BMX BANDITS
A
leading light of the short-lived C-86/anorak movement of the mid-1980's,
the BMX Bandits stood at the epicenter of the Scottish pop music
scene for over a decade; however, despite helping launch the careers
of talents ranging from Teenage Fanclub
and Eugenius to the Soup Dragons
and Superstar, the group itself never grew beyond
the confines of a fervent cult following. They were essentially
the vehicle of singer/guitarist Duglas T. Stewart, a Bellshill native and onetime
member of the Pretty Flowers; he formed the band in 1985,
sarcastically selecting the name "BMX Bandits" out of
his belief that they would fall apart after only one gig. Instead,
the group became a popular local attraction, and soon signed to
Stephen
Pastel's 53rd and 3rd label.
Recorded with a line-up of Stewart,
bassist Sean
Dickson, guitarist Jim McCulloch, drummer Willie McArdle
and backing vocalist Billy Wood, the
BMX Bandits' charming 1986 debut single "E102"
launched them to the forefront of the C-86 uprising, despite being
denied a spot on the NME magazine
compilation cassette of naive jangle-pop which gave the movement
its name. By the follow-up, "What a Wonderful World,"
both McArdle
and Dickson
had exited, and were replaced by ex-Boy Hairdressers bassist Joe McAlinden
and drummer Francis McDonald; Dickson
soon founded his own band, the Soup Dragons, the first of many BMX Bandits
spin-offs to eclipse the original group's success.
After a series of subsequent singles and roster
changes (including the exit of McCulloch, who joined Dickson
in the
Soup Dragons), the BMX Bandits — Stewart, McDonald, McAlinden,
fellow Boy
Hairdressers alum Norman Blake, and guitarist Gordon Keen
— released their long-awaited debut LP, the tongue-in-cheek C-86, in 1990.
A whimsical concert album, Totally
Groovy Live Experience!, appeared later in the year,
but another hiatus followed as Blake and McDonald formed Teenage Fanclub.
Blake returned to the Bandits
fold, however, for 1991's Star Wars, also recorded with ex-Vaselines
frontman Eugene
Kelly; after the 1992 EP Gordon Keen and His BMX Bandits, Keen
and Kelly
broke off to form Captain America, later rechristened Eugenius,
and McAlinden
founded Superstar.