Carter USM

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Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine
Also known as Carter USM
Origin England
Genre(s) Alternative Dance
Alternative rock
Dance-pop
Years active 1987 - 1998
Label(s) Rough Trade
Chrysalis Records
Cooking Vinyl
Associated
acts
Jamie Wednesday
Abdoujaparov
Jim's Super Stereoworld
Jim Bob
Website http://www.carterusm.co.uk/

Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine (frequently shortened to Carter USM) were a British indie band formed in 1987 by singer Jim "Jim Bob" Morrison and guitarist Les "Fruitbat" Carter. They made their name with a distinctive style of power pop, fusing samples, sequenced basses and drum machines with rock 'n' roll guitars and off-beat wordplay-loaded lyrics. They reached the height of their fame in 1992. Over the following years the band took on new members, topping out as a six-piece, but struggled to regain their earlier popularity. They split in 1998 after releasing seven albums.

Contents

Based in Lambeth in South London, England, Fruitbat and Jim Bob originally played in an indie band called Jamie Wednesday, which released two singles - "Vote For Love" and "We Three Kings of Orient Aren't". On discovering they had a gig booked but no-one else to play there, they quickly formed Carter USM, reputedly named for Fruitbat's diligence, aptitude, and stamina. They recorded the backing track of drums, synths and samples, and fused Fruitbat's guitar antics with Jim Bob's lyrics. The debut single "A Sheltered Life" was released later in 1988 on the Big Cat label, but it was not until the classic second single "Sheriff Fatman" in 1989 that the band began to receive real recognition. The song was written about a South London slumlord and was followed by the album 101 Damnations - a critical account of life south of the River Thames, full of black humour, cynicism, wordplay and puns. The album went straight to the top of the indie charts.

The band's gigs became well known for a wall of white stage lights that threw off enormous heat and contributed to the sweaty, stage-diving crowd scenes that became part of the band's image. Such scenes are depicted in the video In Bed With Carter, filmed at the Brixton Academy.

In 1991 - having signed to Rough Trade Records - Carter USM released the album 30 Something which, thanks to non-stop touring, entered the official UK chart at number eight. The accompanying "30 Something" long-sleeved t-shirt became a defining image of the early 1990s indie generation. One of the singles released from the album, "Bloodsport For All", an attack on racism and bullying in the army, was released at the start of the Gulf War and consequently banned by the BBC. Spurred on by infamy, Jim Bob and Fruitbat toured Japan, Yugoslavia and the United States (with EMF) and made a second-on-the-bill appearance at the Reading Festival, with some feeling they upstaged the headline act James. The band also made its first Top Of The Pops appearance with the single "After the Watershed (Early Learning The Hard Way)", a song about child abuse that would become more famous for its subsequent legal battle with The Rolling Stones' publisher over the use of the lyrics "Goodbye Ruby Tuesday" in the chorus. The band also hit the headlines when Fruitbat rugby tackled the children's TV presenter Phillip Schofield in front of millions of television viewers at the Smash Hits Poll Winners Party in 1991.

The demise of Rough Trade records necessitated a change of label, and Carter made the switch to Chrysalis Records to work on their third album. That album, 1992 - The Love Album, went straight to number one in the UK charts, propelling the band to pop stardom. The band was unhappy, however, and this came across in the anger and cynicism of their next record, Post Historic Monsters.

In 1994, Carter's friend Wez joined the band on drums and the newly inspired trio played America, Japan and Europe, including a major concert in Croatia which was recorded and later released on video. The recording was also given away as a free live album with Carter's fifth studio LP, Worry Bomb - a punk-pop album with upbeat material such as "Let's Get Tattoos" and slow, poignant acoustic songs like "My Defeatist Attitude".

In 1996 Carter left Chrysalis Records and joined Cooking Vinyl. With Salv from the band S*M*A*S*H on bass, Wez's brother Steve on guitar, and teenager Ben Lambert on keyboards, Carter became a six-piece band.

After signing to Cooking Vinyl they released a mini-album, A World Without Dave, and started their longest ever UK tour. The band then went back to Canada and the US for what would turn out to be their final expedition. They decided to split shortly after their 10th anniversary, and their final studio album, I Blame The Government, was released in January 1998. Two further albums, Live! and BBC Sessions, were released in the same year, in June and October respectively.

Les Carter currently plays with the band Abdoujaparov as well as appearing as a presenter on the Brentwood radio station Phoenix FM. James Morrison's projects include the band Jim's Super Stereoworld and solo albums including Angelstrike!. He has also written a book, Goodnight, JimBob, detailing his experiences on the road with Carter USM, and a currently unpublished novel.

EMI released Anytime Anyplace Anywhere, a "best of" record featuring tracks from the band's birth until their switch to Cooking Vinyl. This reportedly annoyed the band as they were not consulted or even made aware of the release of the record. In 2004 two new Carter CDs were released: a live album of BBC concerts from the early 1990s, and Brixton Mortars, a compilation album of tracks from their final two studio albums. In 2006, Carter released a new compilation of unreleased tracks and rarities called The Good, The Bad, The Average And Unique. Echoing the earlier Starry Eyed And Bollock Naked, the sleeve features a Volkswagen Beetle - this time a bright green new model convertible. Autumn 2007 sees the release of a band-authorised best of compilation album spanning their entire career on EMI, currently under the working title of You Fat Bastard. The title comes from a chant performed by the crowd at gigs, which now haunts the former members. It originated from one time manager Jon "Fat" Beast's topless on stage band introductions.

In 2001 and 2002, Jim Bob and Fruitbat toured as Who's The Daddy Now?. The pair's two bands, Jim's Super Stereoworld and Abdoujaparov, would play a set each, after which the pair would combine to perform a number of Carter USM songs. Until 2006, Who's The Daddy Now? was the closest thing to a Carter USM regrouping after their split in 1997.

On 4 March 2007, almost 10 years after the band last performed, Carter USM's original two-man line-up played a set of four songs as part of a gig to celebrate the life of former Mega City Four frontman Darren 'Wiz' Brown, who died in December 2006. The band had been booked to play acoustically but surprised the audience by playing a traditional electric set at the last moment.

In 2007, Carter reunited for two "farewell" gigs. The first show announced - taking place on 2 November 2007 at London's Brixton Academy with support from Sultans of Ping - sold out in five days with little advertising except word of mouth. This sell-out prompted another concert to be arranged, taking place at Glasgow Barrowlands on October 20, 2007. The reunion celebrated twenty years since the band's foundation and ten years since their split. The gigs were performed as the original two-piece of Fruitbat and Jim Bob, who more or less kept their promise to play "all the hits and all the favourites".

Their self-confessed "worst gig of all time" was at Kidderminster Market Tavern where the drum machine broke down and they were forced to continue the show without any percussion. Jimbob claimed in Melody Maker that this led to the crowd chanting "Carter need a drummer". During the band's peak, fans of the group were famous for terrace-like chants before and often during their sets, most notably "You Fat Bastard" (a reference to the band's lighting engineer and compere Jon Beast which would remain popular even after Beast renounced both lamp and mic) and "Schofield is a wanker", a reference to Fruitbat's aforementioned televised altercation with Schofield during the Smash Hits Poll Winners Party. In another problematic appearance, Fruitbat suffered a back injury whilst cleaning the bath, leading to an in-chair performance at the Reading Festival in 1995.

Jim Bob and Fruitbat are both fans of cycle racing, and "Surfing USM" was used by Channel Four as a theme tune for their coverage of the 1991 Kellogs Tour of Britain cycle race. Fruitbat's band Abdoujaparov was named after the Tour de France cyclist Djamolidine Abdoujaparov.

In 1993, Jim Bob and Fruitbat made a brief appearance as themselves in the recurring sketch Persons of Restricted Seriousness in the BBC 2 comedy series Newman And Baddiel in Pieces

  • "A Sheltered Life" (October 1988, Southern Studios)
  • "Sheriff Fatman" (November 1989) UK#23
  • "R.u.b.b.i.s.h" (June 1990). Contains a sample of John Peel saying "What do you think of the show so far?" UK#14
  • "Anytime Anyplace Anywhere" (October 1990)
  • "Bloodsport For All" (January 1991). Released the day the Gulf War started and subsequently banned by the BBC for lyrics critical of army life.
  • "After The Watershed (early learning the hard way)" (October 1991) UK#11
  • "The Only Living Boy In New Cross" (April 1992) UK#7
  • "Do Re Me So Far So Good" (June 1992) UK#22
  • "The Impossible Dream" (November 1992). A Christmas cover of "The Impossible Dream (The Quest)", which originally featured in the (1965) Broadway musical Man of La Mancha.
  • "Lean On Me I Won't Fall Over" (August 1993) UK#16
  • "Lenny And Terence" (October 1993). Lenny and Terence are Lenny Kravitz and Terence Trent D'Arby. UK#40
  • "Glam Rock Cops" (February 1994) UK#24
  • "Let's Get Tattoos" (November 1994). First Carter single with real drums. UK#30
  • "The Young Offender's Mum" (January 1995) UK#34
  • "Born On The 5th Of November" (1995) UK#35

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