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The Art Objects

The Art Objects

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  • Formed: 1978 in Bristol, England
  • Disbanded:1981
  • Years Active: 1970s, 1980s

Biography

The Art Objects were an offbeat British group whose embrace of noisy, non-melodic guitar figures and strong psychedelic influences paved the way for post-punk acts such as Echo & the Bunnymen and the Teardrop Explodes. Formed in Bristol in the southwest of Great Britain, the Art Objects began in mid-1978 as an eccentric three-piece featuring spoken vocals from poet Gerard Langley, fractured guitar accompaniment from Jonathan J. Key (aka Jonjo), and dancing by Wojtek Dmochowski. The Art Objects adopted a more conventional lineup in the summer of 1979 when drummer John Langley joined the band, soon followed by bassist Bill Stair and second guitarist Robin Key (Jonathan's brother). In 1980, the Art Objects released a three-song single for the Fried Egg label, featuring the tracks "Hard Objects," "Biblioteque," and "Fit of Pique"; the record was a modest success on the independent charts, and a second single soon followed, "Showing Off (To Impress the Girls)" and "Our Silver Sister." Heartbeat Records, which released the group's second single, wanted an album from the Art Objects, and Bagpipe Music was recorded during five days of sessions in the summer of 1980. It was nearly a year before Bagpipe Music was finally released, and shortly after it reached stores, the group split up, with Gerard Langley, Wojtek Dmochowski, and John Langley soon forming a new group, the Blue Aeroplanes; most of the songs of the Blue Aeroplanes' debut album, Bop Art, began as Art Objects tunes, and Bill Stair, Jonathan J. Key, and Robin Key helped out during the recording. In 2007, an expanded reissue of Bagpipe Music was released by British indie label Cherry Red.
— Mark Deming , All Music Guide

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The Soft Boys, Apartment

Formal Connections:

The Blue Aeroplanes

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