ALBUMWhere Were You?: Hen's Teeth and Other Lost Fragments of Un-Popular Culture Vol.2Mekons
ALBUMI Have Been to Heaven and Back: Hen's Teeth and Other Lost Fragments of Un-Popular Culture Vol. 1Mekons
ALBUMMeMekons
ALBUMUnitedMekons
ALBUMPussy, King of the PiratesMekons & Kathy Acker
ALBUMRetreat from MemphisMekons
ALBUMI Heart MekonsMekons
ALBUMThe Curse of the MekonsMekons
ALBUMThe Mekons Rock 'n' RollMekons
ALBUMSo Good It HurtsMekons
ALBUMHonky Tonkin'Mekons
ALBUMThe Edge of the WorldMekons
ALBUMThe Mekons StoryMekons
ALBUMFear and WhiskeyMekons
ALBUMDevils, Rats & Piggies -- A Special Message from GodzillaMekons
About Mekons
Hometown
Leeds, England
Formed
1976
Genre
Alternative
When it comes to longevity, productivity, and anarchy-inflamed ambition, the Mekons mostly consign their British punk-rock peers to the dustbin of history. Formed as a no-musical-skills-required University of Leeds art collective in 1976, the Mekons launched their recording career with “Never Been In a Riot,” a pitiless parody of The Clash’s “White Riot.” Their first album, 1979’s The Quality of Mercy Is Not Strnen, asserted the punk bawl they maintained until pivoting into classic country with an enhanced lineup on 1985’s lovably loose Fear and Whiskey. They made anti-capitalism fun again while biting the hand that fed them on The Mekons Rock ’n’ Roll (1989) and the self-referential The Curse of the Mekons (1991), setting the stage for 2004’s Punk Rock, 15 raw re-recordings of their 1977-81 broadsides. Several dozen musicians have passed through the band’s ranks, but original Mekons Jon Langford and Tom Greenhalgh (alongside longtime vocalist Sally Timms) keep on rockin’ in the unfree world, as on 2019’s battered-but-not-beaten Deserted.
Similar to: Mekons
Discover more music and artists similar to Mekons, like Jon Langford, The Waco Brothers, Sally Timms