The group started to perform in 1982 as a
sound system on the Bristol scene,[2] with Grant Marshall[3] and Miles Johnson as the main two DJs.[4]
In 1984, they invited the young graffiti artist known as 3D (aka
Robert Del Naja) to join them, and he soon became one of their MCs, writing lyrics to rap with them.[5]
Other rappers joined the collective, such as Willy Wee and later in 1987 Tricky.[5]
As pioneers of sound system culture they played all-nighters, clubs and abandoned warehouses.[6] In 1986, they played
St Paul's Carnival and signed to
4th & B'way Records on Island Records imprint.[6]
Success and disintegration (1985–1989)
In 1985, the single Tearin Down The Avenue was recorded and in May 1986 the group toured Japan.[7][8] After the tour DJ Milo left to work in Japan.[8] The group would perform
sound clashes against other sound systems, on New Year's Eve 1987 they clashed with
Soul II Soul at St Barnabas crypt, Bristol.[9][10] In 1988, Friends & Countrymen was released.[11] However, by this time
Robert Del Naja,
Grant Marshall and
Andrew Vowles had formed
Massive Attack.[12] By 1989 the group was defunct.[4][13]
Post disbanding (1989–present)
DJ Milo has lived and worked going between Japan and New York. In 2013, he performed at St Paul's Carnival.[6][14]
Robert Del Naja,
Grant Marshall and
Andrew Vowles, continued with
Massive Attack and in the early days they often collaborated with
Adrian Thaws. However, differences between members saw Thaws leave in 1995, Vowles leave in 1998 and Marshall took a break in 2001. Marshall returned to Massive Attack in 2005. Thaws returned to Massive Attack in 2016.
Nellee Hooper, who moved to London after the group's dissolution and worked as a producer and remixer for a number of major artists, including
Madonna,
U2,
No Doubt,
Garbage,
Björk and others. He won the 1995
BRIT Award for Best Producer. He was also a member of
Soul II Soul.[15]
Thaws performed with Massive Attack on their first and second full-length releases, Blue Lines and Protection respectively, before pursuing a successful solo career.
Claude Williams provided vocals on Massive Attack's Five Man Army released in 1991. In 2010, he was jailed for a series of robberies, for three years, alongside five other men.[16][17]
Musical style
The Wild Bunch were pioneers of amalgamating a very wide variety of genres.[18][19][20] Their shows mixed disparate styles including elements of hip hop, punk, R&B and reggae. Further, it was their unique focus on slower rhythms and ambient electronic atmospheres that laid the foundations of
Bristol sound, which later developed into the popular
trip hop genre. They were key members of the
Bristol underground scene.[21][22]
Members
The Wild Bunch is perhaps best known for having been one of the first prominent British DJ and vocalist collaborations:[23]
In 2015, musician
James Lavelle put The Wild Bunch's The Look of Love in his top ten British sound system classics that influenced him, calling it 'The record that started it all.'[33]
The 2016, BBC documentary Unfinished: The Making of Massive Attack features the story of The Wild Bunch and the
Bristol sound.[34]
In 2019, the story of The Wild Bunch was told extensively in the book Massive Attack – Out of the Comfort Zone by journalist
Melissa Chemam (chapter 4 and 5).[3]