SQUAD
BACK TO THE BAND INDEX
1977 - 1981
Coventry punk band is the band that Terry Hall came from when he later joined The Coventry Automatics (later called The Specials).
Millionaire / Brockhill boys / Red alert / £8 a week
Johnny Adams says of the last line up of Squad with Johnny, Nigel Mulgrave, Steve Young, Gus Chambers - "John Adams - we done the best recording in Leamington Spa.. I had one copy..borrowed it to someone year's ago..never seen or heard it since..I don't know if the others guys have a copy..about 4 or 5 tracks..one of the tracks is one of mine..Different age, Different World..love to hear it again..probably the best Squad ever sounded"
Red Alert 1978 above.
Line up - There were a lot of changes!
Terry Hall - Vocals (Later of The Specials).Replaced by Gus Chambers - Vocals (later of 21 Guns)
Danny Cunningham - Guitar
Mark Hatwood - Drums (at some point). Billy Little - replaced by Rob Hill - replaced by Steve Young
Scully - Guitar
Sam McNulty - Bass, replaced by Nigel Mulvey - Bass (Nigel later in The Urge.)
Johnny Adams - Guitar (Ex Fission and many other bands)
Steve Young - Drums
Danny Cunningham - Guitar
Mark Hatwood - Drums (at some point). Billy Little - replaced by Rob Hill - replaced by Steve Young
Scully - Guitar
Sam McNulty - Bass, replaced by Nigel Mulvey - Bass (Nigel later in The Urge.)
Johnny Adams - Guitar (Ex Fission and many other bands)
Steve Young - Drums
Above, Squad with Gus Chambers on on vocals and Johnny Adams guitar.
Singles
As far as I know the songs are Ady Dix compositions.
1st single Red Alert and £8 a Week. The singles were recorded after Terry Hall left but he has i believe a writing credit on Red Alert. " So many line up changes meant 6 months after releasing the two singles none of the original band remained"
Singles below on youtube - more details about the recordings are here https://www.discogs.com/artist/350553-Squad-3
Red Alert 1978 above.
Eight Pound a Week 1978, above. Was covered by the Last Resort.
2nd Single 1979 Millionaire / Brockhill Boys
Millionaire 1979
Brock Hill Boys - above.
The Flasher - Squad - from the Sent from Coventry album 1979. I think Ady Dix was one of the composers of this.
About the band
Pete Chambers from his article in the Coventry Telegraph 18th Nov 2014 - a tribute to Gus Chambers.
" Just over six years ago Coventry and the world of music lost one of its most colourful and charismatic figures, Mr Gus ‘Gary’ Chambers.
He will always be remembered for his days in Squad. So we take a look back at this top Coventry punk band.
If you’re talking Cov and punk then you’re talking Squad. Without doubt they were the finest punk band that ever came from this beloved City of ours.
They began their life in the posturing safety-pin clad mid 70s. With a certain Terry Hall on vocals, Danny Cunningham guitar, Billy Little drums and Sam McNulty on bass.
Hall, who was never really cut out for a life of punk, left to join a band called The Specials (whatever became of them?).
He was replaced by the great Gus Chambers. Now Gus was cut out to be a punk, after seeing Roddy Radiation and the Wild Boys he was hooked.
Squad’s rock 'n' roll punk style was the kind of dish most punters in the late 70s were looking for. If you didn’t move at least a little at a Squad gig then you must have reached your sell-by date some years previous. It was always sweaty, loud and enthusiastic with some great laughs thrown in.
The line-up changed constantly, with the band effectively becoming a training ground for Cov musicians. Danny Cunningham would leave and form The Ramrods/ Major 5/Gdansk.
Their drummers would include Mark Hatwood, Rob Hill and Steve Young. Guitarists included Jim Scully (from local band 1984) and Johnny Adams (from the bands The Blue Jays, RU21, Fission, and Don’t Talk Wet).
With Nigel Mulvey then Nick Edwards replacing Sam McNulty on bass, Sam eventually ended up with The Giraffes.
Vocalist Gus looked at all the line-up changes like this, "Coventry was a hotbed of talent in the late 70s, early 80s, some cutting-edge bands were formed, so it was hard to keep good musicians in your own band".
They released two singles in their illustrious career, 'Millionaire' (where they were hanging out with The Radford Boys) and 'Red Alert' with the rather wonderful '£8 a Week' on the other side. They also got onto 'The Sent From Coventry' compilation with the song 'Flasher'.
The singles also appear on The Anagram album Punk Rock Rarities Vol 2. Songs you were likely to hear at their gigs included Brockhill Boys (Millionaire’s other side), 'Son Of Sam', 'We Understand' and 'Bag On Your Head'.
They knew how to play the crowd. I will always remember them singing 'The Bells are Ringing For Me and My Girl' at The Market Tavern.
Whatever the song though, whatever the venue, be it The Heath Hotel, The Hand and Heart, The Domino or Mr George’s, you knew they would always come up with the goods, great times.
Of course it wasn’t all fun in those days, punk rockers despite the fact that most of them were decent friendly people, were stigmatised because of how they looked.
One incident Gus recalled happened in Birmingham after a Boomtown Rats gig.
"We were sitting in this club with a couple of band members, when in burst a guy with a huge kitchen knife screaming all punks must die because they had killed Elvis Presley.
"No one was hurt but it shows what a negative role the media played in it’s portrayal of punks.
"There were however some positives in that time" Gus says. "The race barriers was smashed down during this period and there was nothing stronger than a united front".
As the last pangs of punk rebellion began to die in the city, Squad members moved on, as for Gus well he joined 21 Guns, who released the single 'Ambition Rock' on Neville Staples Shack Records.
They’re line-up-included Stuart Maclean, Kev Tanner and former Specials roadies Johnny Rex and Barb’d wires own Trevor Evans, the record failed to sell and the band soon split.
Gus later moved to America and formed Sons of Damnation, finally joining the no-messing high-energy metal band Grip Inc.
They were formed by former Slayer drum-king Dave Lombardo. Releasing three brooding albums in the mid to late 90s ('Power of Inner Strength', 'Nemesis' and 'Solidify') finally coming back with a forth entitled 'Incorporated' in 2004 greeted as a true return to form by the critics.
"I’ve been very lucky in my career," said Gus, "I have had the privilege of playing in front of thousands of people at festivals like Rock in Rio and the Dynamo Festival in Holland.
"Nothing though brings back fonder memories of playing in front of maybe 20 or 30 people in The Hand and Heart or the back room of The Swanswell."
He is very much missed.
He will always be remembered for his days in Squad. So we take a look back at this top Coventry punk band.
If you’re talking Cov and punk then you’re talking Squad. Without doubt they were the finest punk band that ever came from this beloved City of ours.
They began their life in the posturing safety-pin clad mid 70s. With a certain Terry Hall on vocals, Danny Cunningham guitar, Billy Little drums and Sam McNulty on bass.
Hall, who was never really cut out for a life of punk, left to join a band called The Specials (whatever became of them?).
He was replaced by the great Gus Chambers. Now Gus was cut out to be a punk, after seeing Roddy Radiation and the Wild Boys he was hooked.
Squad’s rock 'n' roll punk style was the kind of dish most punters in the late 70s were looking for. If you didn’t move at least a little at a Squad gig then you must have reached your sell-by date some years previous. It was always sweaty, loud and enthusiastic with some great laughs thrown in.
The line-up changed constantly, with the band effectively becoming a training ground for Cov musicians. Danny Cunningham would leave and form The Ramrods/ Major 5/Gdansk.
Their drummers would include Mark Hatwood, Rob Hill and Steve Young. Guitarists included Jim Scully (from local band 1984) and Johnny Adams (from the bands The Blue Jays, RU21, Fission, and Don’t Talk Wet).
With Nigel Mulvey then Nick Edwards replacing Sam McNulty on bass, Sam eventually ended up with The Giraffes.
Vocalist Gus looked at all the line-up changes like this, "Coventry was a hotbed of talent in the late 70s, early 80s, some cutting-edge bands were formed, so it was hard to keep good musicians in your own band".
They released two singles in their illustrious career, 'Millionaire' (where they were hanging out with The Radford Boys) and 'Red Alert' with the rather wonderful '£8 a Week' on the other side. They also got onto 'The Sent From Coventry' compilation with the song 'Flasher'.
The singles also appear on The Anagram album Punk Rock Rarities Vol 2. Songs you were likely to hear at their gigs included Brockhill Boys (Millionaire’s other side), 'Son Of Sam', 'We Understand' and 'Bag On Your Head'.
They knew how to play the crowd. I will always remember them singing 'The Bells are Ringing For Me and My Girl' at The Market Tavern.
Whatever the song though, whatever the venue, be it The Heath Hotel, The Hand and Heart, The Domino or Mr George’s, you knew they would always come up with the goods, great times.
Of course it wasn’t all fun in those days, punk rockers despite the fact that most of them were decent friendly people, were stigmatised because of how they looked.
One incident Gus recalled happened in Birmingham after a Boomtown Rats gig.
"We were sitting in this club with a couple of band members, when in burst a guy with a huge kitchen knife screaming all punks must die because they had killed Elvis Presley.
"No one was hurt but it shows what a negative role the media played in it’s portrayal of punks.
"There were however some positives in that time" Gus says. "The race barriers was smashed down during this period and there was nothing stronger than a united front".
As the last pangs of punk rebellion began to die in the city, Squad members moved on, as for Gus well he joined 21 Guns, who released the single 'Ambition Rock' on Neville Staples Shack Records.
They’re line-up-included Stuart Maclean, Kev Tanner and former Specials roadies Johnny Rex and Barb’d wires own Trevor Evans, the record failed to sell and the band soon split.
Gus later moved to America and formed Sons of Damnation, finally joining the no-messing high-energy metal band Grip Inc.
They were formed by former Slayer drum-king Dave Lombardo. Releasing three brooding albums in the mid to late 90s ('Power of Inner Strength', 'Nemesis' and 'Solidify') finally coming back with a forth entitled 'Incorporated' in 2004 greeted as a true return to form by the critics.
"I’ve been very lucky in my career," said Gus, "I have had the privilege of playing in front of thousands of people at festivals like Rock in Rio and the Dynamo Festival in Holland.
"Nothing though brings back fonder memories of playing in front of maybe 20 or 30 people in The Hand and Heart or the back room of The Swanswell."
He is very much missed.
..................................................
Articles from Martin Bowes fanzine Alternative Sounds
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