The Dentists were an English indie/pop band from the Medwaytowns in England, who were active from 1984 to 1995. The band's permanent members were Mick Murphy, Bob Collins and Mark Matthews. The band also had three different drummers: Ian Smith, Alun Jones and Rob Grigg. All members participated in writing songs. Mark Reid was Mick Murphy's predecessor as lead singer for the band in 1983 when they were known as The Ancient Gallery.
History
The band met at school in the early 1980s and began playing gigs in their local area around Chatham and Rochester. Their first single, Strawberries are Growing in My Garden, was quickly followed by the albumSome People Are On The PitchThey Think It's All Over It Is Now. The record was produced by Allan Crockford of fellow Medway band The Prisoners and featured the standout track I Had An Excellent Dream. In December 1986, the band supported Del Amitri at the Marquee Club in London, and the Go-Betweens at the Astoria, London. In the same year, a reissue of Strawberries... received radio play from John Peel and Andy Kershaw and was named 'runner-up Single of the Week' by Smash Hits magazine; it reached the Top 40 indie charts. The following year, the band recorded a radio session for Janice Long. Shortly afterwards, their Writhing On The Shagpile EP also made the indie charts. In 1987, on their third visit to mainland Europe, the band were signed by the Belgian label Antler Records, who released a compilation album, Beer Bottle and Bannister Symphonies, and 12" single, "The Fun Has Arrived". During the late 1980s the Dentists were the main attraction in the Medway Bands' Cooperative. The cooperative was chiefly run by Andy Webber of The Hyacinth Girls and would organise both small gigs and multi-act showcases, featuring up-and-coming bands such as The Drunken Popes, The Strookas and Power in Motion. In June 1987, The Dentists headlined a show at the George Hotel in Chatham which featured all 23 acts. After a relatively quiet period with no new releases for over two years, the band's second album, Heads and How to Read Them, was released on Antler in 1991. Third drummer, Rob Grigg replaced Alun Jones on the eve of the European Tour to promote the album. Over the years, the band had attracted an underground following in the United States, and two American fans arranged for the band to play the 1991 College Music Journal festival. Shortly afterward, the Dentists were signed by the American label Homestead Records, which released the compilation Dressed and the album Powdered Lobster Fiasco. In 1992, the Dentists released three seven-inch singles - "See No Evil", "Hear No Evil", and "Speak No Evil" - simultaneously on three different record labels. Each single consisted of two songs by the band and an eponymous poem by John Hegley, read by the poet. Powdered Lobster Fiasco finally attracted the attention of a major label, and the band signed to Eastwest Records in 1993. Their first album for Eastwest, Behind the DoorI Keep the Universe, reached Number 8 on the CMJ College Radio charts and was followed by a six-week tour of the U.S. supporting Shonen Knife. A second album, Deep Six was recorded in early 1995 and produced by Wharton Tiers, but it failed to sell, and the band parted company with Eastwest. A demo of new songs was recorded in France, produced by Mike Hedges but Collins left the band shortly afterwards, their final appearance coming at the 1995 CMJ Music Marathon in New York City. The other members went on to form a new band, Coax with Chris Flack on guitar. Lida Husik covered "Strawberries Are Growing in My Garden " on her 1995 album Joyride. Some People Are on the Pitch They Think It's All Over It Is Now was re-released on CD in 2005 by Rev-Ola Records, a subsidiary of Cherry Red. In 2010, a new Dentists compilation of previously unreleased demos and rarities If All The Flies Were One Fly, was released and the band played two reunion gigs, one with fellow Medway band The Claim on Thursday 25 March 2010 at Dingwalls in Camden Town, London, and the following night, supported by The Love Family, at the Beacon Court, Gillingham. Some People Are on the Pitch They Think It's All Over It Is Now was reissued on vinyl LP in the United Kingdom and United States by Trouble in Mind Records in 2013. Former drummer Alun Jones died in September 2013.
Discography
Albums
Some People Are on the Pitch They Think It's All Over It Is Now
Heads and How to Read Them
Behind the Door I Keep the Universe
Deep Six
Singles and EPs
"Strawberries Are Growing in My Garden "
You and Your Bloody Oranges
Down and Out in Paris and Chatham
Writhing on the Shagpile
The Fun Has Arrived
"Beautiful Day"
"House the Size of Mars"
"See No Evil"
"Hear No Evil"
"Speak No Evil"
"Bigbangredshiftblackholes"
Compilations
Beer Bottle and Bannister Symphonies: A Collection of Some of the Finer Moments of Dentistry