The Folk Devils with Kris Jozajtis in conversation with David Eastaugh
Founding member Ian Lowery had previously been the original singer in late 1970s punk rock band The Wall and then signed to Killing Joke's Malicious Damage label as leader of the group Ski Patrol.[1] Politics and the general tensions that seemed endemic to the Killing Joke scene led Ian to leave Ski Patrol and recruit long-time friend of Jaz Coleman - Alan Cole on drums, Kris Jozajtis on guitar (now Dr Kris Jozajtis at Greenfaulds High School) and Mark Whiteley, from Wales, on bass to form another group, Folk Devils, in 1983.[1] Mark had been active in both the London and Welsh music scene. He worked with Anrhefn, Wales' seminal punk band and with the ill-fated Hack Hack on the album Despite Amputations. He left the band midway through a gig at The Fridge in Brixton unhappy with the band, their label (Shout Records), and musical direction. A fight ensued and Mark became a Folk Devil.
Wendy Houstoun
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
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