In early 1980, Andrews and Laff recorded as
session musicians on
Jimmy Pursey's first solo album
Imagination Camouflage (1980) (Andrews receiving co-writing credit for two of the LP's songs, "Freak Show" and "Situation's Vacant"), before in mid-1980 Andrews and Laff with the bassist Simon Bernal formed the three man
post-punk band
Empire, with Andrews as the act's lead vocalist. Empire released via the new label Dinosaur Discs, backed by a record shop of the same name at No. 17 Barons Court Road in
West Kensington, the song "Hot Seat" (1981), with a B-side entitled "All These Things", which failed to enter the UK Singles Chart. A long-player entitled
Expensive Sound (1981), recorded without a producer at Alvic Studios in
Barons Court, also failed to enter the UK Album Chart. The band played a handful of gigs around London before Bernal left. After an unstable line-up and some more gigging in 1981–1982, Laff left the act in February 1983 in frustration with its lack of apparent commercial development. In early 1983, Andrews renamed the act New Empire after recruiting the vocalist Babel Wallace, Mike Gregovich (one of the sound engineers at Alvic Studios who had recorded the band's
Expensive Sound LP) playing bass, and Crispin Taylor on the drums. The new line-up released a
white label 12" titled "Inside You", and toured in the UK in 1983 as a support act to
John Miles and
Roman Holliday, and also in
Spain, where it found some unanticipated and mysteriously caused popularity with well attended shows. However, without a record label's support, New Empire's increasingly adverse financial circumstances led to Andrews ending it in February 1984 at a gig at the Thames Hall in
Slough,
Berkshire; Andrews signaling the defeat by wrecking his
amp with his guitar in the band's final performance. (A retrospective album of New Empire material would be released in the United States 24 years later entitled
Expansive Sound (2009)). Despite its lack of commercial success, Empire was an influential band in the development of the
emo music genre in the United States, and an acknowledged key influence via songs such as "Him or Me" (1981) on the development of the sound of
The Stone Roses from the
Manchester scene of the late 1980s. The
Expansive Sound LP was commercially re-issued in the United Kingdom in 1986. In the United States, it was re-issued in 2003 by the label Poorly Packaged Products as a double album containing seven previously unreleased studio recordings by the band and live performance material, and in 2014 a limited run collector's edition of the original record and sleeve artwork was released by Drastic Plastic Records. ==Westworld==