4人收藏
by Jo-Ann GreeneUsually tossed into the mod bag, the Jolt defied such easy categorizations, and split up just as that movement emerged into the national spotlight. Fired by the fury of punk, the band formed in the summer of 1976 in the suburbs of Glasgow, Scotland. The initial quartet quickly slimmed to the trio of singer/guitarist Robbie Collins and bassist Jim Doak, both university dropouts, and drumming journalist Iain Shedden. Gigging around Glasgow didnt offer much opportunity for advancement, and so by the following summer the Jolt had made London home. They now plied the same circuit as the punks, striking up a friendship with the Jam, for whom they often opened. Polydor quickly snapped the Jolt up, and in September 1977 the groups debut single, All I Can Do, arrived. As with all the second-generation bands, the Jolt were bringing new influences into the already fading punk scene, in their case a healthy dose of 60s R&B. For anyone having trouble identifying just where their inspiration lay, the trio answered the question with its follow-up, a raucous cover of the Small Faces Whatcha Gonna Do About It. But while Eddie & the Hot Rods were having success with an R&B-punk crossover sound, the Jolt decidedly werent. Third time lucky? I Cant Wait, released in June 1978, completed the hat trick of flops, although the song is a classic combo of spitting punk fury and Who-esque power chords. It boded badly for the Jolts eponymous self-titled album, which arrived the following month. More diverse in sound than their singles had suggested was possible, the album still didnt jolt the public out of its lethargy or the press away from the Jam comparisons, even if the Buzzcocks and the Undertones were much more apt. The group made one last valiant attempt to shake up its fortunes, enlarging to a quartet with the arrival of guitarist Kevin Key a few months later. The Jolt continued gigging, and in the new year, the rising tide of mod seemed likely to carry the Jolt chartward with it.At which point the group handed the British press the bullet that would finish the band off — See Saw, a then unreleased Jam number gifted to them by Paul Weller for inclusion on the Jolts forthcoming Maybe Tonight EP. The press obliged with a predictable pasting. The A-side deserved it; both songs were weak. But the flip — See Saw and Stop Look — were everything a mod could desire. The EP arrived in the shops in June 1979, and stayed there. And as mod burst into full flower, the Jolts members called it a day, thus harvesting none of the rewards from the new genre they had helped engender. The Jolt might have been no more than a footnote in most peoples musical archives, but the U.K. label Captain Mod reissued their album and all their singles on CD in 2002, providing a vivid reminder of the groups groundbreaking and underappreciated glory.