Pete Wylie | |
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Wylie in the audience at Brady's Club, Liverpool, early 1980s
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Background information | |
Birth name | Peter James Wylie |
Born |
Liverpool, England |
22 March 1958
Genres | Post-punk, alternative rock, new wave |
Occupation(s) | Musician, singer, songwriter, guitarist |
Instruments | Guitar |
Years active | 1977–present |
Associated acts | Crucial Three, The Spitfire Boys, Crash Course, Wah! Heat, Wah!, The Mighty Wah!, Shambeko! Say Wah!, Big Hard Excellent Fish, The KLF, The Farm, Josie Jones |
Pete Wylie / Wah! discography | |
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Studio albums | 6 |
Compilation albums | 2 |
EPs | 2 |
Singles | 24 |
Peter James Wylie (born 22 March 1958) is an English singer/songwriter and guitarist, best known as the leader of the band variously known as Wah!, Wah! Heat, Shambeko! Say Wah!, JF Wah!, The Mighty Wah! and Wah! The Mongrel. He was credited by Melody Maker with coining "rockism".
Wylie was born in Liverpool. He began his career in 1977 with lead vocalist Ian McCulloch and bassist Julian Cope, with whom he formed the band Crucial Three, which lasted from May to June the same year. In December 1977, he joined The Spitfire Boys, who dissolved the same month. Wylie and two of the band, Pete Griffiths and Peter Clarke, formed the same month, The Nova Mob, alongside Julian Cope. The band lasted until May 1978. In August, he joined established local band Crash Course (December 1977 – January 1979) after seeing them supporting Big in Japan at the matinee of their farewell show in Eric's club on 26 August. The revised Crash Course made their first live appearance at Manchester University on 13 October.
On 22 December 1978, a professional recording of the band performing at Eric's was made for a live EP, to be released on the club's own label, and to follow the Pink Military EP which had also been recorded there. Crash Course disbanded in January 1979 and the record wasn't pressed (the tape subsequently lost). Earlier in December 1978 the band had recorded three tracks at Liverpool's Open Eye demo studios: 'Someone Different' (with which The Glass Torpedoes had a minor hit in mid 1979), 'Tears of a Clown' (the Smokey Robinson song), and 'Look Now'. Shortly after the band's demise the three Open Eye demo tracks were broadcast, in their unmixed form, on BBC radio. One of the last compositions to be rehearsed by Crash Course was the semi instrumental 'Heart Surgery'. A version of this later appeared on the Glass Torpedoes EP.
Active from 1979, Wylie and company garnered critical acclaim throughout 1980 for the singles "Better Scream" and "Seven Minutes to Midnight" (both as Wah! Heat), the latter being single of the week in the NME, Sounds and Melody Maker during spring 1980, and the 1981 Warner Bros. album Nah = Poo! – The Art of Bluff (as Wah!). Their biggest hit single was "The Story of the Blues", which was released in late 1982, and reached number 3 in the UK Singles Chart.