Thursday, September 26, 2024

The Rabid Rat Punk Club / Now Society

 

The Rabid Rat Punk Club/Now Society

by Pete Clemons




It is fair to say that Warwick University was no different in struggling with the emerging punk rock scene. As indeed did many universities. Initially the whole punk rock scene was given a rough time. In the case of Warwick though, and in order to meet demand and attract punk bands, an alternative social scene began to run in parallel with the more customary social scene. It was known as The Rabid Rat Punk Club.

One of their first gigs was held during 1977 where they invited a band called School Meals to play. As was the case an over exuberant crowd spilled over to disorder.

The organisers received the following warning: 'Rabid Rat, the campus society which caters for new wave enthusiasts, has been formally told of the imposition of a ban, which followed incidents at two new wave concerts that took place earlier this term'.

The first concert, given by the band School Meals, was a private booking by the Disco Room, arranged through normal Arts Federation channels. According to an Arts Federation source: "They made a mess of the stewarding - only one man was at the door". After the concert abusive slogans were daubed in prominent areas of the union building. At least half of the audience came from outside the university, and it is they rather than the students at the concert who are believed to have done the daubing.

The second of those gigs, and a week after the School Meals concert, Rabid Rat organised a concert featuring the VIPs. The VIPs were mainly a university based band. On this occasion the Arts Federation installed its own stewards in the Disco Room, but again ugly incidents occurred.

"It was like the inside of a powder keg in there", an Arts Federation source said, "the only way to handle gigs like that is with professional bouncers". Again, the common denominator it seemed, was that half the audience was non-student.

The Arts Federation's chief steward confirmed that he and his staff were unable to keep order. The students' union executive supported a proposal to impose what was later described as "an unofficial ban' on New Wave groups. But of course that ban was soon lifted.

The Now Society began during January 1978. It was an offshoot of the then fashionable Rabid Rat Punk Club. At the time of its inception the arts federation (in the words of the club) was incapable of putting on any bands of any interest at a time when the British music scene was at its most vibrant.

As an alternative Paul Shurey (drummer of the VIPs) and Mike Dembinski instigated the Now Society.

Music, fun and spontaneity were the original watchwords. The first events were planned on a massive scale; fun dates were based around some small but hip bands: Whirlwind, The Boyfriends, Rocca Hula and the Waikiki Wipeouts. The nights came with discos, food & drink, competitions and fancy-dress.

This made a direct change from the 'normal boring old sit down university gigs'. Students flocked along, as publicity was good and the gigs were attractive. After about 5 fun dates organised by Shurey and Dembinski, based around power pop/beat/rock'n'roll acts, a new regime took over, which led to a new phase of 'Nowism', right in tune with the fast approaching 80s, and the emergence of Coventry as the cultural theatre of the universe.

1978 also saw a light-hearted musical intervention as a member of top campus pop group, the VIPs, was almost drowned by hecklers. Very quick on the uptake, ahead of the game so to speak, the Now Society had spotted the up and coming local talent and had vowed to have them at Warwick.

'You will have the opportunity to view the most promising talent that the City of Coventry has produced' affirmed the society. 'Over the last year or so Coventry, and the surrounding area, have produced a few good bands'. Of course they were referring to The Coventry Automatics and all that came with it.

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