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When Una Baines (keyboards, vocals) and <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Martin Bramah</a> (guitar, vocals) quit <a href="spotify:artist:6WoTvA9qinpHtSRJuldYh6">the Fall</a> in the late '70s, some of that group's irreverent, punk-injected spirit continued to flow through their veins when they formed the Blue Orchids in Manchester, England in 1979. With the addition of Rick Goldstar (guitar), Steve Toyne (bass), and Joe Kin (drums), Baines and <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Bramah</a> reaped critical acclaim with their brainchild. The Blue Orchids signed with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Rough+Trade%22">Rough Trade</a> in 1980 and their first single, "The Flood/Disney Boys," drew comparisons to <a href="spotify:artist:1nJvji2KIlWSseXRSlNYsC">the Velvet Underground</a>'s psychedelic weirdness. Ironically, the Blue Orchids became the supporting band for former <a href="spotify:artist:1nJvji2KIlWSseXRSlNYsC">Velvets</a> chanteuse <a href="spotify:artist:0IwlY33zbBXN7zlS9DP2Cj">Nico</a> during her tour of Europe a year later. The group's debut LP, The Greatest Hit (Money Mountain), was released in 1981 to excellent reviews. The Blue Orchids' uncompromising sound -- half-sung or spoken lyrics, drugged-out keyboards, jagged guitars -- made them favorites on the U.K. independent charts.

In 1982, after recording the EP Agents of Change, the band split up. Baines and <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Bramah</a> revived the Blue Orchids in 1984 with new members. The resurrected Blue Orchids began performing in clubs again and released a 12" single in 1985. The group landed gigs in Austria and Germany before disbanding once more. Baines then joined the Fates while <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Bramah</a> collaborated with ex-<a href="spotify:artist:6WoTvA9qinpHtSRJuldYh6">Fall</a> drummer Karl Burns in <a href="spotify:artist:2WTkIXU9aXmyJOCQnq2XnW">Thirst</a>. <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Bramah</a> collected another set of musicians to record as the Blue Orchids in 1991, releasing the 12" single "Diamond Age." Although somewhat overshadowed by other Manchester acts such as <a href="spotify:artist:432R46LaYsJZV2Gmc4jUV5">Joy Division</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:0yNLKJebCb8Aueb54LYya3">New Order</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:3yY2gUcIsjMr8hjo51PoJ8">the Smiths</a>, the Blue Orchids' influence lived on in the Hammond organ-powered grooves of <a href="spotify:artist:66GWpx9iLxrvvfhDsG9STP">Inspiral Carpets</a>; moreover, <a href="spotify:artist:7sbwBqdkynNUDgiWU3TQ5J">Aztec Camera</a> covered "Bad Education" from The Greatest Hit (Money Mountain).

In 2002, <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Cherry+Red+Records%22">Cherry Red Records</a> compiled A Darker Bloom: The Blue Orchids Collection, a retrospective of their work from 1980 to the early '90s. In 2003, the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22LTM+Records%22">LTM Records</a> label brought out two collections of rare and unreleased Blue Orchids tracks, From Severe to Serene and The Sleeper. The renewed interest in the group prompted <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Martin Bramah</a> to assemble a new version of the Blue Orchids, and in 2004 <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22LTM%22">LTM</a> released Mystic Bud, an album of new material from this incarnation of the band. <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Bramah</a> soon moved on to other projects, but he once again revived the Blue Orchids in 2012 for a run of live gigs. This edition of the group began working up new material, and in 2016 they released an LP of original songs, The Once and Future Thing. The same year saw the release of Awefull, a collection of the Blue Orchids' <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Rough+Trade%22">Rough Trade</a> singles along with some rare cuts, and The Battle of Twisted Heel, a compilation credited to <a href="spotify:artist:0qqYRAnnA75ue1a3Zjj6JE">Martin Bramah</a> that included the tracks from the obscure 2005 Blue Orchids EP Slum-Cavern-Jest! More rarities from the group's archives surfaced on the 2017 EP Skull Jam, including a cover of <a href="spotify:artist:6Ix7Hx8Af0jg9X4OfD9sYR">Atomic Rooster</a>'s "The Devil's Answer." ~ Michael Sutton

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