Athletico Spizz 80

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Effortless 00:00 Tools
Rhythm Inside 00:00 Tools
New Species 00:00 Tools
Touched 00:00 Tools
Intimate 00:00 Tools
European Heroes 00:00 Tools
Airships 00:00 Tools
Energy Crisis 00:00 Tools
Clocks Are Big 00:00 Tools
Red and Black 00:00 Tools
Personimpersonator 00:00 Tools
Where's Captain Kirk 00:00 Tools
No Room 00:00 Tools
Spock's Missing 00:00 Tools
Where's Captain Kirk? 02:17 Tools
Central Park 00:00 Tools
Red & Black 00:00 Tools
Hot Deserts 00:00 Tools
The Rhythm Inside 00:00 Tools
Legal Proceedings 00:00 Tools
airships (1980) 00:00 Tools
Brainwashing Time 00:00 Tools
Scared 00:00 Tools
Melancholy 00:00 Tools
Central Park (Doctors And Nurses - Dub Version) 00:00 Tools
Where's Captain Kirk (Live) 00:00 Tools
Where's Captain Kirk? (Live) 00:00 Tools
Rythm Inside 00:00 Tools
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As Spizz Energi (http://www.spizzenergi.com) they became the first number one band in the newly formed Indie Chart in January 1980. The BBC DJ John Peel described "Where's Captain Kirk?" as... "the best Star Trek associated song". This was probably the peak of Spizz's music career. This lineup continued as Athletico Spizz 80, gaining a considerable following. They became the only band to sell out the Marquee Club for five consecutive nights (and a sixth afternoon alcohol-free matinee show). The tune was featured in the 1981's archival Urgh! A Music War film. This film was shown occasionally on late-night American cable TV, and may have helped prolong Spizz's notoriety slightly. They released a LP record titled Do A Runner on A&M records, to mixed reviews. When Lü Edmonds joined the lineup in 1982, they again changed their name -- to the SPIZZLES. The group released an LP called Spikey Dream Flowers, which cemented the group's somic image as science-fiction weirdoes. A final 1982 single, Megacity 3, was the swan-song of Spizz in the 1980s. By 1982 the New Wave was over, and post-punk bands like the Smiths and Gang of Four were taking over the indie music scene. Spizz was noted for an annual name change policy which ceased when the Guinness Book of Records failed to recognise Spizz's claim that he has recorded and released the greatest number of recordings under different names."Too Specialised" was the response of the then deputy editor Shelagh Thomas who confessed to owning "Where's Captain Kirk?". American stadium rockers R.E.M. (who started their band in the early 80s) have recorded a version of 'Where's Captain Kirk?' which they gave to the fan club members for Christmas 1992. Spizz still appears live and releases material through Cherry Red Records (http://www.cherryred.co.uk). The most recent release however has emerged on his own label 442ok (http://www.442ok.com). It is called 'We're The England' and is the 3rd England World Cup Song attempt. Previously 'E for England' for France 1998 and 'On The Road To Yokohama' for 2002. Other Spizz football related songs are 'The Sun Never Sets On Aston Villa' which is on the clubs official CD, 'Three Lions In The Sky" which was aimed at TV producers and his own label "company song" 442ok. Added to this maxi single released in May 2006 is the earliest known recording of 'Where's Captain Kirk?' from his own archives. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.