After meeting at college Gareth, Graham and Marc noted a shared interest in bands such as
The Damned,
The Who and
The Sex Pistols, and formed The Plague in the autumn of 1976. Drummer Greg Horton completed the line-up, and the band began playing together at a rehearsal space attached to a church in
Bromley. By early 1977 The Plague were playing locally, soon securing a regular slot at the
Battersea Arts Centre – initially as support to musical-play "The Food Show". They were the first
punk rock band to play at the venue, playing a twenty-minute set to open the show as well as providing a contemporary soundtrack to The Food Show in return for rehearsal space. As The Food Show was put on by the
Inner London Education Authority (ILEA), the unlikely pairing played other ILEA venues together. However this was a short-lived arrangement after the band played soon-to-be fan-favourite "1, 2, Fuck You!" one night at a school. Despite requesting a punk show, school staff in the audience went berserk, almost leading to a fight between the school's PE teacher and the band/manager. The headmaster demanded an apology from The Plague, which was unforthcoming, so from that point onward they were banned from all ILEA venues – rather a fitting and appropriate state of affairs for a hungry teenage punk band in 1977. Having recorded their first demo (containing such embryonic examples of their sound as: "Again and Again", "On The Dole", and "Nightmares") The Plague began their long-standing relationship with
The Roxy club, playing shows with such punk luminaries as the
UK Subs and
Slaughter and the Dogs. Eventually the club manager Kevin St John would phone the band up when others had cancelled gigs at the last minute. As well as regulars to the club the band brought with them their "Battersea Mob", a group of punks based at The Old Swan pub in
Battersea. The Battersea Mob proved to be the most loyal of fans, some even trekking as far afield as
Coventry and
Manchester to see the band. It was during this time that the band wrote many songs including "Spies", "Personality Clash", "No Strings Attached", "End of the World", "Politician" and "Nuffin' Doing". After
The Roxy closed The Plague remained active, playing at the Institute of Psychiatry,
Camberwell, and
Toyah Willcox's club night "Mayhem". One outstanding gig at the Institute resulted in interest from
CBS records. == Early singles and career==