The The is a British
musical and multimedia group that has been active
in various forms since 1979, with singer/songwriter/frontman
Matt Johnson being the only
constant band member. Releases are fairly few and far
between for the band, but over the years The The have sold several
million albums internationally and achieved critical acclaim; their
1983 album
Soul Mining was voted the third best album of
the year by British music magazine
Melody Maker. This album featured the song
"Uncertain Smile", which at one point was voted the third greatest
song ever by
Australian Triple J radio listeners.
Since
2007, The The have enjoyed a small surge of attention in the
United
States
thanks to an M&M's
advertising campaign, which has been using the band's song "This is
the Day" as its theme music.
History
Early years (1977–1982)
In November 1977, Matt Johnson placed an
advertisement in the
NME
1977, asking for'Bass/lead guitarist into
Velvets/
Syd
Barrett'. Johnson later placed a second advert in the NME,
stating his new influences as'
The
Residents/
Throbbing
Gristle'.
Finally, The The made their debut as a trio at London's Africa
Centre on 11 May 1979, third on the bill to
Scritti Politti and
PragVEC, using backing tape tracks for the drums and
bass. The band at this point consisted of Johnson on vocal and
guitar, Keith Laws on synths\tapes, and guitarist\violinist Peter
Fenton-Jones (who would quickly drop out of the group).
As The The was getting underway, Matt Johnson was simultaneously
working with experimental synth-pop combo
The Gadgets, and would contribute to two albums
this group released in 1980. As well, Johnson recorded two solo
demo tapes in 1978/79, one of which (
See Without Being
Seen) was sold at gigs; the other (
Spirits) is
apparently unreleased in any form.
Peter Ashworth, then known as Triash,
became The The's drummer in 1980, and Tom Johnston was added on
bass. The band, now a quartet, issued a single ("Controversial
Subject"/Black and White") on
4AD
Records. Johnston and Ashworth would then drop out of the band,
although Ashworth (using his real name) would move onto a
decades-long career as a photographer and designer for numerous
bands—amongst them, The The. Tom Johnston, meanwhile, pursued his
career as cartoonist for the Sun newspaper.
As a duo (Johnson and Laws), The The began playing shows with some
of that era's most influential groups:
Wire,
Cabaret
Voltaire,
DAF,
This Heat,
The Birthday Party and
Scritti Politti. In 1981, Johnson issued a
solo album on 4AD called
Burning
Blue Soul; years later, it would be re-issued and credited
to The The.
In September 1981, the duo inked a deal with
Some Bizzare Records, and released the
7" single "Cold Spell Ahead". Shortly thereafter, Laws left and the
only member of The The was Johnson.
The Matt Johnson years (1983–1988)
The band's next single was an early version of "Uncertain Smile"
produced by
Mike Thorne; it reached #68
UK. This version is very different from the perhaps now
more-familiar album version, and features sax and flute by session
player
Crispin Cioe rather than (as on
the album version) the piano of sessioneer
Jools Holland. Former member Laws appeared on
one b-side track of the 12".
In 1982, the intended debut album by The The (
The Pornography of Despair)
was recorded, but was never officially released. Johnson apparently
ran off some cassette copies for friends, and several tracks have
been re-recorded or issued as B-sides, but the album remains
unissued, and (according to Johnson) is likely to remain so.
Instead, in 1983 The The released their official album debut, the
synth-noir classic
Soul Mining.
It featured the minor UK #71 hit "This Is The Day", as well as a
new recording of "Uncertain Smile".
During The The's more prolific period of releases, from
Soul
Mining (1983) to
Dusk (1992), most artwork used on
the albums and single releases was produced by Matt Johnson's
brother
Andrew Johnson. The artwork
has a distinctive style, and sometimes courted controversy, most
notably the initial release of the 1986 single "Infected" which was
withdrawn from sale and re-issued with an edited version of the
cover art.
For the 1986 album
Infected, The The still only consisted
of Johnson, augmented by session musicians. This album spawned four
charting singles in the UK, notably
Heartland which made
the UK Top 30.
Return to a full-fledged band (1989–2002)
By 1989, The The was an actual band again, Johnson having recruited
ex-
Smiths guitarist
Johnny Marr, ex-
Nick
Lowe bassist
James Eller and
ex-
ABC drummer
David Palmer as full fledged members.
This line-up recorded the album
Mind
Bomb, which featured the band's highest charting single to
that time, "The Beat(en) Generation", which peaked at #18 UK.
Adding keyboardist–guitarist
D.C.
Collard to the official line-up in
1989, the band embarked on a world tour in 1989–90, and issued the
1990 studio EP
Shades of Blue. This and a later EP of
remixes, 1993's
Dis-infected, were compiled into a 1994
full-length album for the North American market called
Solitude.
In 1993, the five-piece line-up issued the album
Dusk, which spun off three top
forty singles in the UK, led by "Dogs of Lust". A world tour
followed, at which point the band's line-up was reshuffled; Marr
and Eller left, and were replaced by guitarist Keith Joyner and
bassist Jared Nickerson, respectively. Also added was harmonica
player Jim Fitting, who auditioned in New York in early 1993. The
version of their hit "This Is The Day" featuring Jim Fitting was
often dubbed "
That Was The Day". Palmer bowed out partway
through the tour and was replaced by new drummer
Andy Kubiszewski.
The band's next project was 1995's
Hanky Panky, an album that
consisted entirely of
Hank Williams
cover tunes.
Hanky Panky was recorded by a new group
consisting of Johnson, Collard, Fitting, guitarist
Eric Schermerhorn, bass guitarist
Gail Ann Dorsey (billed as "Hollywood"
Dorsey), and drummer "Reverend" Brian MacLeod. Their cover version
of "I Saw The Light" hit #31 UK.
The music video shows the whole band
playing on the top of the Chrysler Building
in New York City, with many shots of Matt Johnson
on the metal gargoyles. The video was shot on the roof of a
much shorter building, which featured plastic gargoyles.
A 1997 album called
Gun Sluts was apparently recorded but
left unreleased by the band after it was rejected by their label.
The band then ended their relationship with Sony, moving to
Interscope.
In 2000, The The, now conisisting of Johnson, Schermerhorn, bassist
Spencer Campbell and drummer Earl Harvin, released
NakedSelf, the band's final new studio album
to date. This same line-up also recorded two new tracks for the
2002 compilation
45
RPM: The Singles of The The.
In June 2002, The The made a single live appearance at the
Meltdown Festival in London. At this
point, the band consisted solely of Johnson, with guests
J. G.
Thirlwell on tapes and loops, and
Benn Northover on film and video.
This is the last live performance by The The to date; Johnson has
stated on the official The The website that there are no plans for
The The (or Matt Johnson) to appear live on stage again.
Recent activities
In May 2007, The The released a new download-only single on their
website. Entitled "Mrs. Mac", the song was about Johnson's first
day of school as a child. All instruments and vocals on the track
were performed by Johnson.
A press release was issued along with the track, announcing a
forthcoming The The album called
The End of the Day with
guest appearances by
Elysian
Fields,
J.G. Thirlwell,
Thomas
Leer,
Rob Ellis,
Anna Domino, and others. To date, the album
remains unreleased.
In June 2009 it was announced that The The created an original
soundtrack to the Gerard Johnson film
Tony. The official
The The website describes the film as "a dark character study that
exposes the sinister secrets of a lonely London life."
Members
Official members
Matt Johnson is the only consistent member of The The. As well,
from 1983–1988 (and again from 2002–present) he was the
only official member of The The.
Official band members have been:
Collaborators
The following musicians were not official members of The The, but
made notable contributions to various recordings by the band.
Discography
Commerically released albums
Compilation albums
Unreleased, limited edition and promo-only albums
The recording career of The The/Matt Johnson features numerous
full-length albums that have never seen commercial release. Despite
their unavailability on disc, Johnson includes these albums in
almost every official discography issued by the band.
- Matt Johnson: See Without Being Seen (1978–79)
- A Matt Johnson solo project. Very limited
cassette release, only avaialble at concerts.
- Matt Johnson: Spirits (1979)
- Matt Johnson solo.
Unreleased.
- Gun Sluts (1997)
- Completed album for Sony.
Unreleased.
- Film Music (2002)
- Promotional-only release.
- The End Of The Day (2007)
- Announced as "forthcoming" in May, 2007.
As yet unreleased.
Singles
Year |
Title |
Chart positions |
Album |
UK |
USA Modern Rock |
1980 |
Controversial Subject |
- |
- |
- |
1981 |
Cold Spell Ahead |
- |
- |
- |
1982 |
Uncertain Smile |
68 |
- |
Soul Mining |
1983 |
Perfect |
- |
- |
- |
Uncertain Smile |
- |
- |
Soul Mining |
This Is the Day |
71 |
- |
1986 |
Sweet Bird of Truth |
- |
- |
Infected |
Heartland |
29 |
- |
Infected |
48 |
- |
1987 |
Slow Train To Dawn |
64 |
- |
Sweet Bird of truth |
55 |
- |
1989 |
The Beat(en) Generation |
18 |
13 |
Mind Bomb |
Gravitate to Me |
63 |
15 |
Armageddon Days Are Here (Again) |
70 |
- |
Kingdom of Rain |
- |
16 |
1990 |
Jealous of Youth |
- |
7 |
Solitude |
1991 |
Shades of Blue EP |
54 |
- |
- |
1993 |
Dogs of Lust |
25 |
2 |
Dusk |
Slow Emotion Replay |
35 |
- |
Love Is Stronger Than Death |
39 |
14 |
1994 |
Dis-Infected EP |
17 |
- |
- |
1995 |
I Saw the
Light |
31 |
24 |
Hanky Panky |
2000 |
Shrunken Man |
- |
- |
NakedSelf |
2007 |
Mrs Mac |
- |
- |
- |
See also: "Solitude" (EP) which was released in December 1999 and
contained remixes of The The songs - most notably, "That was the
Day", a version of their hit single, "This is the Day".
References
External links