The Caretaker Race

The Caretaker Race were an indie pop band formed in East London in 1986 when singer/guitarist Andy Strickland (also a part-time music journalist) left The Loft. Strickland recruited Dave Mew (drums), Henry Hersom (bass guitar), and Sally Ward (keyboards). The band's name came from a Star Trek paperback adventure.[1] Gaining comparisons with The Go-Betweens,[2] they initially released a brace of singles on their own Roustabout Records label before signing to the Foundation label in 1989. Hersom left to join Bob, his replacement being ex-Flatmates bassist Jackie Carrera,[2] After two more singles on Foundation, the Stephen Street-produced album Hangover Square was released in 1990. Sally Ward left to take up teaching, to be replaced by Andrew Deevey.[3] The band split up in 1991.

The Caretaker Race
OriginLondon
GenresIndie pop
Years active1986–1991
LabelsRoustabout, Foundation
Past membersAndy Strickland
Dave Mew
Henry Hersom
Sally Ward
Jackie Carrera
Andrew Deevey

Strickland also filled in on guitar for The Chesterfields in 1987.[3]

Discography

Albums

  • Hangover Square (1990, Foundation)

Singles

  • "Somewhere on Sea" (1987, Roustabout)
  • "Anywhere But Home" (1988, Roustabout)
  • "I Wish I'd Said That" (1989, Foundation)
  • "Man Overboard" (1990, Foundation)
  • "Two Steel Rings" (1990, Foundation)
gollark: If I want to cross a chasm with a bridge, or something, I can draw on my limited knowledge of physics and materials science and whatever and put together a somewhat sensible prototype, then make inferences from what happens to it, and get something working out.
gollark: No. We can reason about problems in various ways. So can some animals.
gollark: It doesn't have its own will. It's a giant non-agent mess driven by tons of interacting blind optimization processes.
gollark: Depends. There's not a general answer which isn't vaguely stupid somehow.
gollark: It isn't useful to treat it as intelligent because it doesn't display intelligent behaviours.

References

  1. Foxdude Records Archived 17 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Larkin, Colin:"The Guinness Who's Who of Indie and New Wave Music", Guinness, 1992, ISBN 0-85112-579-4
  3. Strong, Martin C.:"The Great Alternative & Indie Discography", 1999, Canongate, ISBN 0-86241-913-1


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.