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Sultans Biography (Again.. Blatantly stolen..hehehe)
The Sultans of Ping F.C. formed in Cork in early 1988. For the
next 2 years they played live locally and gained a large devoted
following. The original line-up was Niall O'Flaherty - vocals, Pat
O'Connell - guitar, Paul Fennelly - bass, and Ger Lyons - drums. Some of
the classic Sultans songs such as Where's Me Jumper and Turnip Fish were
written in this period.
In April 1990 the band recorded their
first demo featuring three songs namely Stupid Kid, Riot at the Sheepdog
Trials and Eamon Andrews. The tape was sold under the name of Confessions
of a Sellafield Sex Guru and it sold over 500 copies.
The band
played their first Dublin show that year supporting popular Irish band The
Golden Horde. In October 1990 the Euro Rock festival was held in Cork so
the Sultans were chosen as the local entry and they went down a storm with
the home crowd. Afterwards many people agreed that the Sultans had a
bright future in front of them. For some strange reason the band become
very popular in Sweden due to the Euro Rock festival being broadcast there
on radio, so things were looking good.
In December the band
were invited to do a radio session for the Dave Fanning show on RTE (Irish
National Radio) and again this went down very well and furthered the bands
cause for world domination!
In 1991 Ger Lyons and Paul Fennell
left the band and in March of that year Morty McCarthy took up residence
on the drum kit and John Mcauliffe took up bass playing duties. By this
stage the Sultans were making quite a name for themselves around Ireland
and this resulted in them being asked to headline the final night of the
Cork Rocks Weekend - which is an annual event showcasing the best in
unsigned Irish bands held on the June Bank Holiday weekend. Martin Heath
of Rhythm King Records was so impressed by the bands performance that he
immediately offered them a deal. Paddy agreed on the spot when he saw that
Martin had a personal organiser!! The deal was signed in August 1991 and
the band went through another line up change when John McAuliffe left to
become a psychologist. He was replaced on bass by Alan McFeely.
The band played their first gig in the UK in London in November
1991 and they received a great response from an appreciative crowd. The
debut single Where's My Jumper was released at the end of January 1992 and
the band set off around the UK in a highly successful debut tour before
resuming to Ireland to do some dates.
In March 1992 John Peel
invited the band to do a session for his show on BBC 1 who duly obliged.
The follow up single Stupid Kid was released in April and reached No. 1 in
the Indie Charts, No. 67 in the national charts as well as No. 5 in the
Irish Charts. The band by now had begun to gather a large and loyal
following in the UK and a second successful tour followed. The summer saw
the Sultans play at such festivals as Fleadh (Finsbury Park), Feile
Festival (Ireland) and Reading Festival as well as doing an Irish tour and
recording their debut LP - so there wasn't much time for getting a suntan!
The bands third single was released at the end of September
entitled Veronica which reached No.2 in the lndie charts and No. 66 in
national charts. The Sultans then set off to Europe to do a ten date
support tour with Carter USM, then more good news for the band when Epic
Records signed them up for an undisclosed transfer fee. December saw the
band begin a tour in Lexiip (Ireland) and finish in Tokyo (Japan)! And the
fairytale story was completed when their 4th single and their first on
Epic You talk too much crashed into the British national charts at no. 32.
The debut LP Casual Sex in the Cineplex was released in February and it
crashed into the charts at No. 26.
Meanwhile the Sultans were
completing a highly successful tour of the U.K. culminating in a sell-out
concert at the Astoria in London. The band then returned home to Cork for a
triumphant gig in the City Hall before settling down to begin a bit of
work called the writing of that difficult second LP.!!
In May 1993
the Sultans were back on the road in Holland with those lovable Luna
chicks
for 6 concerts which saw them begin to make a name for themselves in a
flat country (killing the theory that the Sultans only do well in
countries that have got lots of hills and mountains!). After that it was
back to Japan for a 5 date tour which was suburb and it saw the Sultans
become one of the few western bands in recent years to play Hiroshima and
after that saw them do two sold out nights in Tokyo.
The band had
a well deserved break and they went off on holidays before resuming
writing of the second LP. At the end of June a quick trip around the U.K.
was made doing dates, here and there.
In July they entered Marcus
Studios in London to begin recording alongside such hallowed artists as
'Take That' and 'Gabrielle '(Oh how we screamed). Steve Lovell was again
the main man in charge of production duties while Tim Hunt and Simon
Vine stock ably mixed the Sultans tunes. Little breaks during the recording
were taken in order to continue the quest for world domination. The Feile
Festival in Ireland was taken by the scruff of the neck and given a bloody
good shaking before all the A. O. R. artists peddled their wares on the
Sunday.
Two weeks later the Sultans invaded Sweden and played in
Hulsfred Festival where they filled the 3,000 capacity arena with many
more left outside and Stockholm was taken the following day in the
capitals lrish festival. in between these forays the band continued apace
with their recording.
A proposed Reading Festival appearance
unfortunately never came to fruition so the Sultans finished recording the
new LP (by now titled Teenage Drug) and dropped the F.C. off the end of
their name. The single Teenage Punks was released at the start of
September and it reached no. 48 in the pop charts. The band then did some
warm up dates and supported those lovable chappies Carter USM on their
jaunt around the UK in October. Immediately afterwards Michiko the sixth
single was released and it just ended up outside the top 40 at no. 43.
After that it was back to the land of the Rising Sun and a tour of teenage
schools to spread terror and mayhem.
However Niall developed a
serious eye injury and he had to be hospitalised in Tokyo and the band had
to cut short their tour. Thankfully Niall recovered fully and a month
later the Sultans were again ready to rock so they did a Christmas tour in
Ireland before taking a well deserved break for a few weeks. In late
January 1994 they began their sixth tour of the UK. and this 22 date tour
took them the length and breadth of the nation and it finished with a sell
out show at the Forum - the bands biggest to date. The single Wake up and
scratch me was a taster for the forthcoming LP Teenage Drug and it charted
at 48. The album was released and again it entered inside the top 50
keeping up the bands fine record of chart entries. A tour of Europe
followed encompassing Holland, Sweden, Denmark and Germany and this was
very successful. Virtually straight afterwards the band returned to Japan
to play six shows which again went very well.
The summer of 1994
were spent alternating between the rehearsal and live concerts all over
the U.K. and the band returned to the studio in late August to record 5
new songs for a future release. In late September the band made their
first trip to the U.S.A and had a hugely successful and enjoyable time
even if Niall has a warrant out for his arrest in Canada for being a bit
too rude to say the least!
In 1995 they toured again with a new
guitarist and had a concert broadcast on British ITV on a program called
The Beat. The start of 1996 saw the Sultans (now without the Ping) support
The Ramones for their farewell tour, followed by the release of the single
Mescaline and their own British tour. Mescaline got to 21 in the UK Indie
Charts. In June they toured again, including a Paris date with the Sex
Pistols and released the third album Good Year For Trouble.
This page mainly thanks to Lisa Hall.