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The Primitives: ‘A reviewer said that Crash would finish the band. Then it was in Dumb and Dumber’

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PJ Court, vocals, guitars The Primitives formed in the summer of 1984 with a singer called Keiron, who brought me in to write songs. When he left, we pinned up an advert in Coventry library and Tracy, who I’d actually met before on a Youth Opportunity Programme, answered. At that point, we sounded more like the Birthday Party or the Gun Club, so I wrote three new songs – Through the Flowers, Across My Shoulder and Crash – to test a more pop direction. Crash was simple and noisy, with a basic guitar line that became the “Na na na” hook. It was in our live set, but we dropped it quite quickly. We thought we already had enough bubblegum, Ramones-style songs, and we more or less forgot about it until 1987, when our producer Paul Sampson suggested we revisit it. We’d had a couple of covers in the music press – Melody Maker and NME in the same week – and the record companies were beginning to sniff around. So we used Crash as bait to generate interest.…

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