Generation X
Generation X - English post‐punk band aka “Gen X”
Group from United Kingdom
Genres: punk, punk rock, new wave, british, British Punk
Similar artists via Last.fm
About Generation X
The core members of Generation X, a seminal British punk rock band with heavy new wave and power pop influences, was singer-songwriter Billy Idol (who has since maintained a remarkable 40+ year solo career) and bassist Tony James (later of Sigue Sigue Sputnik and for a spell Sisters of Mercy before settling in Carbon/Silicon). Generation X was formed in 1976 after guitarist Billy Idol (a.k.a William Broad) and bassist Tony James decided to go out on their own, leaving Gene October, the leader of their then band Chelsea. In December of 1976, they played the first punk gig at mecca club The Roxy in London's Covent Garden neighborhood with friends from "the Bromley contingent" Siouxsie & the Banshees, a band featuring a young Sid Vicious. The blatantly image conscious group soon secured management, fired their first drummer, and auditioned over 50 drummers before settling on Mark Laff of Subway Sect. They were photogenic and signed a worldwide long term deal to Chrysalis (also home of Blondie) and had popsmith Phil Wainman, producer of The Bay City Rollers and Sweet mix their debut album. In September 1977 they became the first punk group to "sell out" and lip synch their debut single Your Generation on TV's Tops of The Pops, and also that month performed on Marc Bolan's TV show just days before the T-Rex frontman's death. Generation X also appeared in films like DOA and in Don Letts' Punk Movie. In October of 1978, recordings for a second Generation X album produced by Ian Hunter of Mott The Hoople followed, the resulting Valley Of The Dolls hitting the streets in 1979. Guitarist Bob Dagwood Anderson eventually quit the lineup after completing a Japanese tour and the recordings for a third album in 1979.(The final Derwood lineup LP actually doesn't resurface for almost 20 years until 1998, and was finally released on an indie against Idol's wishes as Sweet Revenge). After a troubling two year period of uncertainty due to legal and financial battles with manager Stewart Joseph, Billy Idol and Tony James re-recruited & re-christened for their re-dubbed Gen X project. Friends, foes, pros and fellow fools then convened and attempted to get another record out. Outside the core Idol/James duo, studio collaborators like ex-Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones, ex-Clash drummer Terry Chimes, Chelsea guitarist James Stevenson, Steve New of Rich Kids, Danny Kustow of Tom Robinson Band, as well as John McGeogh later of Siouxsie & the Banshees. With renewed spirit and producer Keith Forsey at the helm, Gen X would go on to release one more LP Kiss Me Deadly in 1981. After neither the album nor the singles "Dancing With Myself" and "Kiss Me Deadly" took the charts, the band broke up. Idol joined up with NYC based Kiss manager Bill Aucion, re-releasing "Dancing with Myself" and the rest, as they say, is history. A one off Generation X reunion occurred in 1993 at London's Astoria. Hopes for future reunions have popped up infrequently, but, with the band members ensconced in their own projects, prospects have seemed unlikely.The group's music remains popular among punk rock, new wave, and power pop revivalists in the U.K. and elsewhere, with a cult following lasting into the new millennium.
Taken from Last.fm
508,807 listeners · 3,475,212 plays via Last.fm
On RadioStar
Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation
Generation X — Top 30 songs of 43
| Artist | Song title | Like / Dislike | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Generation X | Kiss Me Deadly (2002 Remaster) | ||
| Generation X | Dancing With Myself (EP Version) | ||
| Generation X | Your Generation {1979} | ||
| Generation X | Your Generation | ||
| Generation X | Valley Of The Dolls | ||
| Generation X | Ready Steady Go w Punk Rock | ||
| Generation X | Ready Steady Go | ||
| Generation X | Dancing With Myself | ||
| Generation X | Gimme Some Truth | ||
| Generation X | Dancing with myself | ||
| Generation X | Kiss Me Deadly | ||
| Generation X | One Hundred Punks | ||
| Generation X | Dancing With My Self | ||
| Generation X | Your Generation (1977)~1.95 | ||
| Generation X | Dancing with Myself | ||
| Generation X | Ready Steady Go 1978 | ||
| Generation X | Your Generation 1977 | ||
| Generation X | Dancing With Myself (Uptown Mix / Remastered 2002) (Vital Idol [Explicit]) | ||
| Generation X | Happy People | ||
| Generation X | King Rocker~2 | ||
| Generation X | Your Generation~3 | ||
| Generation X | Dancing With My | ||
| Generation X | Day by Day - Perfect Hits 1975-1981 | ||
| Generation X | From The Heart | ||
| Generation X | Gimmie Some Truth | ||
| Generation X | Dancing with Myself~4 | ||
| Generation X | Day By Day | ||
| Generation X | Valley of the Dolls | ||
| Generation X | Shakin' All Over | ||
| Generation X | Dancing With Myself // The Anarchy Factory |