Tuesday, June 03, 2025

Colin Jerwood and Conflict

Colin Jerwood, 1962-2025

Sorry to hear about death of Colin Jerwood, lead singer with Conflict. I saw them at various places in the 1980s including Thames Poly, the Ambulance station (Old Kent Road) and Bowes Lyon House in Stevenage. A band of contradictions sometimes to be sure (what was that about using the SAS 'Who dares wins' logo never mind some later stupid remarks) but in those 1980s days nobody else could express our rage against the machine quite like them and they played countless benefits. As Crass slowed down there was a period in which they were the leading band in the anarcho-punk scene as it headed from pacifism to class war,  giving lots of bands their first releases on their Mortarhate label including several great compilations.

Conflict - To a Nation of Animal Lovers (I used to have poster from this on my wall)


I think it's fair to say that Colin wasn't all talk either, I believe he was active in the Animal Liberation Front at one time and not averse to getting stuck in to fascists. In Ian Glasper's anarcho punk book there's an account of what happened at the seminal 1982 gig at the Zig Zag squat in Westbourne Park, where Crass, The Mob and other bands played. According to Andy Martin from The Apostles, who also played that day, a group of right wing skinheads turned up with the result that; "this Asian lad – he was probably the only audience member not of white Caucasian origin – was being brutally kicked and punched by all these fascist thugs… that’s right five onto one. And what were the other members of the 500-strong audience doing while this was happening? They had formed a wide circle around the scene and watched in play out… that’s right, these anarchist pacifist rat-bags stood and watched five fascists beat up a 15-year-old Asian boy… In case you’re wondering what happened next, yes, we did surge forward to come to the lad’s aid, but before we could involve ourselves, both Penny and Andy (yes, from Crass) had jumped between us and grabbed the two biggest skinheads, and shoved them to one side of the hall. Colin Jerwood of Conflict confronted the others with less reasonable force, and threatened to put them all in hospital. Those three fascists virtually wet their knickers at the prospect' (The Day the Country Died: a history of anarcho-punk 1980-1984).

This flyer is from what may have been last time I saw them, at Clarendon Ballroom in Hammersmith playing for anti-apartheid in 1986, others mentioned on the flyer include Icons of Filth, Exit Stance and Liberty



Sunday, May 18, 2025

For Peace! exhibition at Four Corners


'For Peace!' is an interesting exhibition at Four Corners gallery in Bethnal Green, based around material from the archive at MayDay Rooms. The focus is very much on the more radical end of peace and anti-militarist movements - not simply calling for an absence of conflict but challenging the existence of the military and the state's weapons of mass destruction which tick along beneath the radar of mainstream political discourse. Was anybody ever asked for instance whether we wanted a continuing massive US military base at Lakenheath in Suffolk? 

From this perspective the efforts of the Greenham Common and Faslane peace camps set up in the 1980s are seen as central, installing themselves at what is perhaps the real heart of the state - less  Whitehall than the fenced off compounds behind which it accumulates its missiles.

Abolish War! - Greenham common women's peace camp

The Faslane peace camp was set up in 1982 at the Royal Naval base in Scotland that is home to Britain's nuclear weapons-armed submarines

There is archive material from the direct action end of the 1950s/60s movement against the bomb (Committee of 100 and Spies for Peace) and from some less well known 1980s/90s activists such as those who opposed the 'nuclear colonialism' of testing sites and weapons bases.

'The peasants are revolting Ma'am' - a group of women protestors described in the Sun as a '15-strong feminist brigade' climbed over the wall into Buckingham Palace grounds in 1993 in solidarity with the Western Shoshone people whose land in the Nevada Desert was used as a testing ground for American and British nuclear weapons.

'Women working for a nuclear-free and independent Pacific' - a 1980s benefit at the Old White Horse in Brixton (later Brixton Jamm). The Rongelap survivors were those still living with the radioactive aftermath of the 1950s H Bomb tests in the Pacific.

There is also an emphasis     on solidarity movements such as the Troops Out Movement who campaigned for British withdrawal from Ireland from the 1970s to the 1990s

1980s Southwark Troops Out Movement meeting -  SNOW venue refers to 'Squatters Network of Walworth'

Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament against Trident missiles and a flyer for the 1983 'Festival for the Future' in Bristol