...And the Native Hipsters
English post-punk group / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
...And the Native Hipsters was an English experimental group formed in London, England in 1979. Centred on the nucleus of musicians William Wilding and Blatt (Nanette Greenblatt), they are best known for their 1980 single, "There Goes Concorde Again", which attracted the attention of BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel,[1] and reached number five on the UK Independent Charts.[2][3] The song was listed by New Musical Express in their "NME Writers 100 Best Indie Singles Ever" in 1992.[4]
Quick Facts Also known as, Origin ...
...And the Native Hipsters | |
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Also known as | Native Hipsters |
Origin | London, England |
Genres | Experimental, plunderphonics, post-punk, electronic |
Years active | 1979 – mid-1980s |
Labels | Heater Volume Records, MRMusic, Glass Records, Illuminated Records |
Spinoff of | Wildings, Patterns |
Past members | William Wilding Blatt (Nanette Greenblatt) Robert Cubitt Tom Fawcett Lester Square Annie Whitehead Ludwina van der Sman Chris Cornetto Simon Davidson[1] |
Website | www |
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AllMusic called the Native Hipsters "[o]ne of the more bizarre groups" from the late-1970s and early-1980s.[1]