The Wolfhounds special with Andrew Golding talking about life in music, indie pop and his new solo album Dragon Welding'.
The Wolfhounds began as a slightly askew indie pop/rock band, and signed to the Pink label in 1986. First EP Cut the Cake was well enough received for the NME to include them on their C86 compilation album. After three singles and debut album Unseen Ripples From A Pebble on Pink,[1] they briefly moved to Idea Records for the Me single, then rejoined Pink's boss at his new label September Records. September soon evolved into Midnight Music which was the Wolfhounds' home for all subsequent releases.
With original members Bolton and Clark replaced by David Oliver and Matt Deighton, the Wolfhounds' sound developed into a denser, less poppy sound.[citation needed] After a compilation of earlier material, second album proper Bright and Guilty was released in 1989, featuring the singles "Son of Nothing", "Rent Act" and "Happy Shopper". The sound progressed further with the albums Blown Away (also 1989) and Attitude (1990), which found them in Sonic Youth territory, interspersing raging guitars with elegant compositional exercises. This proved to be the final Wolfhounds release of the 80s, with the band splitting in early 1990.
Golding and Stebbing formed Crawl, while Callahan hooked up with former Ultra Vivid Scene member Margaret Fiedler in Moonshake. Matt Deighton formed Mother Earth.
The current line-up is David Callahan (guitar/vocals), Andy Golding (guitar/vocals), Peter Wilkins (drums) and Richard Golding (bass). The Wolfhounds reformed in 2005 for a gig to mark the 20th anniversary of the release of their first single "Cut the Cake" in 1985.
In 2006, they were asked by Bob Stanley of St Etienne to play at the ICA in London, alongside Roddy Frame and Phil Wilson, to celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the NME cassette C86. They have continued to play live, re-energised when The Membranes asked them to be special guests at The Lexington in London, and in March 2012 played with Laetitia Sadier from Stereolab in support at a benefit to raise funds for the Timperley Frank Sidebottom memorial statue.
An EP called EP001 was released on Vollwert-Records Berlin in April 2012 containing three songs that pre-date the band's first single but that were never recorded satisfactorily at the time. Of these songs, 'Skullface' has picked up a lot of radio play.
The band released several 7" singles in 2013, included on new album Middle Age Freaks, released on Odd Box Records in 2014. Also in 2014 an anniversary limited-edition issue of Unseen Ripples from a Pebble (plus bonus tracks) was released by Optic Nerve Recordings.
In October 2016, the Wolfhounds released their sixth album Untied Kingdom (...Or How to Come to Terms with Your Culture). Louder Than War rated it 9/10.
Robert Hecker - Redd Kross and It's OK!
Slade - Dave Hill
Desmond Child
Evergreen Dazed - Elizabeth Bruce
Steve Almaas - Beat Rodeo & The Suicide Commandos
Fifth Column - Caroline Azar & G.B. Jones
Robert Sellers and Nick Pendleton - Marquee: The Story of the World’s Greatest Music Venue
Terry Newman - Taylor Swift
Steve Parsons - Sharks
Stephen Budd
Gitane Demone - Pompeii 99, Christian Death, Gitane Demone Quartet
Bob Andrews or Derwood Andrews - Generation X, Empire & Westworld
Evergreen Dazed - Mark Turrell
Andy Prieboy - Wall of Voodoo
Annie Haslam - Renaissance
Nick Haeffner - The Tea Set
Kevin Armstrong - David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Paul McCartney, Morrissey
Mick Rossi - Slaughter & The Dogs
Paul Simpson - The Wild Swans, Care & Teardrop Explodes
Inge Kuijt - Comsat Angels
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