Jez Bird: Mod revival singer who led the
Lambrettas to chart success
In the spring of 1979, the
Mod revival was gathering momentum. In Brighton, Quadrophenia was
being filmed, and in the East End of London the Bridge House had
been holding regular Mods Monday nights which culminated in a "Mods
Mayday '79" event and live album. In June that year, the Lambrettas
made their live début on Hastings Pier. "We weren't even advertised
to appear. They just stuck us on the bill and we went down so well,"
recalled Jez Bird, the lead singer of the Brighton group that was
named after the iconic Italian scooter. "This guy said: 'I'll be
your manager'. He got us some gigs in London and within about a
month we had a singles deal. It was very quick from nowhere to
getting somewhere."
Nine months later, the Lambrettas scored the
biggest hit of all the Mod revival bands when their ska-infused
cover of "Poison Ivy" sold 250,000 copies and reached No 7 in the
charts. Signed to Elton John's Rocket Records, the Lambrettas
appeared on Top of the Pops and had further hits with "Da-a-a-ance",
"Another Day (Another Girl)", and their 1980 album Beat Boys in the
Jet Age. However, when the Mod revival bubble burst and Ambience,
their proto-Britpop second album, flopped, they broke up, in April
1982. Bird remained a popular face around his home town of Lewes in
East Sussex, still performing in pubs.
Jeremy Bird was born in 1957. He sang and played
guitar in a rhythm'n'blues band called Shakedown with the guitarist
Doug Sanders, before they formed the Lambrettas with the bassist
Mark Ellis and the drummer Paul Wincer. Their début hit was issued
on 2-Stroke, in a sleeve which pastiched the 2-Tone singles,
replacing the pork-pie-hatted silhouette with a parka-wearing Mod.
(The band later toured Europe with Madness, proving there were no
hard feelings.)
The Lambrettas' first single, "Go Steady", which
originally appeared on the 499 2139 compilation issued by Rocket
Records in 1979, had been produced by Pete Waterman, who also
suggested they cover "Poison Ivy", but the eclectic all-rounder
Peter Collins oversaw the group's first album. In August 1980, Bird
had a pop at The Sun's Page Three glamour models with the Lambrettas'
fourth single, originally called "Page 3", but the band had to ditch
the sleeve and change the song title to "Another Day (Another Girl)"
after the tabloid threatened legal action.
In 1982, for their eighth and final single, an
ill-advised cover of Jefferson Airplane's "Somebody to Love", they
ditched the Mod look for more casual clothes. "In those days, the
image was gone so quickly. It was always on to the next thing.
Fashion seemed to be much more associated with movements then,"
recalled Bird, who stayed in music, formed Rave On Jack with
Sanders, and later led his own band.
Reflecting on his brief flirtation with the charts
in 1980, Bird was philosophical. "There was a vacuum at that time in
the music business. You had the big bands, the punk thing had shot
its bolt and there was this gap, and it was the Moddy, power-poppy
type bands that filled it up. We were just lucky really, because we
just got the Lambrettas name to get people to our gigs in Brighton,"
he said.
"I'm still a Mod at heart. I've still got the
suits, the Harringtons, the DM shoes. In a way it spoils you for
real life having so much success so young, but I wouldn't change
it."
Jeremy Bird, singer, songwriter and guitarist:
born Lewes, East Sussex October 1957; married (two children); died
Lewes 27 August 2008.