Following in the footsteps of their slightly more successful forbears The Saints, Presidents Eleven were originally a garage/punk band formed in the Brisbane suburb of Corinda. Although earlier versions had a floating membership going under names such as The Zones and IQ Zero, what can be described as Presidents Eleven Mark I formed in 1980. This lineup was Ian Whittred (vocals), Damon Faggioni (drums), Greg Baxter (bass), Alex Plegt (guitar) and Peter van Vuuren (guitar).
At this stage the band’s repertoire consisted mainly of covers albeit played with a Dead Kennedys’ wall of sound, blitzkrieg attack. Renowned for their prodigious drug intake they made some demos of their few original songs including the classic ''Got Me, Got You'' before a summer’s worth of mushroom tripping, petty thievery, unwelcome attention from the Queensland Police Force and general debauchery saw the breakup of their communal household and the band. When the smoke (and their heads) had cleared, and with no preferred choice of career, Presidents Eleven had a lineup change with Baxter, Plegt and van Vuuren departing. Plegt and Baxter went on to form Arctic Circles. Damon Faggioni moved to bass and the band added Michael Faggioni on drums and Richard Best on guitar.
This version of the band boasted a much more professional approach and a tough Detroit rock sound that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on the Citadel record label. Whilst Damon Faggioni made an extremely psychotic drummer in the original version of the band, his musicianship and song writing ability came to the fore in this version of the group, aided and abetted by the more ‘musical’ talents of his older brother Michael on drums and Richard Best on guitar. This line up played almost all original material although they were well known for delivering truly face melting performances of The Damned’s ''New Rose'' and Radio Birdman’s ''Hangin’ On''. The band gigged regularly, supporting international acts such as The Gun Club and recording original material such as ''Your Sister Said'', ''Rotten to the Bone'', ''No More'', ''It Could Be You'' and a throwaway ditty called ''Summer Vacation''. Seduced by the more obvious American Detroit rock sound of the times, Richard Best left to join Brisbane band Les Bon Bons in early 1984.
After trying a couple of different guitarists the band finally settled on Roger ‘Golden Boy’ McDonald as lead guitarist remembering him from The Resistors who had played alongside Presidents Eleven at their first official show at Bingo Pete’s in the Valley in 1981. This version of the band saw Damon Faggioni’s song writing talents begin to expand beyond the simple Detroit rock parameters and start to take on a more European flavour as witnessed on the moody waltz time ballad ''Hold On'' and the multi layered arrangement of their rock masterpiece ''Lovely Day''. However, in spite of such gems the gimmicky pop song ''Summer Vacation'' became something of favourite with 4ZZZ – themselves no stranger when it came to the promotion of gimmicky songs. The track was a highlight of the 4ZZZ cassette only release 'Queensland in Quarantine', giving the band their greatest success but at the expense of their hard rock credibility.
With Roger McDonald now on board as lead guitarist the band spent three weeks in Sydney recording their first single ''Summer Vacation / Don’t Follow Me'' at Emerald City Studios and playing shows with the likes of The Happy Hate-Me-Nots and The Beasts of Bourbon. Although unhappy with the ‘safe’, radio friendly production job done by producer John Zahlika, the single went through three separate pressings, making it to #5 on Sydney’s Out on the Street’s Independent Charts and becoming the first song by a local band to make it to #1 on the 4ZZZ Hot One Hundred. This period saw the band playing on a weekly basis and supporting the likes of Public Image Ltd at Festival Hall. Although arguably the best rhythm section in town with only the Atkinson brothers from Ups and Downs able to lay a glove on them, the fiery relationship between the Faggioni brothers became untenable resulting in Michael leaving the group. The band took this opportunity to go on ‘winter vacation’ for 3 months and consider their options. The departure of Michael Faggioni saw him eventually replaced by Justin Foley, ushering in the final version of the band.
In January 1986 the group went into Brisbane’s Suite Sixteen recording studios at Milton and recorded six songs for a mini-LP to be called 'Hold On'. The band continued to play regularly, supporting The Flamin’ Groovies at Easts Leagues Club and even travelling to Townsville for a week to promote the imminent release of their new product. It was meant to rid the band of the unwelcome and unrepresentative albatross of ''Summer Vacation'' once and for all and also be the catalyst for a successful move to Sydney and a recording deal with either Waterfront Records or Citadel. Unfortunately, problems with the pressing of the vinyl were not detected until after the release had been distributed to record outlets. The resulting confusion and frustration saw the release stall and sales dropped off before the first pressing had sold out. Although they continued to play regularly, disappointed, disillusioned and losing enthusiasm, the band limped on until they played their final show on New Year’s Eve 1986 at Morticia’s nightclub.
Members
Ian Whittred (vocals), Damon Faggioni (drums), Greg Baxter (bass), Alex Plegt (guitar), Peter van Vuuren (guitar), Michael Faggioni (drums), Roger McDonald (guitar), Justin Foley (drums), Richard Best (guitar)
''Summer Vacation / Don't Follow Me'' 1984 Sundown
ALBUMS
'Hold On' 1986
References
http://tropicalacceleration.blogspot.com.au/2011/02/brisbanes-presidents-eleven-uncovered.html
References
http://tropicalacceleration.blogspot.com.au/2011/02/brisbanes-presidents-eleven-uncovered.html
I had the same problem with the pressing of the Fugitive Microbes single - a really great single stillborn. It's a bitch, isn't it? Tony Kneipp.
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