Mar 062015
 

Under the Radar shines a light on lesser-known cover artists. If you’re not listening to these folks, you should. Catch up on past installments here.

The way Adrian Edmondson tells it, he bought a mandolin after an inebriation-inducing lunch near Denmark Street in Soho, “a very dangerous place to be with a group of friends, drunk, if you have either cash, or a credit card about your person.” The next day, he picked it up and began playing the songs of his youth – by bands like the Clash, the Sex Pistols, the Ramones, and other bands that certainly informed his portrayal of Vyvyan Basterd in the beloved Britcom The Young Ones. What came out was something very special indeed – so much so that Edmondson went out to find like-minded folk musicians to play this music with him, and when he found Uilleann pipe player Troy Donockley, the Bad Shepherds were born.

The band, augmented by various fiddlers, bassists and percussionists, became a huge hit on the festival circuit. People may have come to the show expecting to laugh at the comedian playing punk songs like they’d never been played before, but they wound up smiling for different reasons altogether. “We call it joy,” Edmondson said in a 2013 interview. “Maximum joy is out motto… Comedy is combat, you have to batter people into laughing at you, but with music, you join together, the band and the audience make it work.”

The Bad Shepherds don’t need an audience to make it work, either – they’ve released three fine studio albums. Below are some samples…

The Bad Shepherds – Once in a Lifetime (Talking Heads cover)


Arguably the only cover of an American band on 2009’s Yan, Tyan, Tethera, Methera! (I’ll argue why in a moment), “Once in a Lifetime” has a gentler sense of exuberance than the Talking Heads original.

The Bad Shepherds – I Fought the Law (The Clash cover)


It takes a little gumption to call this a Clash cover, as the Clash learned it from the Bobby Fuller Four (who learned it from the Crickets, who learned it from Sonny Curtis, who wrote the theme to The Mary Tyler Moore Show, which was covered by Hüsker Dü, etc. etc. etc.). But judging by its surroundings, it was the Clash’s take that the Shepherds first encountered, so it’s the Clash’s take that gets transformed. Wonder if anybody’s pogoed to this?

The Bad Shepherds – Anarchy in the UK (Sex Pistols cover)


2010’s By Hook or By Crook opens with a cover of the Sex Pistols’ “Anarchy in the UK,” but you can’t say it opens with a bang. Rather, the song sounds like it’s drifting across the moors, encountering its listeners rather than confronting them. Where the original assaults, the remake enchants.

The Bad Shepherds – Our House (Madness cover)


2013’s Mud, Blood and Beer starts off with “Our House,” the Madness song that served as their US breakthrough and was featured on The Young Ones. But where that lip-sync appearance ended with a lot of kickin’ and a-gougin’, the Bad Shepherds is immersed in seas of tranquility and memory.

The Bad Shepherds – Ramones Medley (The Ramones cover)


It wouldn’t be a worthy punk-cover band if it didn’t include a Ramones cover, would it? So it stands to reason that this medley makes the Bad Shepherds worthy thrice over. You’ll find covers of “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue,” “Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment,” and “Blitzkrieg Bop” brought together here.

Learn more about the Bad Shepherds on their website. Buy their music at iTunes and Amazon.

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  2 Responses to “Under the Radar: The Bad Shepherds”

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  1. […] got his chance to perform it with the Bad Shepherds, who you may remember us rhapsodizing about earlier this month. We’re happy to take one more chance to share the fun of their changing a song from lunging […]

  2. […] to do? English alt-comedian Adrian Edmondson (Vyvyan Basterd from UK-sitcom The Young Ones) formed The Bad Shepherds in 2008 to perform punk and new wave classics on traditional folk instruments that include mandolin […]

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