1970s Transmitters Formation and early releases The band formed in
Ealing, West London in 1977. The original line-up was John Quinn (vocals – also known as "John Clegg", "John Grimes" or "John X"), Sam Dodson (guitar, aka "Sam Dodds"), Simon "Sid" Wells (bass), Amanda de Grey (keyboards), Jim Chase (drums) and Dexter O'Brian (lyrics – real name
Christopher McHallem). Guitarists Steve Walsh (Manicured Noise) and John Guillani (from O'Brian's other band The Decorators) also stood in as live members at various times. Rick Kemp was initially on drums. The band's debut single was "Party", released on Ebony Records in 1978. This was followed in the same year by the album
24 Hours. On 29 December 1978, the band played a concert at the
Electric Ballroom, Camden, supporting
The Police. On 15 February 1979, they supported an early line-up of
The Human League at the Nashville Rooms, West London. (Other bands played with during this period include
Scritti Politti,
The Birthday Party,
Dolly Mixture,
The Slits,
Alternative TV,
The Fall and
Blurt.) A concert at the
Greenwich Theatre on 18 March 1979 was reviewed by both NME and
Record Mirror Review. Writing in the latter, Chris Westwood said "The Transmitters were, as is their forte, unpredictable, uncalculatedly comic, inspiring and brilliant... The sound is open, free, off-the-cuff, bound together through all the stumbling, fumbling chaos that their approach entails. "The One That Won The War", par example, a personal favourite, damn near falls apart at the seams, with clattering whining guitar thrashes mating with probably the most essential bass phrase this side of any other Transmitters number you care to name." NME's
Paul Morley described the music as "feverish and jumpy" and stated "The Transmitters are the cheekiest group I've seen since
The Mekons; the wackiest I've seen since
Public Image (and almost as sinister). They were, of course, great. Naturally, their music is of
Velvets' ancestry; deceptively nonchalant, barely controlled, repetitive, erratic and intoxicating, presented with an odd, wry condescension." The same reviews paid plenty of attention to the band's stage presence, in particular that of the charismatic John Quinn. Describing Quinn as "inscrutable", Morley also claimed that he had "the comedy timing of a
Dave Allen, the detachment of a
Devoto, the amused poise of a
Mark Smith, the cool of a
Sinatra." The Transmitters played a pro-National Abortion Campaign benefit gig at the Hope & Anchor,
Islington, London on 28 October 1979. Reviewing the concert in
Sounds, Nick Tester reflected "The Transmitters were a useful choice for a movement (all about choice) fighting a pitiful and regressive male intrusion. They borrow from a wide source – early psychedelia,
Beefheart, through to even
Essential Logic – but furrow the influences into a style which demands to be taken on its own merits. Comparisons are so limited that I find it hard to avoid the much mistaken and inflexible term 'progressive'. Further to this, their music, whether cautious or dissipated, is always underlined by a devilishly impulsive awareness and wicked streak of unpredictability. They play a serious game of musical hide and seek... In a set that switched with as much consistency as a knackered fluorescent light the Transmitters were always compelling and somehow evaded a possible self-destructive urge." The Transmitters broke up in 1980.
Transmitters Presumed Dead Soon after the split a new Ealing-based band emerged, called
Transmitters Presumed Dead. As the name implied this was a merger between members of Transmitters (Dodson, Wells and Chase) and members of the similarly defunct band
Missing Presumed Dead (Mikel Lee and Dave Baby). Tim Whelan (one of the two singers of
Furniture) was recruited to sing lead vocals. Chris Westwood reviewed the new band's concert at the Trafalgar, Shepherds Bush in Record Mirror, concluding "The ramshackle remnants of The Transmitters and Missing Presumed Dead have assembled in the name of fun, chaos and roo-beat enterprise. The end – and beautifully unrehearsed – result is a temporary six piece, sax and flute and guitars and drums, that quite honestly asks questions of all our established and revered leaders. Why is everyone else so sober? We're working on a smale scale here; in a
Shepherd's Bush pub with people being silly, playing sloppily but with undeniable width, stamina, ingenuity. Mikel (Presumed Dead) sings and dances, spins tinny guitar in the path of writing saxophone (Dave, Presumed Dead) and more jarring, clashing guitar (Sam, presumed drunk) while the conglomorate stagger from number to number: "Q-Tips" and "Catholics", "Kill the Postman" and "Change Gear". There’s even a ska-like destruction of "Sugar Sugar", where everything is so bad but brilliant – guitars out of tune, vocals all over the shop – but the actual point of TPD lies not in their affected clumsiness but in transforming clever and demanding music into a touching, entertaining sort of hobby.”
1980s Transmitters Launch of second line-up and second album Transmitters Presumed Dead soon transformed into the second Transmitters line-up of Sam Dodson (guitar), Sid Wells (bass), Dave Baby (saxophone) and
Julian Treasure (drums, ex Fish Turned Human) with Mikel Lee leaving and
Rob Chapman (lead vocals, ex
Glaxo Babies) replacing Tim Whelan. This band recorded a second
Peel Session in 1981, as well as releasing the second Transmitters album –
And We Call That Leisure Time – on Bristols'
Heartbeat Records later in the year. (In parallel, Mikel Lee (guitar, vocals), Julian Treasure (drums), Tim Whelan (guitar, vocals) and Ian Hawkridge (bass) came together as a reinvented Missing Presumed Dead, gigging and recording their own John Peel Session in the same year which was produced by
Bob Sargent and included a strong version of the original Transmitters song "0.5 Alive".)
Transmitters in transit (1982–1987) The line-up of The Transmitters continued to change over the years. Baby, Wells and Treasure all left at various points during the 1980s; Treasure was replaced by the returning Jim Chase, and Whelan also returned to the line-up (replacing Chapman). Several more musicians passed through The Transmitters during this period – including guitarist Vince Cutcliffe and keyboard player Bob Sargeant (aka "the Hand of Borgus Wheems"). Live performances were augmented by several other "floating" members – Joe Sax and theremin player John Woodley. In 1985, a Transmitters song called "Sheep Farming" became the first song to be
remixed by a new
worldbeat outfit called
Loop Guru (which happened to be led by head Transmitter Sam Dodson).
Final line-up and recordings The band's final line-up (between 1987 and 1989) was Dodson, Whelan, Chase, James McQueen (bass), Dave "Mud-Demon" Muddyman (keyboards/accordion/sampler, ex-Birdloom) and Whelan's
Furniture colleague
Hamilton "Hami" Lee (drums,
sampler). This line-up recorded tracks for a third Transmitters album which was not released during the band's lifetime. This music finally saw the light of day as
Count Your Blessings (1987/89), which was released as a free download album in 2006 by Portuguese digital record label
You Are Not Stealing Records. Reviewing a gig at Subterrania, London in 1988, Melody Maker's Chris Roberts claimed "Tim Whelan is the most restless man alive and demonstrates this by dancing like a young
Jackson, pacing like
Mark E Smith, and hurling himself at the floor like any-age
Iggy. He spits forth his topical angst ("there's a hole in the world") while his lanky henchmen beat manifold drums, extract Haitian war chants from keyboard thingies, and scratch shrill guitars like jaguars assaulting sandpaper. They tangle with the
Velvets' "Ferryboat Bill" quite swimmingly and, all things assimilated, are a cathartic anglepoise on the heart of darkness. Highly wrecked and mended." The Transmitters released a 12-inch single, "The Mechanic", on yet another label (9CC/Craving Co Productions) in 1989. Writing in Music Week, Dave Henderson described it as "like
Stump never happened, wanton artiness, expressing-yourself tendencies and other such angles are exposed.” The band split up for the second time later in 1989.
Post-split Tim Whelan and Hamilton Lee (Transglobal Underground) Whelan and Lee continued to write and play with their other band,
Furniture, until 1990. They launched their own
worldbeat project
Transglobal Underground two years later in 1992.
Sam Dodson and Dave Muddyman (Loop Guru etc) Dodson and Muddyman (under the pseudonyms of "Salman Gita" and "Jamuud") continued with their
worldbeat project
Loop Guru), launching the project in full in 1992. Dodson also teamed up with
Loop Guru singer Linda Finger,
Damned's drummer
Rat Scabies,
Psychic TV's Jim Daly (aka "Jym Darling") and jazz singer Liz Fletcher to form
Slipper, an electronica-and-vocal project with elements of gospel and jazz. Described as "Portishead with a sense of humour" the project released two albums (2000s
Invisible Movies and 2002's
Zoon Sandwich, both on Rephlex Records) and a mini-album called
Earworms (released on the Mechanism label in 2002). Another Transmitters player, theremin player John Woodley, was a frequent contributor. Dodson and Daly also teamed up as
Thaw, another electronica project blending urban trance techno with ancient vocal chants and "tribal rhythms". Thaw released the
Holy Cat album on Dodson's record label Elsewhen in 2005. Most recently, Dodson has teamed up with Neil Sparkes (ex-
Transglobal Underground and a current Temple of Sound member) to form
Loungeclash, whose debut album
Dread Time Story was released on Warlock Records/Sony Red USA on 19 February 2008. In addition to his Loop Guru membership, Dave Muddyman is currently a member of Hoopy Froods, Round Way Wrong and MuudMap.
Various members (The Flavel Bambi Septet) Circa 1991, Whelan and Lee reunited with Julian Treasure, Jim Chase and James McQueen in
The Flavel Bambi Septet, a light-hearted Ealing-based
world music band named after a gas cooker and perform Arabic and Middle Eastern pop music standards, oriental classics, Russian polkas, Nigerian brass band favourites and
Klezmer tunes. During its existence, the band made regular performances at Club Dog and Waterman's Art Centre (in West London) and also made an appearance at the
Edinburgh Festival Fringe as the house band for a variety theatre show.
2007 reunion The Transmitters reunited in March 2007 to promote the compilation album
I Fear No One, which included the recordings from their first Peel session in 1979. This album was released on 12 March 2007 on the Dodson-owned record label Elsewhen Records. The band performed a reunion gig at The Inn on the Green, Ladbroke Grove, West London on 40 March 2007. The band line-up on this occasion was similar to the final 1980s line-up, consisting of Sam Dodson (guitar), Tim Whelan (vocals), James McQueen (bass), John Woodley (theremin and keyboards), Jim Chase (drums) and Hamilton Lee (drums and sampler). ==Discography==