During the first wave of U.K. punk rock, plenty of bands sang about a world full of violence and chaos, but
Stiff Little Fingers didn't have to imagine a dystopian world -- living in Belfast, Northern Ireland at the height of "The Troubles," police brutality and terrorist violence were simply a part of daily life, and the band's music was a powerful response to what they saw, raw-boned rock & roll that balanced rage at a world gone mad against hope for a better day.
Stiff Little Fingers were formed in 1977 by singer and guitarist
Jake Burns, guitarist
Henry Cluney, bassist
Ali McMordie, and drummer
Brian Faloon.
Burns,
Cluney, and
Faloon had previously been in a cover band called Highway Star, but when
Cluney became a convert to punk rock,
Burns and
Faloon followed suit, and after recruiting
McMordie, they took the name
Stiff Little Fingers from a song by
the Vibrators.
Shortly after the band started playing out,
Burns struck up a correspondence with reporter
Gordon Ogilvie, who urged
Burns to use his own experiences of Belfast life in his songs;
Ogilvie began collaborating with
Burns as a songwriter, and
Ogilvie and music writer Colin McClelland agreed to manage the band. McClelland booked time for the band at a studio in a local radio station usually used to record commercial jingles; the band cut raw versions of "Suspect Device" and "Wasted Life," two anthemic tunes that became
SLF's first single, released on their own Rigid Digits label in early 1978. The influential BBC disc jockey
John Peel started spinning "Suspect Device" on his show, and soon the indie label Rough Trade struck a distribution deal with Rigid Digits; in 1979, Rough Trade released
Stiff Little Fingers' brilliant first album,
Inflammable Material, and it became one of the first independent punk albums to chart in the U.K., rising to 14 on the British sales surveys.
With their new success in England,
Stiff Little Fingers relocated to London, which led to drummer
Brian Faloon leaving the group (as did co-manager McClelland).
Jim Reilly signed on as drummer in time for the sessions for
SLF's second album, 1980's
Nobody's Heroes, their first LP in a new distribution deal with Chrysalis Records. The album fared well, as did the 1980 live set
Hanx! and 1981's polished but effective
Go for It. However,
Reilly quit the band after the release of
Go for It, and
Dolphin Taylor, formerly of
the Tom Robinson Band, took over behind the drums. Released in 1982,
Now Then... was a more pop-oriented effort that didn't please fans and made no great impression on the charts; as ticket sales began to lag, acrimony rose within the group, and in early 1983,
Jake Burns announced
Stiff Little Fingers had broken up.
Little was heard from the members of
Stiff Little Fingers (though
Burns released a few singles with his group Jake Burns & the Big Wheel) until 1987, when
Burns and
Ali McMordie got together for a few pints and decided it was time to give
SLF another try. With
Henry Cluney and
Dolphin Taylor returning to the lineup,
Stiff Little Fingers launched a successful tour of the U.K. and Europe, and the group opted to make the reunion an ongoing concern. In 1991, the band began work on a new album, but
McMordie bowed out of
SLF, saying he was unable to commit to their increasingly busy schedule, and the group recruited a new member, former
Jam bassist
Bruce Foxton. Issued in 1991, Flags & Emblems became the first new
Stiff Little Fingers album since their reunion, but by the time they released Get a Life in 1994,
Henry Cluney was out of the group, with
Burns handling all guitar work in the studio and
Dave Sharp (formerly of
the Alarm) or
Ian McCallum joining
SLF for live dates, depending on availability. In 1998,
McCallum was officially named
Stiff Little Fingers' full-time guitarist, while drummer
Steve Grantley had taken over for
Dolphin Taylor, who left to spend more time with his family.
Stiff Little Fingers toured frequently and continued to record, releasing Tinderbox in 1997, Hope Street in 1999, and
Guitar and Drum in 2003, and after
Foxton left to join the group From the Jam in 2006,
Ali McMordie returned to the lineup. However, by his own admission,
Burns was unhappy with his own songwriting, feeling he was writing because he had to and not because he wanted to, and in 2008, after turning 50 years old, he decided to scrap an
SLF album in progress as he felt his material was subpar. However, several years later, when news broke of the pedophilia scandal in Ireland's Catholic Church and how it affected men of his generation,
Burns was inspired to once again write songs that dealt with injustice and how it ravaged the lives of ordinary people. In 2013,
Stiff Little Fingers eagerly began work on a new album, financed by their fans through a crowdfunding campaign, and in 2014,
No Going Back was released. In 2017,
Stiff Little Fingers offered evidence of their continued strength as a live act with Best Served Loud, recorded during a 2016 St. Patrick's Day show at the Barrowlands in Glasgow, Scotland. ~ Mark Deming