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UNIT, Rock In Opposition: Phase Four

UNIT, Rock In Opposition: Phase Four

This album can justifiably be regarded as the older brother of Dare To Be Different: political and personal texts set to pop songs, rock anthems and even post-punk pieces designed to be as accessible as possible. ( By UNIT standards!)

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£4.00

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  [2008]

27 tracks. 70.27 mins.  12 page, full colour booklet.  Notes, lyrics and song descriptions in CD booklet.  Cover by Andy.

Claims that we recorded this in response to complaints and criticism with regard to the style and idiom of the previous album are proved utterly false when it is revealed that over two thirds of Rock In Opposition Phase 4 was recorded during the same sessions used for Phase 3. Both albums were originally intended to be released on the same day which, in the event, is what we did. This album can justifiably be regarded as the older brother of Dare To Be Different: political and personal texts set to pop songs, rock anthems and even post-punk pieces designed to be as accessible as possible. It was Achoi who suggested we record our own interpretations of works by The Apostles and 4 pieces by 1980s anarchist band Anthrax. Both these albums mark a turning point in the career of UNIT since, at the end of the recording sessions, Dave, Trung and Achoi all retired from the group although Achoi will still provide CD booklet notes and management duties. This also concludes the series of Rock In Opposition albums we commenced way back in 2005 and these 5 discs represent one of the most innovative (if not always successful) adventures into breaking barriers in modern music that any independent group has attempted.

The CD label is by Dave and marks the end of his fine series of sword tsuba designs which have graced our albums since We Are Your Gods way back in 2000.

 

 

UNIT is currently a trio of musicians, artists and film makers who consist of Luc Tran (that’s me), Cheung Yiu Munn (a.k.a. U-J) and Andy Martin. We’ve just released our 13th CD but the spine on it says it’s our 10th album. No, I haven’t quite sussed that out yet either. I don’t like all the music we’ve done – but I can’t think of a single track that isn’t interesting or unusual.


The first phase of our career saw Lawrence Burton, Nathan Coles and Peter Williams join forces with Andy Martin and Dave Fanning, both of whom had previously been in an unsuccessful performance art group called The Apostles in the 1980s. The intention was not only to venture into the avant garde territory that Andy and Dave had investigated during the early years of the 1990s but also to record again, properly and with professional production values, nearly all the works previously committed to old fashioned vinyl by The Apostles. However, much of the decade was spent producing Smile magazine with music definitely taking a subservient role at this time.


From 1994 to 1997, UNIT released their records under the name Academy 23 to avoid confusion with a fairly successful German avant garde group who were also called UNIT. This outfit disbanded early in 1997 so we reverted to our original name with the 7″ EP Richard Dawkins Is Together With Us. After 2000, we elected to concentrate mainly on writing, performing and recording new music in as many different styles and genres as we could manage, given the technical limitations of certain group members. Our only tenuous link with the previous format of the group (and The Apostles before that) was our deliberate hostility toward capitalism and the commercial music industry and our support for Class War, the paper and the idea.


Most people understandably think of UNIT as ‘that group with all the Chinese lads in it’ but this only applies to the second phase of our career which commenced in 1999 when Ngo Achoi, Lang Kin Tung and Gieng San Man joined Andy Martin and Dave Fanning to form what was really a new group. It is this group with which most people are familiar, thanks to the tireless promotion and distribution of our work undertaken first by Achoi and then by U-J, who set up our e-mail account and website. When ‘Sons Of The Dragon’ was released it heralded our intention to put Chinese people on the independent music map. We wanted to prove to the world there was more to us than cooking and kung fu. Rap music had Jin Au Yeung in America and LMF in Hong Kong but in the sphere of pop music, the avant garde and punk rock, the demographic remained resolutely white…so we decided to change all that, despite the open hostility directed at us by certain people in the UK such as Fracture, Idwal Fissure and Head Wound who clearly didn’t want a bunch of Chinkies spoiling their scene.


Two other group members deserve a shout out: Chinese guitarist and vocalist Garlen Lo and Vietnamese saxophonist Thanh Trung Nguyen. Garlen stayed for just over a year but left the group because he wanted to play only twee little pop songs – nothing wrong with that, of course, but it’s not what we’re about. Trung, like Garlen, comes from a wealthy background and so, also like Garlen, found our struggle to save up enough money to pay for studio time and release CDs, inexplicable and strange. His musical origins are in jazz, especially the big band jazz of the 1930s – very odd for a 16 year old! He managed to stay with us long enough to appear on all four Rock In Opposition albums and he played at most of our prestigious concerts in 2006 and 2007 but his parents objected to him being in a pop group and they most definitely objected to Andy (many people do) so by the end of 2007 we became a trio.


If it had not been for Hackney Chinese Youth Club in Ellingfort Road (which, sadly, closed in 2006), UNIT would not exist, at least not in its present state. That was where I met U-J and Andy and that was how I came to join UNIT as a drummer and keyboard player. Garlen Lo is in fact the only member of UNIT who doesn’t originate from HCYC. The famous Birmingham poet Andy Nunn introduced us to the Kill Your Pet Puppy chat room. Through that I discovered the history behind the UK punk scene and I learned about the whole Crass / Class War divide, the miners strike, Margaret Thatcher, Greenham Common, the Poll Tax riots and all the rest of it. To think there was a time when people my age used to go on demonstrations and start riots when the government gave us shabby treatment. Now we just turn on our laptops, plug in our I-pods and download another programme to keep us amused.


 

Luc 2008


UNIT have donated these CD's as  a benefit for Active, which we appreciate and will help us continue to do free stickers and posters etc.