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UV Pøp (or "Ultra Violent Pop") was a post-punk group from the South Yorkshire region of England formed in the early 1980s by John K. White. White had been providing the musical backing for a floundering vocal group called the I Scream Boys, and launched UV Pøp as a one-man band when the other project failed to gather any momentum. The first recorded output was a single produced by the members of <a href="spotify:artist:2kS4yz85MaZlxp2VaS3BEe">Cabaret Voltaire</a>, which led UV Pøp to exposure and more gigs. The band, consisting of White singing over pre-recorded backup tapes, opened shows in support of <a href="spotify:artist:0IwlY33zbBXN7zlS9DP2Cj">Nico</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5GXP40qqAgwCsG6mQ3NMWj">In the Nursery</a>, and the then-unknowns <a href="spotify:artist:36E7oYfz3LLRto6l2WmDcD">Pulp</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:6kz53iCdBSqhQCZ21CoLcc">Culture Club</a>. The single also gained mass exposure through frequent spins on John Peel's radio show. The band's debut LP, No Songs Tomorrow, was released in 1983. Its bleak post-punk/pre-goth dirges and early found-sound experiments were met with critical acclaim, and the initial run sold out quickly. A follow-up record came with 1986's Bendy Baby Man. The group had expanded to a more traditional band by then, and White & co. scored an underground hit with the darkly catchy "Serious." The band was silent for the next few decades, White still working on recordings and considering the band's dormancy more a hiatus than a breakup. In that time No Songs Tomorrow became a huge post-punk collectors item, with rare original copies fetching big sums from vinyl freaks worldwide. In 2011, Brooklyn label <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Sacred+Bones%22">Sacred Bones</a> reissued the band's first single as well as No Songs Tomorrow, and in 2012 the label brought a revitalized UV Pøp to the States to play some of their first-ever New York City shows. ~ Fred Thomas, Rovi

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