Early
compatriots of Cabaret Voltaire and Throbbing Gristle on
Britain's experimental/industrial scene, 23 Skidoo pursued
an improvisational fusion of ethnic drumming and post-punk
dance on their few recordings of the early '80s.
Named
after a mysterious Illuminati phrase that appeared in the
work of Aleister Crowley, William Burroughs and filmmaker
Julian Biggs, the group formed in London around brothers
(and martial-arts experts) Alex and Johnny Turnbull and
Fritz Catlin (aka Fritz Haamann). Influenced by Fela Kuti
and the emerging New York hip-hop scene, 23 Skidoo released
their first single "Ethics" in 1980. For their
second, the band recorded at Cabaret Voltaire's Western
Works with Genesis P-Orridge of Throbbing Gristle helping
out on production. In 1982, 23 Skidoo released the mini-LP
Seven Songs and the Tearing Up the Plans EP for the Fetish
label (also home to recordings by Throbbing Gristle and
Clock DVA). After replacing their nominal rhythm section
with bassist Sketch (who shared the trio's aesthetic), the
band continued with 1983's The Culling Is Coming and 1984's
Urban Gamelan. Their varied influences and occasionally
sublime sound confused many critics and listeners, who expected
all industrial groups to be as loud and chaotic as the emerging
Test Dept. or Einsturzende Neubaten.
Even
after disbanding in 1984 however, 23 Skidoo continued recording
together sporadically during the rest of the decade, and
the quartet -- the Turnbulls plus Catlin and Sketch -- formed
their own Ronin label in 1989. Though no material from the
band appeared in the '90s, they did several remixes and
recorded for advertisers including Nike, Wrangler, and Smirnoff.
Finally, in 2000, 23 Skidoo released a new, self-titled
album for Virgin.