top of page

Slade: (Glam Yobs)
Noddy's howl, Dave's sparkle, boots that thudded like thunder-Mama Weer All Crazee Now turned pubs into riots, Cum on Feel the Noize made every kid scream wrong. Misspelled mayhem for the factory lads who couldn't spell glam but owned it. More misprints stamping weekly.


Slade: Part of the Glam Rock Movement Cover Article (1972)
Slade’s Part of the Glam Rock Movement , a cover and one-page article in Disc Music Newspaper , August 19, 1972.

Slade
Aug 18, 19721 min read


Slade: "I can see why they were scared of us!" Feature (1972)
Slade and Jim Lea’s "I can see why they were scared of us!" , a one-page feature in Record Mirror , September 23, 1972.

Slade
Jul 22, 19721 min read


Slade: "Blind Date with Dave" Article (1972)
Dave Hill’s "Blind Date with Dave" , a one-page blind date reviews article in Melody Maker , June 24, 1972.

Slade
Jun 23, 19721 min read


Slade: Slade’s Month Article (1972)
Slade’s Slade’s Month , a one-page calendar article in Bravo Magazine , May 1, 1972.

Slade
Apr 30, 19721 min read


Slade: Amazing Face To Face Cover Article (1972)
Slade’s Amazing Face To Face , a cover and one-page article in Record Mirror , April 22, 1972.

Slade
Apr 21, 19721 min read


📰 Tape and Hi-Fi Info – Mar. 1972
From Slade’s glam thunder to Buffy’s folk shimmer — March 1972’s tape scene was alive and well.

Slade
Mar 18, 19723 min read


📰Band Breakdown – Slade – Mar.1972
A candid, rough‑edged portrait of a band who survived the clubs, the skinhead era, and the lean years — emerging stronger, louder, and more unified than ever.

Slade
Mar 4, 19728 min read


📰 Slade Alive! – Cover: Mar. 1972
A band once defined by image now defined by power — Slade Alive! marks the moment their live sound became their le

Slade
Mar 4, 19723 min read


Look Wot You Dun Single: 1972
The candidate that reached number 4.

Slade
Jan 28, 19725 min read


Look Wot You Dun Single Review: 1972
Slade's Second No. 1 Hope Published in the UK on January 22, 1972, New Musical Express’s one-page single review of Slade’s “Look Wot You Dun” (Polydor) predicted it could be another No. 1 hit. The enthusiastic review praised the track as “immensely catchy,” heavily laden with the same successful gimmicks as their previous single “Coz I Luv You” — including the ungrammatical but colloquial title and that startling pistol-shot beat. The reviewer noted that while the routine was

Slade
Jan 22, 19722 min read
bottom of page
