Thatcher on Acid

Thatcher on Acid were an English anarcho-punk band.[1] They formed in Somerset during 1983.[2] Their name is a satirical reference to former UK prime minister Margaret Thatcher.[3] Ben Corrigan, Bob Butler and Andy Tuck also played in Schwartzeneggar with ex-Crass member, Steve Ignorant.[4] The band opened the anarcho-punk band Conflict's "Gathering of the 5000" show at Brixton Academy,[2] an event which resulted in many arrests and achieved a degree of infamy.[5]

Thatcher on Acid
OriginEngland, UK
GenresAnarcho-punk
Years active1983–1998
LabelsAll the Madmen, Agit-Prop

Discography[6]

Singles & EPs

  • Moondance (1986 - 12" - All the Madmen)
  • Flannel 905 (1990 - 7" - Rugger Bugger Discs)
  • Thatcher On Acid Meets Steerpike - The Illusion Of Being Together (1990 - 12" - Meantime Records)
  • Can We Laugh Now? / No Fucking War (1992 - Split EP with 7 Year Bitch - Clawfist Records)
  • Yo Yo Man (1992 - 7" - K Records)
  • "Frank" Jr. (1992 - 7" - Subcorridor Records)
  • Chagrin (1992 - 7" - Desperate Attempt Records)

LPs

  • Curdled (1987 - All the Madmen)
  • Frank (1991 - Agit-Prop)
  • Squib (1994 - Split CD with Wat Tyler named Yurp Thing - Allied Records)

Compilations & Lives

  • Thatcher On Acid (1988 - also known as Garlic - Rugger Bugger Records)
  • Curdled/The Moondance (1997 - reissued of first LP plus first 12" - Broken Rekids Record)
  • Pressing: 84-91 (1995 - Desperate Attempt Records)

Members

  • Ben Corrigan - Guitar/Vocals
  • Mat - Bass/Vocals
  • Martin - Drums (1983–1987)
  • Andy Tuck - Drums (1987 onwards)
  • Bob Butler - Bass
gollark: Or if there's a general culture of rushing things out with insufficient testing.
gollark: For example, if they report the issue and the project manager says "it's not significant, fix it later".
gollark: Also, you seem to be blaming the individual developers despite the possibility of there being more things going on.
gollark: Well, it's very indirect in these cases.
gollark: * would have committed a crime under my proposed law, even

References

  1. Myers, Ben. Green Day: American Idiots & the New Punk Explosion. The Disinformation Company. p. ?. 2006. Retrieved 2012-11-29.
  2. Glasper, Ian (2007). The Day the Country Died: A History of Anarcho Punk 1980 to 1984. Cherry Red Books. p. 221-222,
  3. Green, Alex. The Stone Roses. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 31. 2006.
  4. Bains, Jon. "Alice Donut: Food, Sex and Cruelty" Archived 27 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Convulsion Magazine. Issue 4. p. 34. 24 October 1995. Retrieved 2012-11-29.
  5. "Conflict, London 1987". Transcription of statement on Conflict/Mortarhate merchandise leaflet distributed at gigs in the late 80s and early 90s.
  6. "Thatcher On Acid". www.discogs.com.
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