The Stupids are an English hardcore punk band formed in the 1980s by Tom Withers.

The Stupids
OriginIpswich, England
GenresSkate punk
Years active1984–1989; 2008–present
LabelsChildren of the Revolution, Vinyl Solution, Boss Tuneage
MembersTommy Stupid
Marty Tuff
Johnny Stallion
Past membersWolfie Retard
Ed Shred
Steve Snax
Pauly Pizza
Rossi O'Schmitt

Career edit

 
Ed Shred performing in Vienna in 1987

Formed in Ipswich, England in the mid 1980s,[1] The Stupids released four albums and six EPs, and recorded three sessions for John Peel's BBC Radio 1 show in the 1980s,[2] and toured the United States (with Ludichrist) and Australia (the Hard-Ons) as well as Europe, the United Kingdom, and, most recently, Japan.

The band have featured on various CD re-issues, compilation albums (e.g. Sounds and the U.S. skate magazine, Thrasher), collector singles, and BBC session releases released by Strange Fruit.

The Stupids were featured in the 22 August 1987 edition of the NME about the band and the UK skate scene, and also made the front page.[3]

A live video tape, Drive-In Hit Movie, was released shortly after the band broke up in 1989.[4]

Post-break up edit

After the band split, Tommy Stupid went on to forge a new career in drum and bass as Klute. Of the other members, Wolfie Retard continued with Perfect Daze and Lovejunk, while Ed Shred continued with Sink (later Big Ray);[5] both also played together in the band Chocolate. After a hiatus from live music, Ed went on to form K-Line, and later Dealing With Damage.[6]

Reunion edit

Tommy Stupid reformed the Stupids in 2008, with a new line-up.[7] In June 2008, Boss Tuneage released a comprehensive reissues series of the Stupids, co-ordinating six CD and LP reissues of their entire back catalogue; four for release on the Boss Tuneage Retro Series imprint, the other two on Visible Noise.

In 2009, The Stupids released their first studio album in 20 years, The Kids Don't Like it, on Boss Tuneage.

2011 saw the release of Japanese Vacation on Waterslide Records, Boss Tuneage's sister label, to coincide with a tour of Japan. The band had to cancel their 2012 European tour because Tommy Stupid broke his leg.

 
Tommy Stupid, Marty Tuff & Wolfie Retard at Treetop Studios during the recording of Peruvian Vacation

Members edit

  • Tommy Stupid - drums/vocals/guitars
  • Wolfie Retard - bass/vocals
  • Marty Tuff - guitar
  • Ed Shred - guitar/vocals/bass
  • Gizz Butt - guitar
  • Steve Snax - bass
  • Pauly Pizza - bass
  • Rossi O'Schmitt - bass (2008–2012)
  • Wild Johnny Stallion (John Roscoe) - bass (2013–present)

with guest spots from:

  • Stuey Q - bass
  • Mitch - guitar
  • Bobby Justice - vocals
  • Dave Ross - vocals
  • Chris Shary - vocals
  • Ziggy - drums

Discography edit

Albums edit

  • Peruvian Vacation (Children of The Revolution Records - 1985)
  • Retard Picnic (Children of The Revolution Records - 1986)
  • Van Stupid (Vinyl Solution - 1987)
  • Jesus Meets The Stupids (Vinyl Solution - 1988)
  • The Kids Don't Like It album (Boss Tuneage - 2009)

EPs and singles edit

  • Violent Nun 7-inch EP (Children of The Revolution Records - 1985)
  • Eat 12-inch EP (As Frankfurter) (Vinyl Solution - 1987)
  • Mail Order Only 7-inch EP (Vinyl Solution - 1987)
  • The Peel Sessions 7-inch/12" EP (Strange Fruit - 1988)
  • No Cheese! (The High-Way To Hell Tour Souvenir) 10-inch EP (Split Tour EP With The Hard-Ons) (Vinyl Solution/Waterfront Records - 1989)
  • Wipe Out 7-inch EP (A PBJ Production - 1989)
  • "Feel The Suck" 7-inch (Boss Tuneage - 2008)
  • Japanese Vacation EP (Waterslide Records/Boss Tuneage - 2011)
  • Demonstration Tape '89 7-inch EP (Alona's Dream - 2013)

References edit

  1. ^ Glasper, Ian (2009). Trapped In A Scene - UK Hardcore 1985-1989. Cherry Red Records. ISBN 978-1-901447-61-3.
  2. ^ Colin Larkin, ed. (1999). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Heavy Rock (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 432. ISBN 0-7535-0257-7.
  3. ^ "NME August 1987 | VSM". Vintageskateboardmagazines.com. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  4. ^ "The Stupids | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  5. ^ "Sink Discography". 28 February 2018. Archived from the original on 28 February 2018. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  6. ^ "Dealing With Damage - Interview". Hopecollectiveireland.com. 31 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Stupids interview – Caught in the Crossfire". Caughtinthecrossfire.com. 4 April 2014. Retrieved 1 June 2020.

External links edit