FABLULOUS

UK’s (Almost) Most Dangerous Band (Finally) Release Their Epic Opus GET F*UCKED BY FABULOUS

“Fabulous play the search-and-destroy card like they were reared for the job... Time, dear readers, to get very ugly.” – NME

“A little attitude goes several hundred miles these days and you don’t need an Atlas to see where Fabulous are heading.” - London Times

“They piss on their mentors with sexy carelessness. Ripcord culture for beautiful people.” – ELLE

Brief Two Year History (1991-1993) Involves Kylie Minogue, Pete Wakeman, Oasis, Beastie Boys
and Keanu Reeves (in the trunk of a car!!)

Few bands' reputations precede them as much as 1990s British band FABULOUS. Much like the Sex Pistols a dozen years before them, Fabulous’ media headlines back then often included the words “Vandals”, “Banned”, and “Riots.” Banned by nearly every venue of their debut UK tour, the band was featured heavily in NME, i-D, The Face, The Wire, Select, and Melody Maker even though they only officially released a mere handful of singles, one of which, “Destined To Be Free” garnered NME’s prestigious “Single of the Week.” But before they could release their debut album, the band imploded… and their history became the stuff of UK legend. On June XX, 2022 however, Boston-based Supermegabot Records is unearthing their 15-track never-before-released album GET F***ED BY FABULOUS to deliver what exactly has been missing in the rock world for the last three decades.

Including the original seven single A and B-sides, coupled with loads of unreleased instant-classic anthems by a wildly-overlooked band from an unsung era of rock history, Get F***ed… carries all the unbridled swagger and unchecked danger that was absent from the post-shoegazer/ecstacy-laced rave trash that dominated the music scene of that time. With all the attitude and unrestrained infamy of punk bands before them, Fabulous bearhugged Kylie Minogue, Keanu Reeves, Radiohead and Beastie Boys among many others in their den of iniquity and shook up the sleepy music world.

The band’s first lineup featured NME journalist Simon "Spence" Dudfield (singer) and NMEphotographers Martyn Goodacre (guitar) and Russell Underwood (guitar), rounded out by Kieron "Ronnie Fabulous" Flynn (bass) and Robert "Hodge" Hodges (drums). Equally key was the presence of manager Brown who was also NME editor (and future founder of Loaded Magazine) in the role of not exactly a manager, more a sixth member / agent provocateur.

Produced by Jon Langford (Mekons), their first single on the iconic Heavenly Records “Destined To Be Free” b/w “There’s A Riot Going On”, was released in November 1991 and it burned up the charts. They were consumed with NME "Single of the Week," television, tours (opening for the Beastie Boys, having a fledgling Radiohead open for them, riots, chaos, and loads of coverage. A seemingly endless party had begun. For the next year, Fabulous went full-on, keeping the rumor mill churning, which in turn drove everyone in the business to chase the band. The following May, KROQ in Los Angeles played the B-side “There’s A Riot Going On” as LA burned after the Rodney King verdict.

This attracted the attention of Malcolm McLaren (Sex Pistols’ manager), Keanu Reeves (Neo, John Wick), EMI Records, Hall Or Nothing Management, Andrew Loog-Oldham (Rolling Stones manager, who reactivated his Immediate Records for them), the Beastie Boys (who personally requested the Fabs open their London show), and many others.

The stranger-than-fiction stories continued. Pete Waterman (of the massive pop hitmaking production team Stock Aitken Waterman - think Kylie Minogue, Bananarama & Rick Astley) signed the band to his PWL label and promised to release their debut album, titled Produced By Kylie. It was supposed to be “a cross between the Sex Pistols and Kylie Minogue.” The relationship fizzled in a drunken altercation soon after and those recordings remain unreleased.

A year and a half after the release of “Destined To Be Free,” they finally got around to releasing new music. Produced by Miles Hunt (The Wonderstuff), “Personality Recession” had early on been singled out as perhaps their best song and created a nice boost for the band but did little to return them to their rightful spot at the top of the charts. Their following single “Dead Friends” fizzled too. But it wasn’t because the songs sucked… Their mates Manic Street Preachers released their debut Generation Terrorists and in the States, Nirvana and grunge killed the burgeoning punk revival, leaving no room left for Fabulous to reclaim their stake.

The Fabs had recently opened for the Beastie Boys in London when Thom Yorke & co opened for the Fabs (in the club where Oasis were discovered!)

“We had a lot of attention early on, but deservedly so, because we were probably the most exciting band in the country,” says Simon. “We were the only band saying anything, the only band that had any intelligence, and we just put people’s backs up. Someone said Fabulous were like the KLF with guitars, and we’ve always just wanted to be terrorists; to stick it up the establishment, to stick it up the music industry.”

As an epitaph, Fabulous had broken up with little fanfare merely a year later in 1993. What remained of UK rock was mushed together under the far more mannered Britpop genre.

What had Fabulous been about? Were they a brilliant band, a revolt against tedium, an attempt to get rich off media manipulation, the luckiest or unluckiest bastards on the planet?

The answer is in the dictionary:

fabulous (adj.) fab·u·lous | \ ˈfa-byə-ləs
1. fabulous wealth tremendous, stupendous, prodigious, phenomenal, remarkable, exceptional; astounding, amazing, fantastic, breathtaking, staggering, unthinkable, unimaginable, incredible, unbelievable, unheard of, untold, undreamed of, beyond one's wildest dreams; informal mind-boggling, mind-blowing, jaw-dropping.
2. informal : we had a fabulous time.

Get Fucked By Fabulous features a censored image of their famous Paul Cannell (Screamadelica)-designed porno t-shirt on the cover. Inside are 15 blasts of punk fun that recall the earliest Manic Street Preachers & Shampoo singles, painstakingly remastered from 30 year old media.

Buy the CD HERE