The Alarm: An Old Dog Tries New Trick

Written by wKen
Published February 20, 2004

The aging UK band, The Alarm, have succeeded in pulling a prank on the record buying public. The middle-aged group, best known for their 1983 song "68 Guns", recorded a new single under the fake band name of The Poppyfields. The single, titled "45RPM", is currently number 28 on the British Charts. It was released with a video in which a younger group of men lip-sync to the song.

"We wanted the song to be judged on its merits and stir up the water a little bit," singer Mike Peters is quoted as saying.

Obviously, the look is at least as important as the sound for many music buyers.

Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
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Declaration: 1984-1985 Declaration: 1984-1985
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45 RPM 45 RPM
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The Alarm: An Old Dog Tries New Trick
Published: February 20, 2004
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: News, Music: Punk Rock
Writer: wKen
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Comments

#1 — February 21, 2004 @ 12:10PM — The Theory

damn! that was The Alarm? I had heard about that trickeroo, but never thought it'd be a band I cared about...

#2 — February 21, 2004 @ 12:46PM — Eric Olsen

Hilarous, great story Ken, thanks! It kind of reminds me of XTC as Dukes of the Stratosphear. There seems to be something liberating about playing a persona other than "yourself" - a future post perhaps.

#3 — February 21, 2004 @ 15:20PM — Joe [URL]

More info on the Poppyfields

#4 — February 22, 2004 @ 01:38AM — Doccus [URL]

Ex-cellent :)

It achieved two things:

1) It underscored form v. substance in the music world. This includes bias by the purchasing public regarding age of the artists.

2) It made news. Which makes album sales. I liked the Alarm "back in the day". Now I have to check out the new CD :)

Doc

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