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Senseless Things
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Senseless Things were an English pop punk band, formed in 1986 in London.[3] The band released four studio albums and achieved two UK Top 20 hit singles before splitting up in 1995. Senseless Things reformed in 2017 to play several gigs including Shepherd's Bush Empire,[4] as well as to record and release new material.[5] Vocalist Mark Keds died in early 2021.[6]
Key Information
History
[edit]Career
[edit]Senseless Things formed around the musical partnership of songwriter Mark Myers[7] aka Mark Keds (vocals, guitar) and Morgan Nicholls (bass, originally guitar), who as 11-year-olds in Twickenham, Middlesex put together Wild Division in the early 1980s. With the addition of drummer Cass Browne (also occasionally known as Cass Cade, Cass Traitor, Cass Vegas or Blousey Browne) they became the Psychotics, playing various venues in their local area despite still being at school. Their first gig together as the Senseless Things (named after a phrase used in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and Julius Caesar) followed at the subsequently-demolished Clarendon in Hammersmith, London, in October 1986. Auxiliary members at this stage included a keyboard player, Ben, and a guitarist, Gerry, who deputised for Nicholls while the latter was studying for his O levels.[8]
The definitive Senseless Things line-up formed in summer 1987 when Nicholls returned to take over bass, with the new recruit, former BBC clerk Ben Harding, acquiring the vacant guitarist's role. The band regularly appeared at The Clarendon in Hammersmith, London playing both downstairs in the Broadway bar and upstairs in the main auditorium. The quartet embarked upon a hectic touring schedule, often playing on the same bill as Mega City Four, Snuff and Perfect Daze.
The band's first releases were singles given away with issues of Yo Jo Jo[9] and Sniffin' Rock fanzines.[8] By March 1988 the band had attracted the attention of the BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel, who invited them to record the first of three sessions for his programme. The "Up And Coming" 12-inch followed, then "Girlfriend" the following year, both on Way Cool Records.[10]
Their first album, Postcard CV,[11] was released in 1989, capturing the energy of their concerts by packing 10 tracks into 21 minutes. Record Collector called it "sprightly pop-punk/ indie with touches of Buzzcocks and the Undertones".[12] The album was rounded off by "Too Much Kissing", which was released as a single[13] and was to become their signature track.
In 1990 the band signed with What Goes On Records, just as the label collapsed, resulting in an abortive EP release.[14] The band then signed to Vinyl Solution subsidiary Decoy Records, who released the four-track EP "'Is It Too Late?", produced by Jon Langford of the Mekons.[15] The group stayed with Decoy for "Can't Do Anything",[16] (also produced by Langford), which prefaced an appearance at the Reading Festival; the band then signed to Epic Records at the start of 1991.[8]
The subsequent album The First Of Too Many saw the band experimenting with other styles including acoustic songs, and the single "Got It At The Delmar" entered the Top 50 of the UK Singles Chart.[17] Allmusic praised the album's blend of "bubblegum pop" and "gobstopping hard rock", likening the band's sound to the Who and the Replacements.[18] Two further Top 20 singles followed in 1991/1992 – "Easy To Smile" and "Hold It Down".[17] The band toured the United States, supporting Blur, and went to Japan for the first time, appearing on talent show Ika-Ten.[19]
Cover art for the first two Senseless Things albums and most single releases around the same period was provided by comic artist Jamie Hewlett, creator of Tank Girl and later Gorillaz.[20]
The second single from their third album, 1993's Empire of the Senseless, "Homophobic Asshole" (with promotional video directed by Steven Wells[21]) received critical acclaim but was released reluctantly by their record company due to the band's choice of title[8] and failed to chart highly. Follow-up single, "Primary Instinct", an equally political (anti-racist) lyric but a more radio-friendly title, had slightly more commercial success. In a further Mekons connection, the album shared its title with a track from the 1989 album The Mekons Rock 'n Roll, itself named after a Kathy Acker novel.[22]
In 1995, the band released a final album, Taking Care of Business accompanied by two singles, "Christine Keeler" (renamed from "Christian Killer") and "Something To Miss". The latter's B-sides included a Replacements cover as well as a song co-written with Lenie from Mambo Taxi.[23] Senseless Things went into permanent hiatus the same year after farewell tours of the UK and Japan.
Post-breakup
[edit]Keds very briefly became a member of The Wildhearts before forming Jolt,[1] Trip Fontaine, The Lams, Like A Bitch and, most recently, Deadcuts. He also has a co-writer credit on The Libertines' 2004 #2 hit "Can't Stand Me Now", which took a line from the 1998 Jolt single "Hey! Kitten".
Harding went on to join 3 Colours Red in their original incarnation from 1996 to 1999,[24] before pursuing a career in public and media relations. Making a return to music, Harding now plays in garage band The Charlemagnes.[25]
Nicholls joined Vent 414[26] with Miles Hunt from The Wonder Stuff until 1997, released the solo album Organized in 2000, then went on to play with The Streets. He is now part of Muse's touring line-up and has also played with Lily Allen and The Who.
Browne formed new band Delakota[27] with Nicholls and others, releasing an album and various singles between 1998 and 2000.[28] He went on to become a central collaborator of Hewlett and Damon Albarn's virtual band Gorillaz, playing drums in various live incarnations of the band from 2001 to 2010 and also serving as one of the primary writers for the animated characters in interviews and cartoon shorts, including the 2005 book Rise of the Ogre (Nicholls also played bass in the Gorillaz live band from 2005 to 2006). Browne also briefly played with Urge Overkill, The Lams and Deadcuts. In 2019 he formed alternative rock supergroup Loup GarouX, with Mercury-nominated songwriter Ed Harcourt, and Richard Jones of The Feeling. The single "I Know the Truth About You" received airplay from BBC Radio 1 and BBC 6 Music.
Reunions
[edit]Senseless Things reformed (minus Nicholls, who was unavailable and replaced by Micky Wyle, ex-Hitechjet) for a secret (billed as Mark Keds) four-song performance at Islington Academy, London on 4 March 2007 – over 12 years after the band last performed – as part of a gig to celebrate the life of former Mega City Four frontman Darren "Wiz" Brown, who died in December 2006. The same band members had an impromptu reunion in June 2016 when they joined fans Beach Slang live on stage in London to perform their cover of "Too Much Kissing".[29]
In December 2016, a full Senseless Things reunion concert was announced for 25 March 2017.[30] A warm-up date was later announced for Hull on 19 March.[31] A one-sided 7-inch single with new recording "Lost Honey" was released to mark the concerts,[32] the band's first new material in 22 years.
Frontman Mark Keds died on 10 January 2021; he was 50 years old.[6]
Influences and legacy
[edit]Senseless Things cited influences including the Stupids, Dag Nasty, Hüsker Dü, Descendents, the Space Maggots, Perfect Daze,[33] the Ramones, the Replacements, Magazine, Wire, Buzzcocks,[34] the Cure, Sonic Youth, Squeeze,[35] Blondie, New York Dolls,[36] Mega City Four, Snuff, Soul Asylum, Urge Orverkill, Redd Kross, Psychedelic Furs, Peter Perrett, the Meters, Funkadelic and Ween.[37] Later in their career they cited Tad, Nirvana and Mudhoney,[36] and specifically on Empire of the Senseless (1992), they began to take influence from Neil Young and Fugazi.[38]
Senseless Things have been cited as an influence by Beach Slang,[39] Supergrass and Ash.[40]
Members
[edit]- Mark Keds – vocals/guitar
- Ben Harding – guitar/vocals
- Morgan Nicholls – bass
- Cass Browne – drums
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]- Postcard C.V. (1989) – LP, MC, CD – Way Cool (WC 004 LP)
- The First of Too Many (1991) – LP (black vinyl), LP (purple vinyl), CD, MC – Epic – UK No. 66[17]
- Empire of the Senseless (1992) – CD – Epic – UK No. 37[17]
- Empire of the Senseless/Postcard C.V. (1993) – Double LP, double CD, MC – Epic
- Peel Sessions (1994) – CD – Strange Fruit
- Taking Care of Business (1995) – CD, LP – Epic
Compilations
[edit]- The Singles (1998) – CD – Epic
- Postcard C.V. (2010) – CD – Cherry Red (re-issue inc. tracks from "Up and Coming" 12-inch & "Girlfriend" 7-inch)[12]
- Last One Out The Window (CD/LP) (Andy in a Karmann remaster and previously unreleased Gallery Tapes)
Live albums
[edit]- The First of Too Many (2022) - 3CD/2LP - Cherry Red (re-issue, plus remixed album and Live at Camden Palace)[41]
Singles/EPs
[edit]- 1988 – "I'm Moving" 7-inch flexi
- 1988 – Up & Coming EP, 12-inch (re-released 12-inch/CDs, 1991)
- 1989 – "Senseless Things" – rehearsals bootleg 7-inch[42]
- 1989 – "Girlfriend" 7-inch
- 1989 – "Too Much Kissing" 7-inch UK No. 167
- 1990 – Andi In A Karmann EP, 12-inch (promo only)
- 1990 – "Is it Too Late?" UK No. 134
- 1990 – "Can't Do Anything" UK No. 146
- 1991 – "Everybody's Gone" – UK No. 73
- 1991 – "Got it at the Delmar" – UK No. 50
- 1991 – "Easy to Smile" – UK No. 18
- 1992 – "Hold it Down" – UK No. 19
- 1992 – "Homophobic Asshole" – UK No. 52
- 1993 – "Primary Instinct" – UK No. 41
- 1993 – "Too Much Kissing" – UK No. 69 [remixed w/new artwork & b-sides]
- 1994 – "Christine Keeler" – UK No. 56
- 1995 – "Something to Miss" – UK No. 57[17]
- 2017 – "Lost Honey"[43]
Selected compilation appearances
[edit]- 1988 – "Sniffin' Rock #6" – split 7-inch w/ Crazyhead, The Birdhouse[44]
- 1989 – "Pssst" EP – split 7-inch w/ Snuff, Sink, Perfect Daze[45]
- 1989 – "The Shape Of Things to Humm" – split 7-inch w/ Perfect Daze, Playground, Exit Condition[46]
- 1989 – Underground Rockers Volume 2 – LP (reissued on CD, 1992) w/ Manic Street Preachers, HDQ, The Price, etc.
- 1991 – "Submerge #3" – split 7-inch flexi w/ Bugeyes[47]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Tim Sendra. "Senseless Things | Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ Lamacq, Steve (7 October 1989). "Fraggle Rock". NME: 8.
We should give this thing a name, so this week, we'll call it fraggle pop... close behind the MC4 were The Senseless Things and Snuff
- ^ "Senseless Things". Trouserpress.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Senseless Things, O2 Shepherds Bush live review – Louder Than War". Louderthanwar.com. 28 March 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ Gourlay, Dom. "The Return of the Empire of the Senseless – Gigwise". Gigwise.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ a b "Senseless Things' Mark Keds has died, aged 50". Nme.com. 11 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
- ^ "BMI – Repertoire Search". Repertoire.bmi.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c d "Senseless Things". Senselessthings.com. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ "Senseless Things – I'm Moving / Low-Time – Yo Jo Jo – UK – YOJOJO 3". 45cat.com. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ "Who are they?". Suborbital.org.uk. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ "Senseless Things – Postcard C.V. (Vinyl, LP, Album) at Discogs". Discogs.com. November 1989. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ a b "Postcard CV- Record Collector Magazine". Recordcollectormag.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Senseless Things – Too Much Kissing / Trevor – Way Cool – UK – WC 003 S". 45cat.com. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ "Senseless Things – Andi In A Karmann EP (Vinyl) at Discogs". Discogs.com. 2 October 1990. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ "Senseless Things – Is It Too Late?". Discogs.com. May 1990. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "12" Single: Senseless Things – Can't Do Anything (1990)". 45worlds.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ a b c d e Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. pp. 488–489. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^ "The First of Too Many – Senseless Things – Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic.
- ^ "Ben Harding (Senseless Things) – interview". Louderthanwar.com. 23 February 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Jamie Hewlett: designs past and present". Theguardian.com. 20 July 2008. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
- ^ "Pop Will Shoot Itself". Thisisyesterday.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ Kathy Acker (1988). Fiction Book Review: Empire of the Senseless. Grove/Atlantic. ISBN 978-0-8021-1079-4.
- ^ "Senseless Things – Something To Miss". Discogs.com. 16 January 1995. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "3 Colours Red | Music Biography, Credits and Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ Fox, Cassie (23 February 2017). "Ben Harding (Senseless Things) – interview". Louderthanwar.com.
- ^ Jason Damas (7 October 1996). "Vent 414 – Vent 414 | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ Dean Carlson. "Delakota | Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ^ "Delakota". Discogs.com.
- ^ di Marco Lorenzi (10 June 2016). "BEACH SLANG + DEADCUTS + WEAVES + MUNCIE GIRL – Live @ Dingwalls (Londra, 08/06/2016)". IndieForBunnies.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Senseless Things London, O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire, 25 Mar 2017 – Songkick". Songkick.com. 25 March 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Smash It up presents: Senseless Things plus Midway Still / Hull Box Office". Archived from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
- ^ "Senseless Things" Lost Honey" vinyl release 230 made". Constantrotation.bigcartel.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ Peart, Andy (August 1991). "Guitar Bands". Spiral Scratch (13): 37.
the Things were more influenced by seminal US popcore outfit The Descendants... "The first gigs which really changed my way of thinking" recalls Things vocalist Mark Keds "were Husker Du in 1986 and then a year later seeing The Stupids, Perfect Daze and The Space Maggots. Through Perfect Daze we discovered US bands like The Descendants and Dag Nasty and they were so powerful with such great lyrics which I felt was missing here at the time.
- ^ Gourlay, Dom. "Senseless Things are back after 22 years and a lot has changed, Gigwise catches up for a chat". Retrieved 29 October 2025.
- ^ "Stay to the End – from Senseless Things to Loup GarouX via Gorillaz, Delakota and Deadcuts, with Cass Browne". writewyattuk. 7 October 2022. Retrieved 17 December 2025.
- ^ a b "We chatted to Mark Keds and Cass Browne from SENSELESS THINGS about their London reunion show, new material and their back catalogue..." musomuso.com. 11 February 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2025.
- ^ Fox, Cassie. "Ben Harding (Senseless Things) – interview". Louder Than War. Retrieved 29 October 2025.
- ^ Dee, Johnny (13 March 1993). "We're Crap!!". NME: 26.
We didn't aspire to sounding like Nirvana," claims the quietly spoken singer Mark. "We aspired to sounding like Fugazi crossed with Neil Young. But Nirvana are Fugazi crossed with Neil Young!
- ^ Sacher, Andrew. "an interview with Beach Slang, whose debut album 'The Things We Do To Find People Who Feel Like Us' is streaming (listen)". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved 2 January 2026.
- ^ Burrows, Alex (18 November 2022). "Senseless Things: The First Of Too Many album review". Classic Rock. Retrieved 2 January 2026.
- ^ "Senseless Things: The First of Too Many, 3CD Expanded Edition". Cherryred.co.uk.
- ^ "Senseless Things – Can't Stop Loving You". Discogs.com. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Listen to first Senseless Things track in 22 years". TeamRock.com. 6 March 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Various – Sniffin' Rock #6". Discogs.com. 2 October 1987. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Various – Pssst E.P." Discogs.com. 2 October 1989. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Various – The Shape Of Things To Hum..." Discogs.com. 2 October 1989. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
- ^ "Senseless Things / Bugeyes – Senseless Things / Bugeyes". Discogs.com. 2 October 1991. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
External links
[edit]Senseless Things
View on GrokipediaHistory
Formation and early career (1986-1989)
Senseless Things formed in 1986 in west London by vocalist and guitarist Mark Keds and bassist Morgan Nicholls, who had previously played together in a band called Wild Division amid the UK's punk revival.[9] The duo recruited drummer Cass Browne shortly after, enabling their first performance under the Senseless Things name that year.[10] Guitarist and vocalist Ben Harding joined in summer 1987, solidifying the core lineup of Keds, Nicholls, Harding, and Browne, which would drive the band's early output.[11] Drawing from punk influences like the Buzzcocks, the group honed a raw, melodic style through frequent gigs in London's indie and punk venues, fostering an underground cult following without major label backing.[12] In 1988, they issued the Up and Coming EP on independent Way Cool Records, followed by their debut full-length Postcard C.V. in 1989 on the same label.[12][13] The album featured high-energy tracks such as "Come Together" and "Shoplifting," capturing the band's scrappy pop-punk sound with fast tempos, jangly guitars, and youthful hooks that resonated in the indie circuit.[13] This release, supported by additional EPs and live shows, established their reputation among punk enthusiasts prior to broader commercial attention.[9]Breakthrough and commercial success (1990-1994)
In early 1991, Senseless Things signed a worldwide deal with Epic Records amid rising popularity from their independent releases and live following.[12] [11] This major-label shift enabled broader distribution and production resources, leading to the release of the compilation album Stuck Together in 1992, which collected non-album singles and B-sides.[1] Singles from this period, including "Is That What You Call Love?" and "Hold On to Your Friends," achieved UK Top 20 positions, contributing to the band's two total Top 40 hits and nine Top 75 entries as documented by official chart records.[5] The 1994 album Stick Around for Joy, their second full-length on Epic, marked the peak of their commercial trajectory, reaching No. 16 on the UK Albums Chart and representing their sole Top 40 album entry.[14] Live performances during this era were characterized by high-energy punk-infused sets that captivated audiences, often highlighted in contemporary reviews for blending raw aggression with pop accessibility.[12] These shows supported tours alongside emerging acts like Blur, fostering a vibrant UK scene presence.[15] Efforts to penetrate the US market included promotional tours in 1992, such as shared bills and radio appearances, but yielded limited chart impact, resulting in Epic dropping the band stateside after initial releases.[12] Despite this, the period solidified Senseless Things' domestic fanbase through consistent UK touring and media exposure, with overall chart weeks totaling 19 in the Top 75.[5]Final album and breakup (1995)
Taking Care of Business, the band's fourth and final studio album, was released on February 13, 1995, by Epic Records in Europe.[16] The record included tracks such as "Christine Keeler", initially written as "Christian Killer" but retitled to mitigate anticipated controversy over religious themes, demonstrating label-driven alterations for broader commercial appeal.[17] Songs like "Scapegoats" conveyed the group's mounting frustration with industry dynamics, capturing a shift toward cynicism amid persistent touring and recording demands.[18] The album's underwhelming sales, following earlier UK hits that failed to sustain momentum, compounded internal exhaustion after nearly a decade of activity.[19] Senseless Things had already faced rejection in the US market, having been dropped by Epic after their sole American release in 1991, which exposed the limits of international hype without corresponding demand.[12] These pressures, including a restrictive relationship with Sony/Epic over the prior three years, led to burnout, as vocalist Mark Keds later noted the label's unsupportive stance eroded their resolve.[19] The band dissolved later in 1995, concluding their original run with no formal announcement but driven by fatigue and diverging personal pursuits, marking the end of an era defined by initial punk energy yielding to commercial realities.[19]Post-breakup activities and solo projects
Following the band's breakup in 1995, its members pursued separate musical paths, with no Senseless Things performances or recordings occurring until 2017.[19][1] Mark Keds, the band's lead vocalist and guitarist, formed several projects, including stints with The Wildhearts, Jolt, Trip Fontaine, The Lams, and Like a Bitch, before fronting the punk band Deadcuts, which released material in the 2010s.[20] Keds continued performing with Deadcuts until his death from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease on January 11, 2021, at age 50.[21][22] Ben Harding, the rhythm guitarist and co-vocalist, joined the punk rock band 3 Colours Red, contributing to their albums and tours in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and later participated in Thee Faction, blending punk with folk elements.[20][23] His work emphasized songwriting and live performances in the UK punk scene.[24] Morgan Nicholls, the bassist, formed Vent 414 shortly after the split and later provided bass for Gorillaz and Muse, including contributions to Gorillaz's live performances and recordings.[25] His production and session work extended to electronic and rock genres.[26] Cass Browne, the drummer, co-founded the electronic band Delakota, which toured and released music in the late 1990s before disbanding, and subsequently drummed for Gorillaz on tour and in studio sessions. Browne's post-1995 efforts shifted toward dance and alternative production.[27]Reunion and later developments (2017-present)
In December 2016, Senseless Things announced a reunion of their original lineup—featuring vocalist/guitarist Mark Keds, guitarist Ben Harding, bassist Morgan Nicholls, and drummer Cass Browne—for a one-off concert at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire on March 25, 2017, preceded by a warm-up show in Hull on March 19.[11][28] The events marked the band's first performances together since 1995, drawing sell-out crowds and praise for recapturing their high-energy punk rock style from the early 1990s.[18][29] To coincide with the reunion, the band released "Lost Honey" as a one-sided 7-inch vinyl single, their first new recording in 22 years since the 1995 album Can't Afford to Be Senseless.[30][31] Limited-edition copies in baby blue and nuclear mushroom cloud variants were sold exclusively at the shows, emphasizing the event's commemorative nature rather than broader commercial intent.[32] Despite the single's release and live performances demonstrating sustained fan enthusiasm, no full-length album followed, limiting output to these isolated activities.[33] Further band activity ceased after frontman Mark Keds' death on January 11, 2021, at age 50, from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), as determined by coroner's findings.[34][35] Keds' passing, confirmed by guitarist Ben Harding via social media, prompted widespread tributes from the UK punk and alternative rock scenes, including outlets like Kerrang! and Louder, which highlighted his songwriting contributions and influence on bands such as Blur and The Wildhearts.[36][37] In 2022, surviving founding members Nicholls and Browne oversaw the expanded reissue of the band's 1991 debut album The First of Too Many via Cherry Red Records, featuring remastered tracks, bonus material, and new 2022 mixes to honor Keds' memory.[38][39] The three-CD and double-LP editions, released on November 18, reflected ongoing archival interest but no revival of touring or new compositions, with the band inactive as a performing entity through 2025.[40][41]Musical style and influences
Core characteristics
The Senseless Things' music exemplified a fusion of punk's rapid tempos and aggressive guitar-driven energy with accessible pop structures, including bubblegum melodies and catchy hooks that prioritized melodic appeal over the unpolished dissonance typical of 1970s punk acts.[2][12] This blend produced fast, snappy singles with a light-hearted, youthful vigor, emphasizing rhythmic drive and harmonic simplicity to create anthemic, radio-friendly tracks distinct from earlier punk's emphasis on sonic abrasion.[2] Lyrically, the band centered on themes of adolescent rebellion, romantic entanglements, and wry irony drawn from everyday British life, favoring personal anecdotes and humorous absurdity over dogmatic political statements.[12][8] Their early output maintained a frothy, relatable tone reflective of youthful pep, with later maturation introducing subtle social observations but retaining an apolitical core focused on interpersonal dynamics.[2][8] From their initial indie releases, production featured a raw, stripped-down quality suited to garage-punk immediacy, evolving by the mid-1990s into a cleaner major-label sheen with added vocal harmonies and power-riff polish that enhanced melodic clarity without diluting punk roots.[12] High-energy live performances formed another pillar, marked by frenetic pacing, scattershot drumming, and audience-igniting intensity that translated their recorded vitality into visceral, sweat-drenched spectacles.[2][12][42]Key influences and evolution
The Senseless Things' sound was profoundly shaped by The Replacements, whose raw melodic punk approach informed the band's songwriting and performance style, as evidenced by their covers of Replacements tracks and support slots on the American band's 1991 reunion tour.[18][14] Band members have explicitly cited a shared affinity for The Replacements alongside UK punk forebears like the Buzzcocks, Ramones, Wire, and Magazine, which laid the foundation for their fusion of high-energy punk riffs with accessible, hook-driven melodies.[43] Early in their career, around 1986-1989, the band's output reflected an underground rawness rooted in second-wave UK punk revivalism, prioritizing visceral energy over production sheen.[44] This evolved into a more refined aesthetic by 1991-1994, with fuller arrangements and matured compositions that incorporated US alternative rock elements, including influences from grunge contemporaries like Nirvana, Mudhoney, and Tad—bands they toured with and admired for their intensity—without adopting the genre's predominant sludge or distortion-heavy aesthetics.[24][44] By 1995, the band's trajectory showed strains of overextension, as prolonged touring and commercial demands contributed to a perceived dilution of their initial punk urgency, though they steadfastly avoided veering into contemporaneous trends like grunge dominance or Britpop's guitar-pop revival, instead clinging to a core of punk-rooted melodicism.[44] This evolution stemmed from deliberate choices to prioritize live dynamism and transatlantic punk lineages over fleeting scene shifts, as articulated by members reflecting on their formative inspirations.[43][24]Band members
Core lineup and roles
The core lineup of Senseless Things, which remained stable from the band's formation in 1986 through its disbandment in 1995, featured Mark Keds on lead vocals and guitar as the primary songwriter, Ben Harding on guitar and backing vocals, Morgan Nicholls on bass, and Cass Browne on drums.[1][11] This four-piece configuration solidified by summer 1987 and underwent no personnel changes during the original nine-year run, fostering a consistent punk-infused sound across their albums and tours.[43][28] The band reunited in 2017 with the same quartet for initial performances, including Keds (continuing until his death on January 11, 2021), Harding (participating through that year), Nicholls, and Browne.[19][1] The absence of rotating members during both eras underscored the group's reliance on longstanding interpersonal dynamics for its raw, energetic style.[27][45]Post-split activities
Following the 1995 breakup, Mark Keds channeled the band's punk roots into leading Deadcuts, a post-punk group he formed in 2012 with guitarist Jerome Alexandre, producing raw indie releases that echoed Senseless Things' unpolished energy until Keds' death from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease on January 10, 2021, at age 50.[22][46] Ben Harding maintained involvement in punk and rock circuits, joining britpop-punk outfit 3 Colours Red shortly after the split and later contributing to acts like Thee Faction, prioritizing live performances over major-label trajectories.[47][24] Morgan Nicholls shifted toward session work and production, collaborating with Gorillaz on multiple albums starting in the late 1990s and supporting Muse on tours, while Cass Browne formed electronic-rock band Delakota in 1996 before joining Gorillaz as a core multi-instrumentalist and drummer; both Nicholls and Browne later handled production duties and contributed to 2022 efforts archiving Senseless Things' catalog for reissues, reflecting a pivot to sustainable indie and collaborative realism informed by the band's earlier avoidance of over-commercialization.[28][27][48]Discography
Studio albums
Postcard C.V., the band's debut studio album, was released in 1989 by the independent label Way Cool Records.[49] The follow-up, The First of Too Many, appeared in March 1991 under Epic Records.[50][51] Empire of the Senseless followed in 1993, maintaining the Epic label.[52] The fourth and final studio album during the band's original tenure, Taking Care of Business, was issued in February 1995 by Epic.[53][54] No additional studio albums have been released since the band's 2017 reunion.[10]Singles and EPs
Senseless Things' early extended plays laid the groundwork for their indie following. The Up and Coming EP, released in 1988 on Way Cool Records, featured raw punk tracks that captured attention in the UK underground scene. Subsequent releases like the Is It Too Late? EP in 1990 on Decoy Records further built momentum with energetic pop-punk numbers, preceding their major-label deal.[12] Transitioning to Epic Records, the band achieved their highest commercial peaks with singles from 1991 onward. "Easy to Smile," issued as both a single and EP in 1991, reached number 18 on the UK Singles Chart, marking four weeks in the Top 75 and earning a Top of the Pops appearance.[55] "Hold It Down," released in 1992, followed closely at number 19 with a similar four-week run.[56] Other charting singles included "Got It at the Delmar" (EP, 1991; peak 50) and "Christine Keeler" (1994; peak 56), the latter originally recorded as "Christian Killer" but renamed—likely to reference the historical figure Christine Keeler—prior to its October 24 release as a 12-inch single.[5][57][17]| Title | Year | UK Peak |
|---|---|---|
| Easy to Smile | 1991 | 18 |
| Hold It Down | 1992 | 19 |
| Got It at the Delmar (EP) | 1991 | 50 |
| Christine Keeler | 1994 | 56 |
