Hagar the Womb

Hagar the Womb
Origin London, England
Genres Punk rock
Anarcho-punk
Years active 1980 1986
2011 to present
Labels Mortarhate Records
Abstract Sounds
Mississippi Records
All The Madmen Records
Associated acts We are Going to Eat You
Melt
Members Ruth Elias
Karen Amsden
Stephanie Cohen
Paul Harding
Mitch Flacko
Chris "Liberator" Knowles
Past members Janet Nassim
Paul "Veg" Venables
Elaine Reubens
Julie Sorrell
Nicola Corcoran
Jon "From Bromley" Atwood

Hagar the Womb are an English punk rock band, originally active in the early 1980s and part of the Anarcho-punk movement. In hiatus from 1987, members went on to form We are Going to Eat You and Melt. A 2011 compilation of their back catalogue brought all members back into contact with each other, and invitations to reform and play gigs and festivals have had Hagar The Womb gigging again since 2012.

History

The band was formed in London in 1980, in the toilets of the Wapping Anarchy Centre, established by the efforts of seminal anarchist bands Crass and Poison Girls.[1] The original line-up was all-female, reflecting the band's purpose of giving women a voice in the anarcho-punk scene: Ruth Elias (vocals), Karen Amsden (vocals), Nicola Corcoran (vocals), Janet Nassim (guitar), and Steph Cohen (bass guitar).[1] One week after forming they played their first gig with Zounds and The Mob, with 'Scarecrow' playing drums.[1] They soon recruited a second guitarist, 'Jon From Bromley', and a permanemt drummer, Chris Knowles, formerly of Cold War and The Boiled Eggs.[1] Corcoran left, leaving two vocalists.[1] The band's first demo included the track "For the Ferryman", which was released on the Mortarhate label compilation LP Who? What? Why? When? Where? in 1984.[1] Cohen was replaced by Mitch Flacko (also of The Mekons) prior to the band's first release proper. The band toured the UK punk circuit for five years, releasing two 12-inch EPs and recording a Peel Session for BBC Radio 1 on 11 February 1984.[2] Their first EP, The Word of the Womb (produced by Pete Fender and released on Conflict's Mortarhate label) was a hit on the UK Indie Chart during 1984, peaking at number six, and staying in the chart for more than five months.[1][3] Elaine Reubens joined the band in time for the recording of their Peel session.[1] The band released a second EP, Funnery In a Nunnery (UK Indie No. 9) the next year,[3] now on the Abstract label, drawing comparisons with Siouxsie & the Banshees, Delta 5 and The Slits.[4] Flacko left, his replacement being Paul "Veg" Venables, and Julie Sorrell was brought in to replace Amsden.[1] They continued for another year, but there were no further releases and the band split up, with Knowles, Sorrell, Venables, and Harding forming We Are Going To Eat You, who signed to Big Cat Records after their 1987 début EP and went on to release the album Everywhen in 1990.[4] They later changed their name to Melt, releasing a sole EP before splitting up.[1]

The band's drummer, who has a degree in Philosophy and Literature, went on to become a cult DJ under the name Chris Liberator.[1] Bassist Mitch Flacko has been playing bass in avant garde ensembles, and works as a tour manager.

Line-up

During its lifetime the band's line-up fluctuated regularly, but often included:

Discography

Hagar the Womb

We are Going to Eat You

Melt

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Glasper, Ian (2006) The Day the Country Died: A History of Anarcho Punk 1980-1984, Cherry Red Books, ISBN 1-901447-70-7, p. 154-9
  2. "11/02/1984 - Hagar The Womb", Keeping It Peel, BBC, retrieved 2010-10-05
  3. 1 2 3 4 Lazell, Barry (1998) Indie Hits 1980-1989, Cherry Red Books, ISBN 0-9517206-9-4, p. 107
  4. 1 2 Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 361
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