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DISCOGRAPHY Releases ONE WAY TICKET TO THE ASYLUM tape (Contaminated Cassettes) PROUD TO BE PUNK tape (Contaminated Cassettes - live 1983) Reissues PSYCHO FACTION CD-R (self-released - has various live, practice and demo tracks) INFO sean.mcg1@btinternet.com Sean McGhee, the former singer of Psycho Faction, has information on the live/demo/practice CD-R. |
They were approached by Crass in early '81 with an initial query on putting together a split single with fellow Cumbrian anarcho-punks Counter Attack for release on the fledgling Crass label. Although this would have been the first release on Crass Records (bar their own material and several months prior to the Zounds single), the idea never really got off the ground. This was a recurring problem for the band throughout their period together, as lack of money (they were all teenagers and for the most of the time unemployed) and lack of equipment meant the band never ventured into a studio to record properly. Several years later a kind offer by local Fanzine editor Martyn Cockbain to fund a split single by the band also fell through as the original bassist of the band had spent all the money they earned from a BBC TV appearance on drink!
Although suffering badly from lack of resources and disorganisation, Psycho Faction did manage to play around 35 gigs in their existence from 1979-1984. Not a lot at all by today's standards, but back then almost all punk gigs were self-promoted/organised affairs. Along the way the band shared the stage with Crass, Poison Girls, Flux of Pink Indians, Conflict, Rubella Ballet and others on the anarcho-punk scene. They reached a sort of enigmatic fame via their thanks credit on the book that accompanied Crass' Christ - The Album, being the only band of eight mentioned who remained unrecorded and unreleased (officially), and so it remains until this day. They were one of the bands asked to play the opening night of the long-lost legendary Gateshead punk venue The Station, and also appeared at Sunderland's The Bunker. They were also unfortunate enough to be the target of organised right wing aggression that came to a head at a gig disrupted and stopped at Carlisle's old City Hall alongside Rubella Ballet and the Poison Girls.