*** Welcome to piglix ***

Party Day

Party Day
Origin Barnsley, England
Genres goth rock, indie rock, post-punk
Years active 1982–1988
Labels Party Day Records, Rouska Records, PIAS Recordings (Play it Again Sam Records), Torment Records, Strobelight Records.
Associated acts The Danse Society, Creatures of Habit, Second Coming.
Past members Mick Baker - drums (1982-88)
Martin Steele - guitar, vocals (1982-85)
Carl Firth - bass, vocals (1982-86)
Greg Firth - guitar (1982-83)
Dean Peckett - guitar, vocals (1985-88)
Paul Nash - guitar, vocals (1986-88)
Shaun Crowcroft - bass (1986-88)

Party Day were a goth/indie rock band formed in 1982 in Wombwell near to Barnsley, originally a four-piece consisting of guitarists Martin Steele, Greg Firth, bassist Carl Firth and drummer, Mick Baker. Their sound was described as being "hard knuckleduster goth with post-punk overtones".

The band were formerly called 'Further Experiments' (1979–81) but regrouped as Party Day in 1982. They released their first single, "Row the Boat Ashore" c/w "Poison" on their own label, Party Day Records in 1983, and was well reviewed - "their simpering and delightful sound is a thing of beauty".

Their second single, "The Spider" was described as "Excellent punk junk howl" and was played on John Peel's BBC Radio 1. We shall hopefully continue to see them rip up the roots of this bland desolate music industry.

Much of Party Day's music was "very melancholic at heart but with a drop of venomous punk inside", and as with their second album, Simplicity, their music stayed with you - "the attractive, though slightly over-wrought black sheep, "Glorious Days", which could have brought a lump to Mario Lanza's trousers."

Party Day released Rabbit Pie on the compilation Giraffe in Flames Aaz Records to worthy acclaim. "Highlight though is Party Day's effort, a meaty guitar based number, Rabbit Pie. The threesome are coming on by leaps and bounds and Giraffe in Flames is worth buying just for them."

They had a strong following in Yorkshire, and were credited as being part of both the local scenes of Sheffield and Leeds "No strangers to the local circuit, Party Day have gigged consistently for almost a year".

After the first album, Glasshouse there was a change in personnel with Martin leaving due to ill-health. Other members came in, but by 1988 they broke up after abandoning their unfinished third album.

Party Day were exciting to watch live; Sounds said "They roar along, driven by a good old-fashioned pumping drum-kit, and every so often one of those elusive moving chord-sequences falls into place, leaving you completely startled" and also in the NME, "They hold their guitars like loaded AK47's. They throb".

For Party Day, great success and major exposure were always just a step away.


...
Wikipedia

...