The band famous for their feuds may have buried the hatchet, but their chaotic performance and gnarly sound has not aged well
The Damned are ending their career as they began it, in a cacophony of amateurish noise and chaos, driven by mischief and opportunism. “It’s the gig they said would never happen!” proclaimed 68-year-old bassist Captain Sensible, waving two fingers into the roaring darkness of Hammersmith Apollo.
To be honest, the only people really standing in the way of this inevitable reunion was the band themselves, who broke up twice, and have a history of violent fall outs. But here they all were, apparently ready to bury the hatchet.
When Stiff records rush released the Damned’s debut single New Rose in October 1976, they made punk history, beating The Sex Pistols by five weeks. The Damned were the class jokers of the scene, forgoing political or artistic aspects to revel in the opportunity to create sonic mayhem. The first incarnation was short lived, when guitarist and songwriter Brian James and hyperactive drummer Rat Scabies (Christopher Millar to his mother) quit in 1977.
Singer Dave Vanian soldiered on, with Sensible (aka Raymond Burns) switching to guitar, and the Damned actually enjoyed more commercial success with succeeding line-ups. Their biggest hits (Love Song, Smash It Up, Grimly Fiendish and a top three 1986 remake of Barry Ryan’s Eloise) were thus excluded from this reunion’s proceedings. Essentially, they blasted through their first two albums with all the rackety energy and lack of finesse that a group of veteran professional musicians could muster.