The Stray Trolleys Sole Album Coming Out on CD and Vinyl For the First Time
Our love for Cleaners From Venus’ Martin Newell is neverending. That’s why we’re so happy to announce that we are reissuing the sole album by The Stray Trolleys, a/k/a Newell’s band before he formed the Cleaners from Venus. Barricades and Angels will be available on vinyl and CD for the first time ever on January 20th, 2017.
Pre-Order here: https://www.omnianmusicgroup.com/prod…/barricades-and-angels
In May of 1979, UK native Martin Newell was 26 years old and in transition. He’d just split up with his girlfriend and moved out of the Colchester house they’d shared for four years. A month later, Newell also stepped down as the singer for Gypp, a band he’d been in for three years. Though they had a great live reputation and a strong regional following, Newell, with some misgivings, felt their music was out-of-step with the times. That same year, he turned down the offer of a literature degree course at university as well. Why bother? He had a part-time washing-up job, a guitar and a room in a rambling, boho house. He could just tear the whole thing down and start again. And so he did.
That summer, friend and recording engineer Dave Hoser heard some of Newell’s demos and offered to help record them on his 4-track equipment, dubbed “The Octopus Mobile.” With some of Newell’s former optimism and energy restored, he put together a new band: the then 23-year-old drummer Michael ‘Stix’ Natkanski, former Gypp bass player Tony Phillips and Braintree guitarist Malcolm Burch (a/k/a Max Volume). Calling themselves The Stray Trolleys, the music here predates Newell’s work as The Cleaners from Venus and the bulk of the sessions on their sole album, Barricades and Angels, were recorded at Octopus Studios during spring and summer of 1980. Amazingly, although they had little to no rehearsals, all backing tracks were recorded fairly quickly and everyone got on well, especially in the pub afterwards.
So, what’s the story here? A few youngish unknowns got together in a little home-built country studio and recorded a handful of songs for an album that eventually emerged on a DIY cassette? They weren’t perfect, but there is something very special about this collection. The music captures a time. Just listen.