D&V
– THE NEAREST DOOR
Equally interesting but
in an altogether different way were D&V, who after gracing the
stage at the Zig Zag squat gig the previous year had their début 7”
EP released on Crass Records. Entitled The Nearest Door, as
with most other Crass label releases it was produced by Penny
Rimbaud, engineered by Jon Loder, and came wrapped in a
black-and-white fold-out sleeve adorned with photomontage artwork by
Gee Vaucher.
D&V were just two
people, Andrew Leach on drums and Jeff Antcliffe on vocals; hence the
name, D&V – drums and vocals. Hailing originally from
Sheffield, they had upped sticks and moved to London, bedding down in
the large squatter community in Hackney whereupon they had become
actively involved in the Anarcho Punk scene.
In a similar fashion to
Annie Anxiety and Andy T, they would often appear at gigs as a
support act; one moment suddenly being there on stage doing their
thing and the next moment gone like an urban guerilla hit-and-run
outfit. Though a lot less avant garde than Annie or Andy T, they were
still an unusual proposition due to not being a band in the
traditional sense.
As shown on Bullshit
Detector 1, Penny Rimbaud and Steve Ignorant had at first started out
as being just drums and vocals themselves, before adding guitars,
additional vocals, art, film and everything else. Penny and Steve's
drums and vocals incarnation, however, was but a preamble to
fully-fledged Crass whilst D&V were the whole deal. To a point,
at least.
Though being developed
enough to have their music committed to vinyl, it was obvious that
there was a lot more potential for growth in what D&V were
creating. In many ways, The Nearest Door was the bare bones of what
could be done with just the combination of drums and vocals,
particularly when considering what was being done with Rap music in
America at that time.
It was embryonic.
Whilst being totally
immersed in the Anarcho Punk scene, D&V weren't actually singing
about the Bomb, the government, animal rights or anything of the like either but instead were looking inwards at themselves: “Life's what you
make of it, lay back or get up and go. What you want and where you
go, only you will ever know.”
It was the stuff of
thoughts and feelings. Or as Shakespeare put it, such stuff that
dreams are made on...
Love this, John. A wonderful piece on a great duo.
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