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Some
Thoughts On The Idea Of The NMA Family
by Joolz Denby
A
question that often comes up, both privately and on the New Model Army
Noticeboard, is: ‘What is meant by the term “The Family” in regard to New
Model Army?’
It’s
an important question, and one which provokes strong responses both from those
who feel attracted to the idea and those who fear it means some kind of elite,
or club, to which they either don’t want to, or feel they cannot, belong.
Firstly,
I think it’s important to state for the record, it is not, nor ever has been
during the long years NMA has been in existence, an elite, a club, a gang or
anything else along those lines; more than anything else, it’s a feeling;
some would say, an instinctive emotional response to the intensely emotional
music created by the band.
When
NMA formed in the 1980’s, the UK was in the grip of one of the most socially
devastating governments the country had ever known, led by a person whose agenda
was ably demonstrated by her slogan - ‘There is no such thing as Society,
there are only individual men and women...’. This call to the most base,
selfish instincts in humanity, the so-called ‘Law Of The Jungle’,
characterised the Eighties with it’s single-minded selfishness and brutal
hedonism. If there was no Society, no sense of community or care for those
around you, no real sense of family - and your only god was extreme consumerism
- then it didn’t much matter how you treated others. Ideals such as loyalty,
friendship, pride and altruism all became jokes. The sick, the weak, the
disadvantaged, the alienated and the poor were discounted as being somehow
innately inferior; only the powerful, the ruthless and those society considered
beautiful were admirable. No-one else mattered as long as you got what
you wanted, when you wanted it and it certainly didn’t matter how you went
about achieving that.
NMA
stood against these attitudes with all the force it could muster: from the very
start the band felt the power of its music and lyrics could help create an
atmosphere of change. Not content with simply singing about such things, NMA
raised many thousands of pounds without any fanfare or self-promotion for drug
rehab centres, for the striking miners, for environmental causes by means of
genuine benefit concerts with no ‘hidden expenses‘ or backhanders. Everyone
pitched in to help - fans collected money for these causes from other fans with
the famous Army Bucket Collections. Justin Sullivan picketed with striking
miners and later, fought alongside environmentalists and road protesters. The
band took a stand against the sick glamorisation of drug abuse by a music media
happy to promote damaging myths to young, impressionable readers in order to
sell their papers - NMA said ‘don’t be ignorant about the effects
substance abuse of any kind has on you; do what you want, but make informed
decisions about what you’re doing‘ and in order to present an
alternative, unglamorous view of substance abuse produced the infamous ’Only
Stupid Bastards Use Heroin’ T-shirts which notoriously, the BBC attempted to
ban on the band’s Top Of The Pops appearance. At this sense of
self-determining realism creeping towards the fat golden goose of mainstream
rock n’ roll, the media, ever conflict-fuelled, screamed ‘anti-drug
killjoys’ and ‘grim puritan Northern barbarians’ trying to discredit the
band in any way they could. In attempting to drive NMA underground, however, the
media effectively created in the band a genuine force for the counter-culture.
NMA, it seemed, couldn't be relied upon to be ‘on message’ in a world
hell-bent on control and dumbing-down: NMA spoke up - and it spoke the truth.
But
the band paid a very heavy price for its principles. The press resorted to
sneering at or boycotting them - and in the UK at least to some extent, this
pathetic attitude still continues. It became the accepted thing for journalists
to ignore or personally ridicule the band, despite the very high esteem in which
NMA are held by many other bands, producers and artists and the overwhelming
attendances at gigs all over Europe. Journalists automatically insulted and
vilified NMA as a matter of course, Justin Sullivan especially coming in for
some extremely vindictive personal insults. Even the artwork I did for the band
was jeered at in what UK press coverage NMA got: no NMA associate was safe.
Journalists sympathetic to the band found their articles completely altered by
their editors or more often simply dumped altogether. Smugly, many assumed this
would make NMA conveniently disappear - but they couldn’t have been more
wrong. What in fact happened was - The Family.
Seeing
and feeling the persecution of a creative force that intelligently addressed and
examined the ideas and beliefs they held dear, that never patronised them, that
spoke the secrets of their hearts and was not afraid to stand up and be counted,
fans became more loyal, more devoted and identified even more strongly with NMA
than ever before. It was as if the band in some way became a genuine part of
their lives, became, in fact, part of the fans’ families. This feeling
extended to other fans of the band too - a strong sense of camaraderie and
support began to spring up, underpinned by the idea of modern tribal cultures,
of new clans, and for many in an increasingly alienated culture, a desire to
make new families if their own blood family was dysfunctional. There was a
feeling that if the fans did not look after each other, and care for and support
the band - NMA could not continue to create the work that meant so much to them.
NMA
has always rejected the conventional attitudes of a media-hyped rock n’ roll
image that so many bands, even those claiming to be alternative believe is their
god-given right. There has always been, and will always be, a strong personal
bond between the band and the fan-base: a sense of mutual pride and respect.
This is not always easy, as in any family; some people will always seek to take
advantage of the trust and kindness of others, some will never understand the
concept or consider themselves too jaded and cynical to risk their
carefully-constructed self-image by participating, but to the majority of NMA
fans the Family, despite everything, remains and matures. The band, unlike so
many others in the music industry, have never manipulated or lied to the fans
for financial gain and in return, generation after generation of fans come to
the music and love it honestly. NMA aren’t a ‘cool’ band, they don’t
affect to despise the fans or their technical crews or anyone associated with
the band in order to make themselves feel big or feed their egos - they don‘t
need to. The music is what they love more than anything and it’s all they
need, so each element - band, crew, fans, management - has it’s proper place
in the whole, and each element supports the rest to help create the albums and
legendary live shows that continue year after year.
The
Family is not a formal, contrived organisation, but a spontaneous sense of
fellowship that has developed over the years. There are those who say NMA is now
much more than just a rock band, that it has slowly metamorphosed into a kind of
Movement: not resembling accepted forms of conventional religious or political
movements, but rather a new kind consciousness derived from archaic tribal roots
and the most basic human need for a sense of belonging, transplanted into the
fragmenting twenty-first century to create stability and a sense of collective
power via NMA‘s music, ideas and creative endeavours. For many, NMA and the
Family has simply become a place of emotional sanctuary where they don’t have
be anything but themselves and where they can be proud, not ashamed, of their
deepest feelings in an atmosphere of comradeship, love and support. In a world
obsessed with spin, materialism, fake-celebrity and plastic superficiality this
authenticity is an infinitely precious resource.
And the Family is a joyful thing - to know you can talk to and
communicate with people all over the world who hold similar beliefs and feelings
is genuinely exhilarating.
The
future of the music industry as we know it now becomes ever more uncertain: what
the years to come will hold is unknown in the face of an ever developing
technology. But one thing remains true; music made by human beings about things
that other fellow human beings feel to be their deepest and most sacred
emotions, will never die. It might be driven underground, it might never appear
in the mainstream media, it might be ridiculed by those enmeshed in the illusion
of consumerism and what they sadly consider ‘normal society’, it may
struggle - but it will survive and in the hearts of those who love it, it will
flourish.
That is a small attempt to explain what it means to be part of the NMA Family; naturally, as in any family, each person has their own, individual viewpoint and adds their own valued contribution to the greater picture. But as to my thoughts on the NMA Family - I personally am incredibly proud of it and proud to say I belong to it.
© 2004 Joolz Denby/New Model Army