get Down And Get WIth It�   (a longtime live favorite)   and SLADE conceeds.   It is their breakthrough single...reaching  #16  on the UK singles chart.
In November - the band�s follow-up single,  the sarcastic  �Coz I Luv You�  tops the European charts for four weeks.   It is the first of 6 chart  topping singles and a 5 year

1972
In April, SLADE releases  �SLADE ALIVE!�.   This album will set the precedence for live recordings for years to come.  KISS will mimic its format later in the decade.   BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN will attempt to capture the same  �live presence�  as   SLADE ALIVE throughout his  reign as hira live artist.   It will cause many performers to reconsider their stage presence.   Much later, ROLLING STONE magazine will name
SLADE ALIVE as one of the Top Five Best Live Recordings of All Time.   With good reason.   The record climbed to UK #2  and stayed there for over a YEAR!    �SLADE ALIVE showcases a pub band, who at first, can�t catch a break from it�s audience...but by the last track leaves them shouting;  no, begging, for more.�  =  Mark Thompson, The Aesthetic  In May, SLADE begins it�s first major headlining tour - supported by STATUS QUO.
In the meantime, the band tops the European charts with  �Take Me Bak �Ome�  and  �Mama Weer All Crazee Now�. A preview from the band�s up-coming album,  �Gudbuy T� Jane�  reaches European #2 behind Chuck Berry�s  �My Ding A Ling�

1973
�Slayed?�  tops the European charts for 3 weeks as  �Mama Weer All Crazee Now�  continues to dominate the top of the UK singles chart.
Years in retrospective, NME  (New Musical Express - the UK equivilent of Rolling Stone Stateside)  would proclaim  �SLAYED?�  as  �one of the greatest rock and roll releases forever�.     Buy it if you ain�t got it.
In March, �Cum On Feel The Noize� tops the European chart for 4 weeks - confirming SLADE with the most successful run of hit singles  achieved by a group in the �post Beatles era�.
In June, �Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me�  (a track recorded as a joke by the band - and subsequently disowned)  tops the European charts.    (The song had been recorded as a lark - SLADE found themselves making fun of their success.   It was accidentally turned into the record label  according to legend  and became a HUGE hit.   This is subject to debate.  Did SLADE succomb to TOTAL pop CRAP or did they �accidentally� realease this song?   Who the hell knows.  Whothe hell cares?  -ED)
IN JULY drummer DON POWELL is seriously injured in a car crash, in which his girlfriend Angela Morris is killed.  He will be hospitalized for 6 weeks and will suffer memory problems for many months.
IN THE INTERIM, a compilation of SLADE�s greatest hits thus far, �SLADEST�,   is issued.   It tops the European charts for 3 weeks.
In December - the band releases the seasonal  �MERRY Xmas EVERYBODY�.   The track was recorded the previous year in New York while on tour.  It now tops the European Chart for 5 weeks.   After selling over a quarter million copies in its first day of release, it becomes SLADE�s biggest single - selling quadra-million in Europe  (it re-charts every Christmas from 1981 - 1994)

1974
Drummer Don Powell is fit again and a new album is issued.  �Old, New, Borrowed and Blue�  is SLADE�s third consecutive European chart topper.    It is a terrible sell-out.  Instead of the band�s infamous anthems of decadence and alcohol - fans have found tracks of almost pop  eloquence.   Are SLADE taking themselves too seriously?   Or is this an  �easy way to pass the time�  as they heal from sudden popular super-stardom?
Consdiering the band�s current situation  (Don�s recovery), however, all can be taken in stride.
The record is released in the States as �Stomp Your Hands/Clap Your Feet�.  It�s raucous title leaves many Americans confused.   This is the  band �tearing up clubs in Europe?�    This is the group  �causing riots throughout England?�    Stateside listeners disregard SLADE immediately.
This album will plague SLADE forever in America.   With good reason.   This IS NOT the SLADE era one should be introduced to.  In America, SLADE is practically a joke.  In Europe � SLADE is HUGE.   Go figure.
Regardless, SLADE begins work on a film. 

Tasters from the band�s upcoming film begin to climb the European charts.  �The Bangin� Man�  (which is banned on some European radio stations due to it�s sexual inneundo)  reaches #3 in Europe and the hymnal �Far Far Away� tops the European chart.  Both singles show SLADE firmly back in place;  shedding the  �cheesy� quality of  �Old, New Borrowed And Blue�  for  a much more sophisticated direction.   The band is  truly growing at this point.
The soundtrack and film are released later in the year.  The film is dark, almost �film noir� and surprises many fans.   �FLAME�  is certainly not the Beatlesque movie many had expected.   It is, instead, somewhat serious and bleak - and features very impressive acting debuts from the group.   In the 1990s,  �FLAME� is regarded as one of the more intriguing �rock films�.
The movie, however, does begin to distance the band from much of it�s core following  (until now - that following had consisted primarily of teenagers).  The band, nevertheless, does slowly capitalize upon it�s NEW following of more discriminatory listeners.

1975
Another track from the film,  �How Does It Feel�  (perhaps Slade�s most endearing and impressive song)  reaches only #15 on the European chart and ends Slade�s run of continuous Top 5 singles.    �Thanks For The Memory�, however, restores the group to the top half of the chart - reaching #7 in May.
In September, the band�s film debuts in America.   It will make little impression in the U.S. as many critics and listeners are still confused by this  �strange little band from Wolverhampton�   (in the words of one American writer).
In December, Slade issues the single,  �In For A Penny�.  It reaches #11 in Europe and is from the band�s up-coming release  �Nobody�s Fools�.

1976
In Feburary, SLADE releases  �Nobody�s Fools�.   The album, recorded in New York City,  is an interesting departure from the band�s usual �rock and pop anthems�. Slade, instead, opts for funk and soul.  They definately prove themselves capable but, as punk rock begins to increase in popularity in the UK, much of the band�s dominance of the charts begins to wane.   Still, a couple of singles from the album,  the title track and  �Let�s Call It Quits�  make significant impact.
�Let�s Call It Quits� proves prophetic as SLADE begins to sense it�s fall from public grace.  They do not re-sign to Polydor records but, instead, move to Chas Chandler�s tiny Barn label.   The band suspects that this will allow them complete artistic control of future releases and an opportunity to watch the new wave/punk movement from the shadows.

1977
The band�s debut single for Barn,  �Gypsy Roadhog� reaches only #48 in Europe and their next single,  the excellent  �Burning In The Heat Of  Love� fails to chart   (their first miss since 1970).   Punk and New Wave dominate Europe as disco sweeps America.

1978-1979
Alongside the band�s unsuccessful singles,  SLADE also releases a couple of unsuccessful albums!   Beginning with the brilliant  �Whatever Happened To Slade�,  followed by �Slade Alive II�  and wrapping things up with the elusive  �Return To Base� set.
Happily, these records are being rediscovered today by the youth of America.  Many of today�s successful  �alternative�  artists point to these records as inspiration.   �Whatever Happened To Slade?�  features excellent  jam sessions from SLADE. Very sonic. As is  �Return To Base�.
Both practically have �Smashing Pumpkins, Nirvana and Soundgarden� written all over them.
�Slade Alive II�  points to the fact that SLADE, regardless of chart popularity, is ALWAYS a stunning live attraction.   During their  �low�  phase  -  the band was still able to sell out even the toughest venue in Europe.  �Alive II� documents that and gives us a peek at how SLADE  handled an arena/festival crowd.
The group�s perseverance would soon pay off.   The coming 1980s would herald a massive resurgence in SLADE�s popularity.
In the meantime, though, Noddy Holder, Jim Lea and his brother Frankie form a group called THE DUMMIES.   In an experiement in New Wave music, the trio releases three singles.   The songs place on the independent chart in Europe and the �band� is offered a record deal from the ulta-hip new wave/punk label Stiff Records!   Once the label discovers that the band is actually one half of SLADE  -  who is tied to a contract with Barn Records...and nevertheless not interested in doing this New Wave thing full time...the contract is withdrawn.   Noddy and Jim have a great laugh over the whole thing - Stiff Records is a little pissed off and publicly embarassed.
The songs, which feature Jim on vocals   (part of the deception, as Noddy�s voice is far too recognizable)  are later released on CD on Frankie�s label, Cheapskate Records.

1980
Slade releases an EP titled,  �When I�m Dancin�, I Ain�t Fightin��,  which begins to climb the UK indie chart.  Interest in SLADE begins to return.
The big �comeback�, however, does not occur until this year�s Reading Rock Festival.  At the last minute, Ozzy Osbourne is forced to withdraw as the show�s headliner.   He suggests SLADE as a replacement.  The baffled promoters   (�is SLADE still together?�)  locate the band on tour in Germany.   SLADE flies to the festival and steps on stage to face an enourmous crowd of pissed off Ozzy fans.
At first, the band is hissed at and organizers fear a massive riot.  SLADE is not phased.  They have faced far worse crowds in the pubs of  England many years before.  Winning an audience over is their specialty.  
And they do (win them over).   This fantastic performance is later preserved on disc as an EP. SLADE is called back for several encores � they eventually have to resort to playing  �Merry Xmas Everybody� in July.  SLADE is back - with a vengence.
Hot on the heels of this incredible performance, SLADE releases  �We�ll Bring The House Down�  and the title track climbs to #10 on the European chart.  This is the group�s first Top Ten hit in six years!
SLADE is suddenly found on the covers of magazines and tabloids EVERYWHERE - �just like the good old days�.
Major labels throughout the world vie for the band�s signatures on a new contract.  The band finally signs with RCA. 1981  SLADE releases  �Till Deaf Do Us Part�.   This is band�s first foray into  �heavy metal� music.   Suddenly, SLADE finds themselves being associated with the likes of Iron Maiden!
The group undertakes a massive tour of Europe - again playing to sold out crowds throughout.

1982 - 1984
With success in Europe sky-rocketing again, American major label executives begin to wonder what the fuss is all about.   Upon investigating, they discover that SLADE is actually a really great band!   Wow!   What a breakthrough! SLADE signs a deal with CBS Records in the States.
While recording their next album,  American band QUIET RIOT scores a massive hit with a copycat revival of SLADE�s  �Cum On Feel The Noize�.   In fact, the entire new wave of American heavy metal bands is influenced by SLADE.   The American audience finds itself listening to music it dismissed in the 1970s.
As a taster from the up-coming album, SLADE releases what is perhaps it�s catchiest single in the UK, �My Oh My�.   It tops the European chart.
The band releases  �The Amazing Kamikaze Syndrome�  in Europe and  �Keep Your Hands Off My Power Supply� (A slightly different �Kamikaze Syndrome�)  in America.
�Run Runaway� proves to be SLADE�s American breakthrough hit.   It enters the US Top 10 and reaches #7 in Europe.  �My Oh My� will also prove to be a huge American hit. Meanwhile, Quiet Riot releases yet another SLADE revival,  �Mama Weer All Crazee Now�.

1985
Slade�s success in America continues.   The group�s follow-up to �Keep Your Hands Off My Power Supply�  is titled   �Rogues Gallery�  and
bears four hit singles,  �Little Shelia�,  �Seven Year Bitch�,  �The Myzsterious Mizter Jones� and �Walking On Water, Running On Alcohol�.

Nevertheless,  the band�s  American record label, CBS Associated,  shows little support for the band.   Despite a great deal of radio play and interest in the band - SLADE is granted very little tour support and is forced to sacrifice it�s hold on the American market...again.  Fickle American audiences, with little in the way of visual stimulation  (only �Little Shelia� is granted a video for MTV)  quickly lose interest.

Europe remains kind, however.  �Rogues Gallery�  proves sucessful throughout the continent and in December, SLADE releases the intriguing �Crackers!�  album.  What a fun surprise this record was!  The set is chock-full of Christmas classics  (�Santa Claus Is Comin� To Town� and the like) done only in true SLADE fashion.   That is to say,
the yuletide favorites are loud, scrappy and suited only for a holiday cheer full of liquor and good friends....um, not mom and dad.  It�s a wonderful rock and roll Christmas album.   In fact, perhaps one of the best   (it is, after all, rock and roll,  and SLADE hardly take the holiday spirit seriously - a welcome refreshment in 1985 following several  �Very Special Christmas� albums featuring Bryan Adams, a dwindling Eurythmics and Linda Rondstadt...all of which took everything  far too seriously for the sake of only their bank-books....who�s cynical?!)
�Crackers! - The Slade Christmas Party Album� became a great hit throughout Europe.  The CD was  (mis-takenly not  issued in the States).
The band rounded out the year with another hit song,  �Do You Believe In Miracles?�  -  offspring of the �Crackers!� album.



THE  SLADE  DISCOGRAPHY

Albums

Beginnings  (-/Fontana)  1969
Ballzy  (Fontana/-)  1969
Play It Loud   (Cotillion/Polydor)  1970
Slade Alive!  (Polydor)  1972
Slayed?  (Polydor)  1972
Sladest   (Reprise/Polydor)  1973
Old, New, Borrowed And Blue  (-/Polydor)  1974
Stomp Your Hands, Clap Your Feet  (Warner Brothers/-)  1974
Slade In Flame  (Warner Brothers/Polydor)  1974
Beginnings Of Ambrose Slade  (-/Contour)  1975
Nobody�s Fools  (Warner Brothers/Polydor)  1976
Whatever Happened To Slade?!  (-/Barn)  1977
Slade Alive!  Volume Two   (-/Barn)  1978
Return To Base  (-/Barn)  1979
Slade Smashes  (-/Polydor)  1980
We�ll Bring The House Down  (-/Cheapskate)  1981
�Till Deaf Do Us Part  (-/RCA)  1981
Slade On Stage  (-/RCA)  1982
The Amazing Kamikaze Syndrome   (-/RCA)  1983
Keep Your Hands Off My Power Supply  (CBS Associated/-)  1984
Slade�s Greats   (Polydor)  1984
Rogues Gallery  (CBS Associated/RCA)  1985
Crackers!  -  The Slade Christmas Party Album   (-/Castle)  1985
You Boyz Make Big Noize  (CBS Associated/RCA)  1987
The Slade Story, Volume One  (-/Bear Trax)  1990
The Slade Story, Volume Two  (-/Bear Trax)  1990
The Slade Collection  1981-1987   (-/RCA)   1991
Wall Of Hits  (-/Polydor)  1991
The Slade Collection  1979 - 1987   (-/RCA)   1993
Feel The Noize:  The Very Best Of Slade   (-/Polydor)  1997

SINGLES
                     
TITLE                                             YEAR OF RELEASE              PEAK US CHART POS.   PEAK UK CHART POS.

Genesis                                            (1969)                                       did not chart                       did not chart

Wild Winds Are Blowing                    (1969)                                       did not chart                       did not chart

The Shape Of Things To Come          (1970)                                       did not chart                        did not chart

Know Who You Are                          (1970)                                        did not chart                      did not chart

Get Down And Get With It                 (1971)                                          did not chart                    #16

Coz I Luv You                                 (1971)                                         did not chart                     #1

Look Wot You Dun                          (1972)                                       did not chart                     #4

Take Me Bak� �Ome                         (1972)                                         #97                                 #1

Mama Weer All Crazee Now             (1972)                                          #76                                 #1

Gudbuy T� Jane                              (1972)                                        #68                                   #2

Cum On Feel The Noize                  (1973)                                         #98                                  #1

Skweeze Me Pleeze Me                   (1973)                                         did not chart                    #1

My Friend Stan                             (1973)                                         did not chart                    #2

Merry Xmas Everybody!!                (1973)                                       did not chart                    #1

Everyday                                         (1974)                                      did not chart                    #3

The Bangin� Man                            (1974)                                      did not chart                    #3

Far Far Away                                  (1974)                                      did not chart                     #2


How Does It Feel?                         (1975)                                        did not chart                    #15

Thanks For The Memory              (1975)                                       did not chart                      #7

In For A Penny                            (1975)                                       did not chart                     #11

Let�s Call It Quits                        (1976)                                      did not chart                      #11

Nobody�s Fool                              (1976)                                      did not chart                     #14

Gypsy Roadhog                           (1977)                                      did not chart                      #48

Burning In The Heat Of Love         (1977)                                     did not chart                     did not chart  

My Baby Left Me/That�s Alright Mama  (1977)                        did not chart                      #42

TITLE                                         YEAR OF RELEASE             PEAK US CHART POS.   PEAK UK CHART POS.

Give Us A Goal                           (1978)                                     did not chart                       did not chart

Rock n Roll Bolero                      (1978)                                      did not chart                      did not chart

Ginny Ginny                                (1979)                                      did not chart                     did not chart

Sign O� The Times                      (1979)                                      did not chart                     did not chart

Okey Cokey                                 (1979)                                      did not chart                    did not chart

We�ll Bring The House Down        (1981)                                     did not chart                     #10

Wheels Ain�t Comin� Down          (1981)                                     did not chart                     #60

Knuckle Sandwhich Nancy           (1981)                                    did not chart                    did not chart

Lock Up Your Daughters               (1981)                                   did not chart                    #29

Ruby Red                                        (1982)                                   did not chart                    #51

(And Now The Waltz)  C�est La Vie   (1982)                             did not chart                    #50

My Oh My                                     (1983)                                    #37                                  #2

Run Run Away                              (1984)                                    #20                                  #7

Slam The Hammer Down             (1984)                                   did not chart                      did not chart

All Join Hands                               (1984)                                    did not chart                    #15

Seven Year Bitch                           (1985)                                   did not chart                    #60

Myzterious Mizter Jones                 (1985)                                  did not chart                    #50

Little Shelia                                      (1985)                                 #46                               did not chart

Do You Believe In Miracles?             (1985)                                  did not chart                    #54

Walking On Water, Running On Alcohol (1986)                            #86                                 did not chart

I Win, You Lose                             (1986)                                 #92                                  did not chart
  
Still The Same                               (1987)                                    #52                                  #73

You Boyz Make Big Noize               (1987)                                   #67                                did not chart

Let�s Dance                                    (1988)                                   did not chart                   #52

Radio Wall Of Sound                     (1991)                                   did not chart                  #19
 
Universe                                         (1991)                                    did not chart                 #38
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