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The Pooh Sticks

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  • Formed: Swansea, Wales
  • Years Active: 1980s, 1990s

Albums

Biography All Music GuideWikipedia

All Music Guide:

The Pooh Sticks were rock's most inside joke, a monumental yet affectionate prank on the very mythology of pop music itself. Cloaked behind ridiculously overblown marketing schemes, made-up histories, and cartoon-character images, the Welsh group punctured the industry's myriad excesses, freely pilfering from the entirety of pop's past by shoplifting titles, lyrics, and melodies at will; wrapping their barbs in cotton-candy singalongs, their subversions worked on many levels -- postmodern cultural criticism, retro-irony, slavish imitation, and power pop manna among them -- to forge an identity as high concept as it was lowbrow.

The Pooh Sticks were ostensibly led by frontman Hue Pooh (born Hue Williams), who in October 1987 teamed with Swansea-area schoolmates Paul, (guitar), Alison (bass), Trudi Tangerine (keyboards), and Stephanie (drums) -- no last names, please -- and debuted with the single "On Tape," a witty jab at indie rock fan boy mentality released on manager/svengali Steve Gregory's Fierce label. (In actuality, Gregory was the real mastermind behind the Pooh Sticks, writing, arranging, and producing their records, designing their cover artwork, and even choreographing their live performances.) Alan McGee -- an ironically lavish box set comprised entirely of one-sided singles including the famed "I Know Someone Who Knows Someone Who Knows Alan McGee Quite Well," a nod to the Creation Records chief -- followed in 1988.

The Pooh Sticks EP, a streamlined collection of the box set material, appeared later in 1988, trailed by Orgasm, a set "recorded live...in Trudi Tangerine's basement" including the wonderful "Indie Pop Ain't Noise Pollution." The 1989 mock-bootleg Trademark of Quality was next, compiling live material from a pair of recent club dates including a cover of the Vaselines' "Dying for It" as well as an early rendition of the group's semi-original "Young People." In 1990, they even finally recorded a proper studio LP, Formula One Generation.

In 1991, the Pooh Sticks added Talulah Gosh and Heavenly vocalist Amelia Fletcher to their ranks; the resulting LP, The Great White Wonder, was their masterpiece, a collection of ace pop songs built entirely around other people's ideas, from the Neil Young "Powderfinger" guitar solo at the heart of "The Rhythm of Love" to the liberal use of Stephen Stills' "Love the one you're with" credo right down to the record's title, borrowed from a legendary Bob Dylan bootleg. 1993's sublime Million Seller took the same path; 1995's Optimistic Fool was the Pooh Sticks' swan song.

Wikipedia:

The Pooh Sticks were an indie pop band from Swansea, Wales recording between 1988 and 1995. They were notable for their jangly melodiousness and lyrics gently mocking the indie scene of the time such as on "On Tape", "Indiepop Ain't Noise Pollution" and "I Know Someone Who Knows Someone Who Knows Alan McGee Quite Well". The band changed direction on their 1991 U.S breakthrough The Great White Wonder, eschewing the 'twee' British indie pop sound for a more American-styled power pop sound, akin to bands like Jellyfish and Redd Kross. Subsequent albums Million Seller, considered by some power pop fans to be the band's best work, and Optimistic Fool followed in this style.

Line-up [edit]

Steve Gregory - Producer, songwriterHuw Williams - Vocals

Gregory and Williams invented a fictitious line-up which included:

Trudi Tangerine - tambourine/pianoPaul - GuitarStephanie Bass-Drum - DrumsAlison - Bass
Guests [edit]
Amelia Fletcher - Vocals Orgasm, The Great White Wonder and Million Seller.

Compilations Appearances [edit]

1990: "Time to Time" Becket House (Becket House)1991: "Young People" Indie Top 20 Volume 13 (Beechwood Music)1991: "Who Loves You" My Cheree Amour (Cheree Records)1991: "True Life Hero" Revolution No. 9 (Pax Records)1993: "Jelly on a Plate" Lime Lizard (Lime Lizard)1993: "On Tape" Teenbeat 50 (Matador)1993: "Milion Seller" The Alternative Way - Everything Is Beautiful (Ariola Benelux)1994: "Who Loves You" I Like It If You Feel Lucky (Beekeeper)1995: "When the Night Falls" WTAG Radio Club - A Tag Recordings Sampler (Tag Recordings)1998: "Soft Beds, Hard Battles" Their Sympathetic Majesties Request - A Decade of Obscurity and Obsoletes 1988-1998 (Sympathy for the Record Industry)2000: "Indiepop Ain't Noise Pollution" The Sound of Leamington Spa, Volume 1 (Co-production between: TweeNet Communications, Bilberry Records, Firestation Tower Records) **23-Oct-20002004: "I Know Someone Who Knows Someone Who Knows Alan McGee Quite Well" Rough Trade Shops - Indiepop 1 (Mute Records Ltd.)2006: "On Tape" CD86 - 48 Tracks from the Birth of Indie Pop (Castle Music)2010: "Roll Over Easy" Indietracks - Indiepop Compilation 2010 (Make Do and Mend Records)
Radio Sessions [edit]
1988: John Peel Session1989: John Peel Session1991: Mark Goodier Session