
image by Jon Bennett
Time moves along a mobius strip in the echoing halls of 20JFG’s leaking Victorian haven. It was back in 2005 that we first posted Antifamily’s Staring at a Point. When we finally took possession of their debut LP in early 2007 it turned out to be a deadpan dub infused masterpiece and we eagerly awaited the ensuing explosion of interest…which never really came. Which is sad because it really was one of the best albums of this fractious decade.
And so, earlier this year I went in search of the elusive band and their (likely feral) descendants. Time moves strangely if you recall.

Petit Mal are in fact a side project of Antifamily thereby slightly skewing the genealogical metaphor…They released their album this year thus showing signs of life in ethereal, erudite synth pop in the UK. A rain slick collection of strangely tarnished futurism that falls between Glass Candy’s analogue romanticism and some alien reconstruction of Germanic electronic experimentations from the early 70s.
John Foxx haunts the Underpass of the crumbling city streets that Mt. Dimension inhabits with its oft-quoted ‘Escher-like cross characterisation’. Towering synths pierce the oppressive spires that surround, before revealing themselves as spot-lights heralding the approach of Melanie Gilligan’s cold-wave vocal. Chris & Cosey hover above and allow their missile-sleek, fatalistic synth progeny to play among the laser lines of a forgotten Thamesmead.
As a bonus here’s a live set they did for the excellent Choking on Cufflinks on WFMU in May.

League of Nations were a short lived band from LA who seem to have been active between 1981 – 1984. The left us with one mini-album, a 7″ and this 12″ containing Fade and Thin Ice. Both desperate, mesmerising cold-wave classics. Echoing drum machines and celestial synth washes hover in front of you, menacing and seductive in their programmed perfection. The lyrics seem only a primer for the ascension of the piercing electronic chimes that herald a glistening soulless future.
League of Nations – Fade (12″ version)

Simple Minds were a short lived yet prolific Glaswegian new-wave band who released their wonderful 4th album(s) Sons and Fascination / Sister Feelings Call in 1981 before disappearing in an ill-suited light aircraft somewhere over the pacific, en route to Chicago.
League of Nations opens with an almost irresistible baseline; only the punctuation of sharp stabs of guitar suggesting something altogether more Suicidal. Jim Kerr’s repetitious drawl matching the rumbling bass and grounding the airborne synth melody – always attempting to escape the sprawl but forever fading back into it.
Simple Minds – League of Nations
Epilogue -This post is tagged with cold wave prog
Surely they were en-route to Camden when they died their fiery death?
Yours sincerely
perching path12th October 2009
Well, I was trying to think of a location synonymous with a certain director of teen comedies…
But yeah, the New Romantic phase was the beginning of the end.
Yours sincerely
20jazzfunkgreats13th October 2009
the “new romantic phase” is from whence this particular jam comes! after that you mean the “arena phase” is the beginning of the end. Sparkle In The Rain has some great stuff on it but it’s pretty much all over after that.
Yours sincerely
bcr13th October 2009
Nah, New Gold Dream is the beginning of the ‘New Romantic’ phase before they went arena. Sons and Fascination and Sister Feelings Call are from the ‘New Wave’ phase.
Wikipedia told me so.
Yours sincerely
20jazzfunkgreats13th October 2009
Not that there’s necessarily anything wrong with New Romantics, it’s just that happened to be when Simple Minds stopped making music that appeals to me.
Yours sincerely
20jazzfunkgreats13th October 2009
well, they were certainly an influence on the New Romantics. Duran Duran have specifically mentioned them along with Japan as an early influence. not that anyone cares but me, of course. ;)
Yours sincerely
bcr14th October 2009
Oh I don’t doubt they were an influence it’s just listening to Sons and Fascination and Sister Feelings Call it’s hard to think of them as anything but New-Wave albums. Perhaps even a little derivative New-Wave albums. Although, when a band can record Theme for Dead Cities I’ll let a lack of invention slide ;)
From then on it gets muddy.
Yours sincerely
dann14th October 2009
“Real To Real Cacophony” and “Empires & Dance” are where it’s really at!
Yours sincerely
bcr14th October 2009
Anyone have any idea what happened to League of Nations? I’ve been led into a whirlpool of great bands and sounds I don’t even know what to do.
Yours sincerely
Jeff22nd October 2009